The heroine's rebelliousness is easily reminiscent of what she looked like when she was in middle school. Loves rock, dresses as neutral punk, has social phobia, fights with mother, runs away from home (I haven't gotten there yet).
One scene is a freeze-frame painting of the mother's reluctance and helplessness behind her when the geek in the attic takes out the heroine to leave home. The heroine obviously regrets the pain and troubles her waywardness has brought to her family.
Now I also sometimes regret all kinds of ignorance in the past, short-tempered, not studying hard, and doing whatever I want without considering the consequences. . . All of this can bring misery to those who love you the most.
Perhaps, this is the restlessness of everyone's adolescence. And mine is similar to the one in the movie.
Let's talk about movies. At first, I was attracted by the tense atmosphere, and then the various nonsense of the heroine's family and the police officers really added color. The final boss (psychotic) is also full of suspense.
That is, you think that guy is possible, but he is not the boss, and the result is also a satire of powerful people and high-ranking people.
As an ordinary citizen living at the bottom of a prosperous metropolis, messiness and odor is the constant melody in life. So, the background tone of the film is easy to empathize with me.
If I watched this movie when I was 17, would it change my life? Maybe it will be very emotional at that moment, but then forget about it.
Remember what? Like this immediate review. The rapidity of the input of information brought about by the network is also the rapidity of the outflow (interest).
farewell to youth.
View more about Housebound reviews