Lolita / A Pear Blossom Pressed Begonia
Lolita: A Tree of Pear Blossoms Pressed Begonias
Eighteen brides eighty lang pale hair pair red makeup
Mandarin ducks are made into double nights in a tree of pear blossoms pressed begonias
"Lolita" filmed in 1998 was translated as "A Tree of Pear Blossoms Pressing Begonias", from Dongpo's ridicule of friends, pear blossoms are white, begonias are red, alluding to old husbands and young wives. I read this novel many, many times, and after watching the movie, the 98 version is my favorite version, and I recommend it to you today.
This work can be said to be the pioneering work of Lolita Control, and the story tells a forbidden love that is thirty years apart.
Humbert, a university professor, experienced the pain of his first love girlfriend who died of typhoid fever as a young child.
For many years, he has always had a nightmare in his heart: that is, he has a special feeling for underage girls, a fatal admiration.
He arrived in the United States and, by chance, became a tenant of a widow, Charlotte.
Charlotte slowly fell in love with the male protagonist, hoping to marry him and become her and her daughter's patron. However, he falls in love with Charlotte's 14-year-old daughter, Lolita, who is somewhere between a child and a teenage girl. Love at first sight:
It can be said that at first Humbert imagined Lolita as 14-year-old Anne.
He wanted to find in Lolita the love he had lost before he had time to have it when he was young.
I think about it now
The Bison and Angels of Europe"
Humbert was right to describe Lolita as a.
Lolita is like a bison galloping on the plains, so wild that no one dares to keep it, nor can it keep it. Precocious puberty is where her sexiness lies, and teasing old men with braces seems to be more soul-destroying. In her eyes, there is no ethics, only excitement and fun.
Having her first experience with the boys at Camp Quay, Lolita is like carrying a little secret that "she has been reborn" and can't wait to share it with Humbert, but in a different way.
Lolita's feelings for Humbert are complex, dependent, provocative, and hateful, but there is no love among the many complex feelings.
When she said Clare Quilty was the only man she had ever loved, Humbert asked: What about me? She walked away in silence.
"I just have to look at her,
All kinds of tenderness, gushing into the heart"
It is the darkest yet most extravagant emotional experience of a man, as the opening line says, "Lolita is my desire, my obsession, my sin, my soul." ”
A man's emotional entanglements, love songs, life and death, sin and punishment, secret and moving, abandonment and sad songs are all wrapped in a piece of tenderness. This has nothing to do with social morality, only about the soul.
How much he loved her, he wanted to be close to her at the first sight of her. And that humble love could only sustain him in a safe relationship with her in order to make him a gentleman and not a beast.
Other teenage girls "fade" as their youth passes, but Lolita will always be Lolita. She is Humbert's The One.
Later Lolita was gone, and came back pregnant with someone else's child. Lamenting the indescribable feelings in his heart can make a man humble enough to know that Lolita has never loved himself, and everything is for money, but he still gives all the money to Lolita, who is pregnant with someone else's child, and he cries.
At this moment I felt that for this man there was no perversion, no pretense, only helplessness and pity. Even if he had given her all his money, it was not as much as one-tenth of his love for her, and he might have felt so pathetic that it had tormented him for so long.
He gives her money because she needs it /
He's crying because she doesn't need him anymore /
There are many kinds of love, which may not be moral or untouchable. So he personally killed the man who made Lolita's belly, and a man walked on the hillside in discouragement, looked at the child running down the hill and said, "What makes me sad is not that Lolita is not by my side, but that there is no Lolita in this laughter."