It is quite satisfactory. It is not so much a Jane Eyre movie as it is a brief synopsis of the original Jane Eyre. The character choices weren't very good, one being John Reed as a boy, a boy who looked reckless and a little fat and obnoxious. However, the choice of this movie did not show that feeling, but it accurately portrayed his characteristics of bullying the soft and afraid of the hard. Another casting failure was the missionary. The original portrayed him as a man with clear lines. And the choice in this movie is a boy with a teenage face. The image of the character itself is not well grasped. This should be the director's problem. The missionary didn't fall in love with Jane, but just thought that she was very suitable to be a missionary's wife. He was a calm and restrained person, and this portrayed him a bit like an ordinary man. I really don't understand who the audience of this movie is, people who have read the original book or people who haven't read the original book and want to pretend to be literary. And men are really good at deception, we can often see that many girls have had some bad things happen to themselves, such as being deceived and then pregnant (a large part of this is really related to education, and shouldn’t be so sexual Mysterious, hurt them) or have been sexually assaulted, molested, raped, they will think with guilt whether they should tell their other half, and most of them will choose to confess. It's not their fault, but they still blame themselves. Of course in this movie, I'm not saying that Edward was wrong and shouldn't marry his first wife, after all, it's hard to tell if a person is black or white. It's just that he chose to hide it until the moment of marriage, which makes me feel unacceptable. He can struggle, he can suffer, and he can wander around, but at the moment of marriage before marriage, he must confess. Whatever the outcome, he must confess. It is not right to let another person be deceived for the sake of so-called love. If Jane heard the truth from his mouth, I don't think she would either, so she wouldn't break down and run away.
Jane's uniqueness, what impressed me most should be her saying I'm no longer Jane Eyre. If it was other poor girls, I think they would be very happy when they said this because they got out of poverty and married a rich husband. But Jane Eyre is different. She has a happy meaning when she says this sentence, because she is going to marry the person she loves, but there is also a kind of melancholy, that she will no longer be the unique Jane Eyre Now, Edward's surname will be taken after her first name.
Every time I look at such tragic people, I can't help but associate their tragic experiences with my own, and then wonder if she's tragic or me, even though I know that human tragic shouldn't be compared , but I can't help it all the time. After each comparison, I will realize once again, yes, human misery not only should not be compared, but also cannot be compared.
I envy Jane Eyre for two things, one is that she can paint. Another point is that both men she met respected her talent, saw her ambitions, and talked to her on an equal footing. And the people I meet, although they can see my talent and admit my ambitions, are always suppressing me, they will never say that if you can have your own sky, you will definitely fly very well high. They will say that your final destination is not to get married, you must choose a very good person, even the one I admire very much, he also told me that. People always see my personality first and then see my gender, but they always forget that I am a person other than my personality and my gender, I am a person first, and have mine second Personality, and in the end I am a woman.
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