I'm afraid I don't have enough time to see your white head

Ada 2022-01-08 08:03:22

The theme song "At least there are you" was the theme song that was even more popular than the movie.

The movie talks about love without borders. In fact, it has discussed a lot. The awakened Western-style independent women and the superior oriental old-school men are still helpless even if they are tempted.

It is not so much a love elegy, but a feminine hymn. Anna was calm and clear, fully aware of what she wanted, and it didn't take too long to use her sword to cut her emotions.

Think of the harmony but the difference in the theory of love. We are often attracted by the freshness of our differences, but we are also often alienated by the barriers of differences. After all, the differences on the surface are more important than the harmony in the heart. Therefore, Anna's choice is correct.

The movie screen is very beautiful, and there is always a touch of ambiguity, and the unforgettable dance between the two of them finally becomes exquisite.

I miss you all my life, I'm afraid I won't have enough time to watch you turn your head.

ps, I always think that Fa Ge's romance movies are better than action movies, but it is a pity that Hollywood stories do not have so many king-like characters, but it is a pity that the scenery of Hong Kong movies is getting worse. . .

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Extended Reading
  • Jaron 2022-04-22 07:01:42

    I suddenly remembered that the holiday TV station, the unrecognizable Bai Ling and the two protagonists with a deep image, the story itself is not bad

  • Alessandra 2022-03-21 09:02:40

    I can't wait to watch all of Fage's domestic films

Anna and the King quotes

  • Anna Leonowens: You have the power to lead your people...

    King Mongkut: Now is not the time to change the way that things are done!

    Anna Leonowens: Well, if not now, then when? How many more people must die so that you might save face?

  • [first lines]

    King Chulalongkorn: She was the first English woman I had ever met. And it seemed to me she knew more about the world than anyone. But it was a world Siam was afraid would consume them. The monsoon winds had whispered her arrival like a coming storm. Some welcomed the rain, but others feared a raging flood. Still she came, unaware of the suspicion that preceded her. But it wasn't until years later, that I began to appreciate how brave she was, and how alone she must have felt. An English woman. The first I had ever met.