When I was watching Marie Antoinette, it was shot by PARTY GIRL, which was full of fun, especially the fancy dress party + rock music. There are also new hairstyles, gaming tables-VAGAS, snuff-cocaine... the female director is very serious about comparing ancient and modern and metaphors, so serious, too hard, but it also gives people the feeling of insufficient egao, or lost in Tokyo’s immature and tenderness. It's more fun inadvertently.
Another: Egao: Chine gaguesque
Egao. Le phénomène est si récent qu'aucun dictionnaire ne donne encore la définition de ce mot composé des caractères «féroce» et «se moquer ». The
script seems to be Zweig’s Marie "Antoinette" is modeled on the passage to the court farm, and even the narrative sequence is based on Zweig. I feel that the added part is mostly the American War of Independence and Thomas Jefferson-the French Revolution and the American War of Independence. The Americans have always proudly called it the "sister war".
The oil painting drawn by DUST feels so...ridiculous? DUST has worked very hard to lose weight. If this role was played by Scarlett Johansson, I would like it better, haha. It's a pity that Scarlett Johansson will play it~ Maybe his lips are too thick? Although it’s in Versailles, I think it’s closer to the feeling of Jets Filade, but the clear American accent + Versailles, on the contrary, has the feeling of passing by here, giving people the feeling that tomorrow’s palace like a grass platform will be It will be annihilated, just as the entire camera team will leave Versailles tomorrow. Is this deliberately or is it right?
It's like making up for the dream of an American girl's princess-queen, food, new clothes, PARTY, gentle and weak husband + handsome lover (both of which must be possessed at the same time), and finally-the times change. No wonder they said long ago that from the enthusiasm of Kennedy + Jacqueline, it can be seen that the Americans feel a certain kind of naive disappointment about their lack of a royal family, and laugh.
No wonder the response in France is so cold. From start to finish, a wealthy American girl imagined that she was a dream created by the rose of Versailles more than two hundred years ago.
View more about Marie Antoinette reviews