The yard is full of colorful flowers.
Jiang Wen in the pavilion had a look of desolation on his face. He poured wine and sighed, "Second brother, you know, the word 'incomprehensible' is a very bad evaluation of a director in China. If you make the audience unable to understand, you are a failure."
Ethan Chase is not going to give up drinking today. Words of comfort are useless at this time. Only "wine can relieve all worries": "It's no big deal. Artists with advanced ideas are lonely after all."
Jiang Wen's films are popular because of his masculinity, allegorical deconstruction of history and reality, as well as his delicate artistic rendering of atmosphere and a large number of metaphorical montages.
However, "The Sun Also Rises" places too much emphasis on the expression of his own subjective feelings and is too obscure. In addition, the order of the four parts is reversed, and the background spans multiple eras, which causes the narrative thread of the plot to be broken, making it seem incredible and illogical.
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