Not just horror, but gothic horror

Eliezer 2022-03-25 09:01:08

I read a lot of reviews before and said it was not good, but after reading it in one breath, it didn't feel so bad. Of course, I will be very noble to say that I went for the pp of Dousen. I kind of think this is the best part of his performance that I have seen. The overall feeling is getting better, not as strong as before. Exuding a sense of presence, this time the feeling is integrated into the character. Well, let's talk about it below, but the two women who made the whole play feel more brilliant are the two women, who played the roles too well. I don't like spoilers, so I haven't watched all kinds of propaganda carefully, so I always thought that the two sisters were vampires of ten thousand years or something, and I waited and found out. . . Hey, it's just an ordinary duo of cheating little girls. After finding the entry point, the plot behind it is the standard of a love story textbook. It's so scary and scary, it's just a love movie with a ghost in it that I said in the movie. So thank the director himself for emphasizing not just horror, but gothic horror. If it's just based on the horror line, (I thought of "Poisoning", hahaha). . . In short, the whole movie is set in a love story, and the characters, love and hate in the picture, costumes and characters are perfectly expressed. Of course, the five-star rating is because I personally like the director's feelings and the pp of Dousen has added one star.

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Extended Reading

Crimson Peak quotes

  • Lucille Sharpe: [Looking at the dead butterflies] They're dying. They take the heat from the sun, and when it deserts them, they die.

    Edith Cushing: How sad.

    Lucille Sharpe: No, it's not sad, Edith. It's nature. It's a world of everything dying and eating each other right beneath our feet.

    Edith Cushing: Surely there's more to it than that.

    Lucille Sharpe: [Looking at Edith] Beautiful things are fragile... At home we have only black moths. Formidable creatures, to be sure, but they lack beauty. They thrive on the dark and cold.

    Edith Cushing: What do they feed on?

    Lucille Sharpe: Butterflies, I'm afraid.

  • Lucille Sharpe: You will stay here, with us... won't you? Wait for the storm to pass.

    Dr. Alan McMichael: If you insist.