About lies

Clarabelle 2021-12-16 08:01:10

Tim Burton’s guidance for this biographical film is as painless as Margaret is forced to create a work in the film, but I love him.
Regarding the human nature of lies, everyone has a rich experience. If you want to cover up your flaws, you will always make up a decent excuse for those who make you uncomfortable to extract a confession. So you are decent and miserable, worrying about the day the truth will be revealed. But this dignity makes you feel important, how to quit?
We always say that it's good to be ourselves. If there is no comparison target, is the imbalance also meaningless in the fantasy world?
Being likable is an advantage, but it's a pity that an artist has never been able to do it.
The person who leads you out of the sea of ​​suffering is kind to you. You may never know how wonderful the world is without him, but this should not be an excuse to enslave you.
The film suppresses a lie to the end, and it bursts out at the right time without sensationalism. It should be a person, at least me, the emotion that I want to do.

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Extended Reading
  • Bianka 2022-04-21 09:02:18

    Perfect interpretation of a clever woman is hard to cook without rice. Without the superb marketing methods of male pigs, female pigs cannot live the life they want, just like Burton without Helena and Depp can't show their feelings in detail. Christopher Waltz is still pretty good, Bilge is just too bad. When I watched it, I kept making up the two pigs' feet and brains into Depp and Helena, and that would be another movie. Burton must never lose Eva Green again.

  • Durward 2021-12-16 08:01:10

    The story can be a dark fairy tale, but it is very boring to be filmed, and it can’t be compared with Edward. The focus of the director is to show the two protagonists, but the court scene is still too exaggerated to the point of grandstanding. . But I am really interested in real characters and stories.

Big Eyes quotes

  • Ruben: Sweep the gutters before the taste police arrive.

  • Walter Keane: Would you rather sell a $500 painting, or a million cheaply reproduced posters?

    Walter Keane: See, folks don't care if it's a copy.