Super-beautiful literary film ideal and secular prose poetry

Super-beautiful literary film ideal and secular prose poetry

Title: Bright Stars

Source: Youku, Tencent, Didi.

Fanny, a rich girl, likes to design her own clothes and make them herself. She came across Keats' poems next door and approached him. Under the influence of Keats, Fanny began to learn and appreciate poetry, and in the process of getting along, they fell in love.

Keats, urged by his friends and influenced by secular ideas and doubts, was put on the train to Rome. He explained his gentle love with "forever" again and again, but it also became his disillusioned future under serious illness. For Fanny, Ode to a Nightingale means "Even if love is as distant and inaccessible as a star, she is an unstoppable luminous body."

Fanny has been single for him for three years, walking over and over in the courtyards and Woods where they like to walk, lying in the iris forest, and her tears turn from anger to cold, year after year. She never took off the ring from Keats in her life. Fanny still loves Iris even though his smell disappears. "Bright stars, I wish I could be as firm as you."

The film is as beautiful as a poem, and the most romantic and tactful love is watching the poet fall in love. The relationship between frustrated young writers and lonely lovers is not valued by others. They express their love in letters and poems, and deeply feel the intimate affection of those who can't speak and reach their soul mates physically.

Excellent lines in the play:

"How I wish we could become butterflies and only live for three hot summers. Three happy days with you are better than fifty lonely years in this world. "