Roman Polanski never forgets to influence the audience through his films with his dark, eccentric and pessimistic inner world. Such as the shocking and disturbing scene of slapping "She's my sister, she's my daughter" in "China Town", this time I can't forget the pianist who saw the child stuck in the hole in the wall and struggling in pain. Can't stop guessing what happened on the other side of the wall; the pianist and his family's life and death just ended with a smile and a wave; three times the pianist saw the German from a wheelchair throw a Jewish man from a wheelchair and fell to his death from a high-rise building (the camera follows freedom) fall to the ground), cars run over dying people, Germans exchange fire with Jews...all are shocking.
The pianist has a shadow of Roman Polanski in The Tenant, quiet, pathetic, and a little clumsy in action.
Strangely enough, there are a few scenes in such a depressing film that make me laugh out loud. One: When the pianist was playing the piano in a restaurant, his sister suddenly came to visit, and he had to play the last few notes at a hilariously accelerated pace without the guests noticing. Two: The pianist opened the can, and the can rolled to the heels of the German officer. The German officer asked him to play the piano and asked him to take him to the place where he lived. The pianist kept holding the can. Three: Russian soldiers shot him and asked him "why you are wearing this fucking coat?" and answered honestly "Because I am cold."
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