A lot of this narration mode has been used in American movies lately, like a pounding paperweight. It feels like the voiced barrage lets us hear the character's inner os.
What impresses me is not the plot but the details of some of the shots inside. Strange sight after the accidental drug use, and the tri-color popsicle that compares the Spice Girl (not as pretty as Rachel) to an elk but is a hamster herself.
The male protagonist Greg was born into a very ordinary family, with a nagging mother and a sociologist father who watched various movies and made various strange foods at home every day. There is also a partner Earl who has an older brother with a very fierce dog.
The first time I was forced to find Rachel to play with, I fell in love with her room, the full sun, and the forest-patterned wallpaper. One-third of the film was shot in Rachel's room, and the transitions and tones were very soft. Well, I don't understand this, I just know that in the eyes of a layman, I really love the color of her room and the picture. Rachel's clothes and room are also super-matched, and the whole color is well coordinated.
Greg and Earl's favorite thing to do is to make movies, imitating various business cards, and there are 43 of them. Although they call them bad movies, the peculiar way of shooting still makes people smile. Greg also made up for Hugh Jackman's dialogue with Wolverine, which is also haha. Throughout the film is the soundtrack of various famous movies and various movies. The best one is probably the one they filmed for Rachel, the content is not all kinds of bad street you cheer, you can do it, god bless you. Not all kinds of sensationalism, but just pictures of various tones and subtle expressions, as if they were just showing Rachel the most beautiful thing in this world.
I really sighed when I saw that Greg was still wearing a tuxedo to go to the dance that every American youth film would appear in. Even that car looked like the diaosi male protagonist was sitting in after he successfully hangs a beautiful girl. . Fortunately, it wasn't the prom scene and there was no bloody dance. All I saw was a hospital and something that Greg was deceiving us from the beginning to the end, or that we were willing to be deceived by Greg. Then the tears couldn't stop coming out.
Mr. McCarthy said that we can also learn about a person's life after death. Greg said it was odd but reassuring.
Although the film finally returned to the usual routine of American youth movies, the protagonist got what he wanted to have a good university, good friends and a good girl. Of course, the girl in this movie is dead. It wasn't a chicken soup movie but had some chicken, which I'd happily eat once in a while.
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