this movie killed me too!! 💜😭 loved that you understood the significance of the differences of the paintings and what changed between them and how that showed 💜I loved this movie. I think of it as being about the secret lives and pains of women. Of being married off in the old days and often enough even nowadays, being seen as a prize or property or not fully human, being seen by one's fellow women, and the pain we go through w periods and childbirth and cruel/indifferent men and miscarriage/abortion, which is never depicted or talked about openly in movies or polite society. Her painting the abortion scene was about bringing to light what is so often hidden and showing what a lot of women go through, but in a humanizing light. I thought it significant they showed us this problem after we already started to like the girl. then they show the kind of goofy and spirited ways they were tyring to have the miscarriage. The baby being there beside the girl getting the abortion was to show that the girl wasn't getting an abortion bc she hates babies or is anti-babies, but because as she explained earlier, it would ruin her life and she'd loser her job, struggle in a life of poverty and be shamed by society for having a child out of wedlock. It showed that it's a part of life and while it is somber, it's not something to treat as an evil ritual or a damning event necessarily. The care that all the women in the film showed to one another, the support and companionship and simple joys they offered each other, including even the help from the old lady who gave the abortion, all served as a "portrait" of the highs and lows and secret parts of womanhood, just as their love remains a secret decodable only if one knows why her married portrait shows her finger marking page 28 of that book, and as secret as were the circumstances under which Orpheus turned to see Eurydice even though he knew if he turned to see her, she would be lost to him forever. It's about choosing to love a person entirely even if it comes with inevitable pain and loss. Love your reaction!💜
I love this movie! This director also made a movie called Petite Maman that is a slow burn, but did something different that hit me so hard and I still think of it all the time. It's one of my favorite movies of the last few years. It's also much shorter than Portrait of a Lady on Fire and I think you'd really appreciate it.
Loved your reaction. Maybe the reason it's hard to get into their love story, to relate, is because the acting is so serious... I don't know the right word to describe it 😅 But I felt the same. I still cried at the end though.
THIS WAS BEAUTIFUL but so sad ngl 🥲
The Full Reaction is on Patreon.com/Madvision ⭐️ (Movie Included)
This is such a beautiful movie and I'm so glad I got to watch you watch it
this movie killed me too!! 💜😭 loved that you understood the significance of the differences of the paintings and what changed between them and how that showed 💜I loved this movie. I think of it as being about the secret lives and pains of women. Of being married off in the old days and often enough even nowadays, being seen as a prize or property or not fully human, being seen by one's fellow women, and the pain we go through w periods and childbirth and cruel/indifferent men and miscarriage/abortion, which is never depicted or talked about openly in movies or polite society.
Her painting the abortion scene was about bringing to light what is so often hidden and showing what a lot of women go through, but in a humanizing light. I thought it significant they showed us this problem after we already started to like the girl. then they show the kind of goofy and spirited ways they were tyring to have the miscarriage. The baby being there beside the girl getting the abortion was to show that the girl wasn't getting an abortion bc she hates babies or is anti-babies, but because as she explained earlier, it would ruin her life and she'd loser her job, struggle in a life of poverty and be shamed by society for having a child out of wedlock. It showed that it's a part of life and while it is somber, it's not something to treat as an evil ritual or a damning event necessarily. The care that all the women in the film showed to one another, the support and companionship and simple joys they offered each other, including even the help from the old lady who gave the abortion, all served as a "portrait" of the highs and lows and secret parts of womanhood, just as their love remains a secret decodable only if one knows why her married portrait shows her finger marking page 28 of that book, and as secret as were the circumstances under which Orpheus turned to see Eurydice even though he knew if he turned to see her, she would be lost to him forever. It's about choosing to love a person entirely even if it comes with inevitable pain and loss.
Love your reaction!💜
I love this movie! This director also made a movie called Petite Maman that is a slow burn, but did something different that hit me so hard and I still think of it all the time. It's one of my favorite movies of the last few years. It's also much shorter than Portrait of a Lady on Fire and I think you'd really appreciate it.
i watched it with my mother
@Madvisionn Nice, great person to watch that movie with!
Loved your reaction. Maybe the reason it's hard to get into their love story, to relate, is because the acting is so serious... I don't know the right word to describe it 😅 But I felt the same. I still cried at the end though.
The abortion story is about the womanhood, and that story was needed as a witness to their love story, otherwise i would have been end up as a myth.
✨🩵🌊✨🔳⚜️✨
Pls react to laila majnu by imtiaz ali
Pls react to laila majnu plsss