Also published on my blog.
The series reminded me of my very personal experiences. I somehow feel to be the combination of both Mae and George. How? Mae is much needed. And George is surrounded by those mean "friends".
I left my hometown about 4 years ago. In a new city, with everything new, I tried to stay connected to my old life - those friends, those habits, basically everything I can. But things can not always be that ideal. Trying to hold on to every person around me made me really hard. I had to tolerate their bad habits, their judgement, and even sometimes discrimination. Until today, I am still doing those things, trying to please others. I know that's not a great way to let others know me. I keep on putting others feel good as the first principle to communicate with others. That's bad, not only for me but for them.
Maybe someday, or starting today, I should stand up and defend myself, and my values. It's not necessarily intensive as what George does in the show. I can explore a new way, my way.
As for the part like Mae, there's too much to say. The writing is superb for effectively showing how Mae is dependent on George. I am insecure in almost all my relationships, while most of them suck. I have taken considerable time in figuring out the relationship. Do those guys fancy me, or do they merely treat me like a sex toy, a method to kill time? I always need some confirmation, and I mean it it's always. I am afraid the status is not synchronised with the other. I may make some move far beyond. I may take the other my whole world. I may, just like Mae, get addicted to the other. Is that good? After the show, I am still confused. Those questions always pop up in my mind. Will he still pay attention to me after he has completely got me? Will he still enjoy my terrible jokes? Am I still making him comfortable? Will I get abandoned one day? I get addicted because of my lack of confidence, our difference and my bad memories, maybe.
In the series, Mae relapses. Will I relapse just like her over and over? Let's see.
我并非不喜欢这剧型。Mae是个t打扮的脱口秀演员,不可避免的讨好型人格,内心敏感柔和。8分43秒,她已经遇到了她喜爱的女孩,成功的约会,谈恋爱,两个人一起同居。但是我却生了不忍。我瞄过简介,t打扮不等于t,我知道她会遇见什么。她有毒瘾,她有不安。她的黏人,她的紧绷。她的阴暗。你看8分钟一切美好,她不能入睡,需要开灯,热爱身体触摸。肌肤饥渴症。她试图隐藏阴暗。她注定无法隐藏。更惨的是,她不明白,人怎么努力也是无法满足任何别人的想法。所有的回避都会让缘分渐行渐远。她具有感知别人想法的天赋。但是大多数别人的想法都是毒药。我知道这一切因为。除开瘾症的类型不同,主角的一切我都经历过。所以我停在了8分43秒。需要勇气继续。看她注定搞砸遇见的一切。
类似的丧喜剧,《Fleabag》我就看得毫无波澜觉得角色善于搞砸才有笑点。《Feel good》却让我为角色担心。砸了以后呢,她怎么办?
Broken ?or just be me
“为何我们从未看到碎杯子集合起来,离开地面并跳回桌子,通常解释这违背了热力学第二定律所表示的,在任何闭合系统中无序度或者伤总是随着时间增加,换言之就是墨菲定律的一种形式,事情总是趋向于越变越糟,一个完整的杯子是一个高度有序的状态,地板上碎裂的杯子是一个无序的状态,人们很容易就从早先的桌子上的杯子变成后来地板上的碎杯子而不是相反。”来自霍金。物理学家都知道那么两只猫。一只喜欢进盒子,一只喜欢推杯子。
而成年人的生活,充满了莫宁两可支离破碎。瓷砖修补膏粘好粘不好继续过。
我不知道互助会有什么用。因为其实我不知道倾诉有什么用。你告诉别人。你的烦恼。你却不能得到解决。只是展示了你的软弱。所以其实我明白为什么她要逃离一个互助会。我明白有些人为什么要冲进咖啡柜台,自己做咖啡,而不是埋头吞下垃圾。这个世界并不是你展现你的痛苦,痛苦就会消失。而是你展示你的痛苦,所有人知道你有一个洞。黑洞。可以吞噬一切快乐和幸运,好事。掩盖你的一切。被别人的人看到你的时候。就会看到那个洞,忍不住往里扔垃圾。So.What's the point to show other ones you have a black hole?我明白她为什么试图回避躲藏。却注定无所遁形。
TBC
Feel Good is a low budget 6-episode TV show which mysteriously skipped my attention when it was first brought up by a friend: probably because it features no big star (Lisa is one, but in a small role), and British TV shows like Fleabag and Killing Eve have raised the bar very high now.
However, one night, I started to watch the first episode and was very impressed. The not so sub plot of addiction is so well-written. I really like it when Mae (its main character shares the same name with the writer and lead actor, which is a bit confusing) expands the definition of ‘addiction’: ‘it’s all the same feelings, craving, and withdrawl, and relief, and obsession. We are just swapping one addiction for another’. By doing that, Mae Martin (I will use the full name when referring to the creator) connects the love story and Mae’s struggle to stay clean together. Mae Martin challenges the audience to view addiction as not only a struggle among a group of people, but something many of us face when being in a toxic relationship with partners, or, say, social media. By then, I am convinced Feel Good is quite good because the creators know ‘nuances’. Its focus on addiction also reminds me of Killing Eve S2, the key word for its 2nd season is ‘obsession’. While both handle compulsive/toxic feelings between people/people and object, Killing Eve’s take on obsession is disappointing, Feel Good, on the other hand, only gets better episode by episode.
Story aside, I am mesmerized by how the show introduces the love story to the audience. It is fast-paced. As Guardian remarks, ‘Feel Good moves so quickly and lightly that it seems impossible it could also be managing to construct characters and burrow into psyches as deeply and empathically as it does.’ You never need to fast-forward; it’s densely-packed but you won’t feel stressful; the plots mingle effortlessly. It takes 30 seconds for Mae and George to fall in love with each other. I love how unconventional and unapologetic it is. I love how an LGBTQIA (bless Joyce) story focus on how the two lovers enjoy their relationship (at least for the most part) without giving too much attention to how they are unsure if the other is into them, or suffering from loneliness because they can’t find a partner. Of course the loneliness issue exists and there is suffering, but there are many representations of those already. Feel Good shows how the relationship can be the start, rather than the ending, of a story.
I also like how the struggles of Mae and George are more about themselves making choices than them being in disagreement with a suffocating society. It is refreshing to see not only Mae’s parents, but George’s mother, support their sexuality. Mae’s gig pals don’t make a fuss about her having a girlfriend. The roommate Phil is an angel. The lead of the support group is a gay man; Lava is loved by her mother regardless of her sexuality. While Binky’s husband and his friends are ‘piece of shit’, I don’t see them as homophobic (I could be wrong though). The show demonstrates that everyone can and should be nice to LGBT+ community. I like how Feel Good doesn’t use societal approval as a trope; instead, it allows us to see Mae and George as individuals who make their own decisions. Yes, sexuality is and will be important in their lives, but they don’t let it to devour them, they can still breathe.
The relationship is beautifully written and wonderfully performed. I mean THE CHEMISTRY!! Yes there is sex. As Mae Martin said, she didn’t want the lesbian sex to be voyeuristic. I congratulate her in doing a fantastic job!! Feel Good has amazing sex scenes: they are romantic, witty, hilarious, and honest. The director and writers make sure the sex scenes are not about sex/lust only, they are also about female pleasure. Mae and George communicate and share their sexual preferences; they don’t force their fetish on the other, instead, they ask politely. The show doesn’t mystify lesbian sex: even lesbians can’t cum and that’s ok! Feel Good has achieved what Sex Education has done: it has educated people (older than high schoolers) how to have sex, and more importantly, how to discern when the relationship is going south.
There are nudity scenes and they are (quite literally) serving the plot: it is when Mae feels most vulnerable physically. The paradox of the physicality and the personality is, however, not restricted to gay people. Mae is struggling because she believes however hard she tries, she can never have George in the long haul because George is ‘culturally straight’. George, however, insists this idea is just in Mae’s head. (Or is it?) It becomes apparent that the couple is not on the same page on many things. Mae is shy but she wants public validation of their relationship: she wants to be blessed by George’s family and friends. George is popular (win the lottery) but she is ultra private when it comes to Mae. She points out her friends just want to crack a joke and emotions (mind, not sexuality), for them, is gross. Eventually, George will have to face her own real emotions. There is a moment where Mae questions why George never like/retweet her social media stuffs. As Fleabag says ‘Hair is everything’, the (non)usage of social media, I argue, is (almost) everything. This again shows the discrepancy between the couple – which, of course, is normal; in every relationship/friendship, such disagreements happen and that’s what makes this show so relatable.
It is interesting to note that the dynamic between the two flows all the time. I find myself on the side of Mae and then I am on George’s side! For example, the first episode shows Mae concealing her addiction history from George, which is a bit dishonest; but George also makes Mae think she’s already mentioned her to her friends while actually she’s dating some Crenshaw dude. I find it especially interesting that while George is portrayed as a cold person (she leaves Mae alone in a party; she’s rather cold towards Phil etc etc), Mae can also be quite aloof – check what she does to Lava. When she says let’s not share this with Maggie, it is as if George were saying let’s not tell my friends now.
Talking about George and her friends, I really like how the show does about their friendship. It shows that those friendships, even though ‘long haul’, are not necessarily genuine. Indeed, things can be tricky, if not scary, when friends finally choose to be honest with each other, right?
Binky’s husband and friends are hilarious characters, but the show makes sure not all the male characters are caricatured. I like Phil a lot; he’s giving me the neighbor who ended up marrying Hannah’s boyfriend’s sister in Girls, especially when he’s mentioning all the baby stuffs. Mae’s dad is a charming character; but I am not sure if he’s a good dad. His ‘Oh I need to check the garden’ is a specimen of dad type, who leaves all the dirty job of communicating with kids to mums. The show also inserts in a MeToo story plot where things turn sour quickly. In all, the portrayals of male characters are multifaceted. Well done.
Last but not the least: small roles. Does the show even have small roles? Because everyone shines. Even the shop assistant of that sex shop: the scene is so funny and captivating. Lisa Kudrow is funny but in a cold way – which is really nice. I am not crazy about her first appearance in the laptop; seeing her appear in Blackpool is a real surprise for me (and Mae). I love the scene in Ghost Train the most. Arguing in a horror house/moving train, with all the noise and terrifying man-makes while discussing ‘real emotions’, which is the most terrifying of all – what a genius idea!! The fact that the show keeps vague about why Mae is cast out of the family is an interesting one; I quite like how her mother points out her privilege and that she has everything she wants when she grows up. Again, the show is looking at the mysterious and intricate human mind that is not so easily explainable. Apart from that, I don’t think there are a lot of TV shows that discuss ‘privilege’. Kudos to the writers for highlighting this aspect.
The photography is really pretty. It, like TEOTFW, has a consistent tone, which is even reflected when Mae and George are in bed. Note the beautiful blue shadow. The music is nice. The costume looks comfy and lovely (never let the costume steal the show– I’m talking to you, Killing Eve). My favorite, as I said earlier is the pace of narration. Mae has run a lot and it is a signature of Feel Good, like Fleabag’s looking at the camera.
Feel Good is about a female stand-up comedian. In the States, there is The Marvelous Mrs Maisel. Both Mae and Midge suffer from a backfire from they using real-life stories with their partner (judging from S1 finale, haven’t watched S2 yet). It is interesting to think how personal the stand-up mateials can be, but having just watched Hannah Gadsby’s Nanette, I am reminding myself that in order to make things funny, the ‘truth’ can be compromised. While Nanette is almost metafictional when Hannah approaches/disconstructs what makes comedy, I don’t think that is the angle Feel Good is heading towards. However, it is still fit to think about the show amongst the powerful works by Mae Martin’s fellow female comedians. The freshness of the show also reminds me of Girls (with its minute depictions of modern female life) and Fleabag (with its candidacy about real emotions). Feel Good deserves more recognition and PLEASE CAN WE HAVE SEASON 2 THANK YOU NETFLIX!!
本来是听说老友记里的Phoebes监制了一部新剧,朋友推荐【英国神经病爱情喜剧】,以为会甜,一口气看了六集,被梅气得吐血,但Phoebes风采依旧。
主线是一个不典型的女同性恋和直女的恋爱探索过程。
不典型是因为梅本身集被宠爱的小公主、复吸边缘的戒毒者、甜蜜奶狗、自我身份怀疑、笑点怪异的脱口秀演员等很多身份于一身。冲动,多愁善感,自卑,喜欢直女更追求得到直女的快感,但她总能给自己找到借口,也根本不会为别人考虑。
她习惯把自己置入受害者的场景,偷吃安定是因为乔治让她对自己的身份感到焦虑,和父母关系不好是因为她们把年少的自己狠心赶了出去,害Maggie和女儿lava关系再次崩盘,却只担心自己晚上住在哪。即使到最后也还在说,我从一个东西转移到另一个东西,并没有意识到乔治是人,第二季如果乔治恋爱脑的劲儿过去了,目测还要有冲突。
直女乔治则面临着其他困境,她生活规律,要求严格。
从小到大幻想中的理想生活都是和有趣的绅士结婚生子,孩子的名字可能叫查理、休之类的。但是当她空窗五年后遇到梅,确信自己爱上了她的同时也有迷茫,当自己一直以来的生活基准线被动摇,该从哪一步开始更改呢。即使是在英国,突然出柜也并不是一件对于每个人都非常容易的事情。最主要的是,她还没有准备好接受自己。
很多人相信性向是流动的,但是除了生理取向,乔治更需要的是自己从内心深处接受,多年来理想的生活场景将要有变更。因为她没有设想过这种可能,所以二十多年的想象此时要转向一个空白的场景,不可能她今天遇到梅,明天就说这辈子我不需要一个男人了,因为此前的理想中,这些异性幻想对象给你带来的心理慰藉,这些感受还是分明的。这是一个持久而复杂的变更,很难一蹴而就。
乔治有一群婊子朋友,她怪罪朋友们只讲肤浅的笑话不谈深刻的问题,不关心自己,朋友回敬她那你为什么不跟我说呢?我不知道她对你有多重要。
很多时候我们只需要过好今天想好明天就好了,至于很久的以后,没人能说清。梅需要依赖,没有毒品就靠爱情,没有爱情或许就靠家人,乔治则说不准自己以后会不会喜欢别的女孩。【你是我唯一喜欢的女孩】听起来是很浪漫的事情。
乔治出柜其实并没有遭遇阻碍,只是她给自己设下了太多限制。
勇敢站出来做此时此刻想做的事情,面对自己,是最简单的选择,省去踌躇焦虑,略作考量就去选择,直接承担结果。有时候,不需要给自己和事件贴上严格的标签,生活可能没有想象的那么糟,总要向前走的。
另一边,梅则生活的毫无限制,所以当她进入乔治的生活,乔治的限制都成了她的枷锁,她也要学着成长。因为在乎所以隐瞒,但也因为在乎所以必须要坦诚相待,共渡难关。
最后一句:乔治手受伤要朋友给梅打电话,手机里存的备注是corn,是本人心里全剧最甜一场戏!!
Yes, I titled my review by using Jeanette Winterson’s biography for reference. It is true if you look it up in Douban, a Chinese version IMDB/Facebook, Feel Good will in the recommendation list as the searching result. In this website, people retitle this show as ‘Drunk in London’. It is accurate to use Drunk to describe the main character Mae Martin’s life predicament. She wants to get on the right path but couldn't help making a mess, she tries to be normal but cannot get rid of the psychological hint that ‘You need to accept you have a problem’, she wants to build up a stable intimate relationship but loses control due to emotional insecurity. But I still prefer the original title ‘Feel good’. It is hard to be normal in this high-demand world, feeling good is enough.
The encounter
After watching the series in one sitting, I can safely say Mae Martin is the second gay girl character I feel myself fall in love with after Anne Lister in Gentleman Jack. (Sorry, Suranne!) She is a special friend being with me in this strange self-isolation period. Can I call it love in the time of cholera? I couldn’t help replaying the scene Mae and George encountering and kissing in the pub. How romantic it is when you find someone in the crowd only laughing at your stuff, getting your point while you’re being ignored by others. England’s rose and the Canadian corn are like a blazing fire and dry wood. It is not all about how a tomboy chase a straight girl and how a straight girl seduce an unconfident lesbian. This is a vibrant start that I bet each girl is longing for. You might have a relatable journey that you are falling for a person who is not of the same clan but you think the fate drops from the clouds and the refreshing relationship will be working between you two. After oversharing with a stranger, you believe you have a bond and that’s hard to find in life.
Things usually happen like that, but most beautiful encounters will not end in well. Five minutes past, Mae and George are standing inside and outside the curtain, which implies George is stepping into her life and will be a part of her story. In fact, it does. This is the most subtle camera structure in EP1. It reminds me of how I met my exes, how we consume each other and how I lost them in the end. I suddenly realise I see my own reflection in Mae’s pupils when she says ‘I am not intense’.
Between normal and abnormal
It is rather to say Feel Good is a dark story than rom-com. At least, let’s say it is a heart-breaking life story dress like a love story. Mae Martin's tribulations she experienced in her career, family, and relationships are the main topics of the show. Before that, I’ve had enough of messy ‘permutation and combination’ style relationships in The L Word. Hetero audience hunt for novelty in LGBT TV drama but ignore character’s daily concerns as ordinary persons. They also have issues of how to repair the parent-child relationship, how to express who they really are in front of their friend who is always in the dominant position. Feel good has a unique texture with life-like characters. Each character in this show is so real. Their witty dialogues tickle my fancy all the time.
I can feel the director and the writer manage to keep up a high level of real emotions throughout the show and they capture characters’ dazzling personalities with a brisk pace. In this story, Mae and George are both like premature babies in the incubates, waiting for growth to be big, confident flowers. The director did not portray them as aliens but show strong empathy to care their own inner development. We witness their journeys in pain and sober.
My inner journey of watching "Feel Good" is like a roller-coaster.
E1: Oh!!! Mae and George are just adorable!
E2: Well...I changed my mind. I'd better stand for Mae and Lava?
E3: It is a bloody embodiment of "Please never date a straight girl unless you want to date for floods of tears."
Mae is an authentic, awkward, blunt, needy, sensitive girl with forlorn hope on George’s love. In her whole life, she has felt she is not in the right place. There is ‘other place’ she supposes to be. She thinks people are just swapping one addiction for another, while George is her another addiction. My favourite scene is in the EP3. Mae feels humiliated and a bit angry when being told to enjoy the party. Her confession broke my heart for real.
‘You grew up rich and white and straight and hot, you won the lottery. Of course, you want to dance. You're surrounded by people that want to fuck you. Of course, I don't want to dance in front of people that would have bullied me in high school. And you are too ashamed to touch me. If you want me to feel confident then hold my hand.’
It is not a gay thing. Any underrepresented people could relate to it. There used to be a moment you thought someone in the crowd could see you, but now you found this person knew nothing about your feelings. You notice the intangible huge gap between you. That really hurts.
As the representative of straight girl, Binky holds the opinion that ‘birds of a feather flock together’ by bring Mae and her lesbian cousin together. It is like saying ‘Hey gay girl should stay in your small bubble. That is the norm.’ You all know the hilarious result. Two girls hi each other and ‘see you’ soon. I laughed at this stuff not because there is less possibility for two Tomboys to fall in love with each other (on the contrary, they may slag off each other), but shocked by people’ ignorance that they think a lesbian will definitely like another lesbian since your are of the same kind. Come on. We are all human beings having clear love and hate. The gentle satire to some self-righteous people is one of the highlighted moments in this show. Sorry, your norm is ridiculous.
People distorts the definitions of ‘normal’ and fasten it to the minority. I became to realise the reason why the writer did not let Mae choose Lava, another lesbian girl who’s crush on her, even though a lot of my friends stand for them. ‘If you were my girlfriend, I’d make you come in under a minute.’ is the coolest line in this show. Lava is cold but affectionate in her own way. The writer probably wants to break the stereotype that it is easier to love your own kind. I think Mae must bottle a hidden line up: Hey, I cannot love you just because you are lesbian too.
Reframe your self
After watching it a second time, I changed my impression of George. I shouldn’t have been so mean to her when I watched the first time last week. This time, I see her struggling in her new identity. She hurries so much to put lesbian label on herself by saying ‘I have a girlfriend’ to the wedding photographer and ‘I belong to here. I finger my girlfriend a lot’ to the bartender, in order to cover up her inner uncertainty. ‘Your sobriety. Your gender identity. Is there anything isn’t my responsibility?’ She is facing the greatest pressure in her life. Being with Mae is like pulling up seedlings in her mind to help herself grow, in friendship, and in the workplace. But actually, the key point is not about learning how to be a lesbian. Instead, she needs to learn how to express a real herself, uncover her real feelings to the people surrounded, just like Binky says ‘If you are bothered, just tell us.’
There is another storyline of Mae’s narcotics anonymous meeting. This kind of support group is quite common to see in British/American dramas, like Killing Eve and Flack. As a student with a coaching background, I feel negatively surprised to see team members sitting in a circle and saying ‘I am an addict’ followed by self-introduction. Is it really work to settle a matter by giving themselves psychological suggestion that they still have problems? Or they just gather to find I am not the worst one. In EP 4, Lisa Kudrow hits the nail on the head. Everyone feel better or you feel better when people address the elephant in the room? Every time when Mae suffers a setback in relationship with George, she turns to Maggie and Lava. However, the temporary sense of belonging is self-deception.
Like her mother, Mae is a strong, impulsive, stubborn women. But she also has the vulnerable side.
‘But you told me you loved me first. That was the best moment of my life. I’m embarrassed. I let myself think that someone like you could be with someone like me. I’m not a boy. I’m not even a girl. I’m like a failed version of both. Why am I such a freak?’
She has so many feelings. What she wants is being accepted as what she is, being stick with a new healthy addiction. That is George.
In the last episode in season 1, Mae decides to return to George. The plot seems to quite rush. I wouldn’t say they are the perfect couple and I still doubt the relationship will last. But I would like to regard them as a pair of ‘learning buddy’ in this journey. George is the still and quiet habitat and Mae is the Pac-Man. Story is over. Life needs to go on. They both have too much to learn, not only for love but for lives.
Alien they seem to be. No mortal eye could see. The intimate welding of their history. by Thomas Hardy
Other things I want to address
Besides main characters, each supporting role is so lovely: Phil, Binky, Mae’s father, the bartender, and the bellboy in horror hotel. I love the script! I am especially impressed by Mae’s father. He has the wisdom of affairs handling and can read people’s mind accurately.
"You are still and strong, you wear your heart on your sleeves, you are fiercely passionate."
‘Your young lady must be needing you now. She’s off on her own, adrift in uncharted seas.’
He is absolutely one of the best father roles I’ve ever seen.
Now I can say I am ready to graduate from Feel Good after finishing this review. Thank you, Lisa, you remind me of the scotch egg I’ve had in Yorkshire. I am glad you enjoy it too. I will probably visit Blackpool to see the beautiful sunset one day. See you guys in season 2!
by Lssiedusky
2020.3.31
深夜刷完了6集,希望有第二季,分别表达一下我对两个主角的看法(如标题)
George
George的主要性格特点是不轻易表露自己的心迹,比较内向的一个人。这一点也导致她在身份认同上不是那么快。这个女主的直女变弯心路历程很真实,她因为爱而成长,主要有两个转折点,第一个是摔伤后让朋友call corn(也是全剧最甜的点哈哈)然后在医院里表露心迹,其实前面也有伏笔就是她参加完婚礼回家想象着对mae说 love you,marry with her。而在喝多受伤进医院打了吗啡之后,则第一次表达出了自己的想法,对于一个直女了那么多年的人来说真的很不容易。第二个转折点我认为是在教室对着喊别人基佬的女生大声呵斥并冲到校长办公室说应该教学生lgbt相关知识,此时她已经逐步认同自己喜欢女生所以才会注意到基佬这个词对gay来说有多么冒犯(这在以前在她潜意识里大约是不会引起强烈反感的现象),她在学着认同自己也在找寻什么是真正的朋友,开始学着表达走出自己的舒适区,六集下来George有很大的成长,她试着去体贴mae,甚至最后坦诚说要一起承担包袱(当然开始出现单方面的包容,这会让对方愈发觉得自己是一个victim,这是一个隐患,如果有第二季这样的心态会出问题)
Mae
有两条线,一条和父母的,一条和女友。两条线都体现了mae是一个内心脆弱敏感不肯承担责任且总是以受害者自居的人。
首先是父母线,中间有一段是父亲对mae说在把mae赶出家门后,母亲天天跟着看mae,我看到这个觉得可能是一个母女缓和的关键点,但似乎mae一直一直介意自己被抛弃,依旧没有安全感,道歉也只是为了获得对方的关注与爱,并不是发自内心的真诚,正如她开头说:这是第十二条中的第九步。偏偏母亲是个倔强的人,对方越是强调自己的受害者身份,mae妈越是倔,于是在父母线上的和解尝试是非常失败的。不过最后一集mae哭着说想回家时,母亲还是心软了,毕竟是亲妈,但这其实不是真正意义上的和解。但不可否认的是,没有人是天生的瘾君子,小时候到底发生了什么导致mae会这样未可知。但25岁的成年人真的不要一直强调说对方的抛弃,如果真的不要了怎么可能随时同意和你打视频电话(狗头)。
女友线,看了有点生气,在一起这段感情中很明显George其实有更多的付出,mae一直都没想过要改变自己重塑自己,让自己忙起来独立起来,一开始的粘人和急着寻求对方在朋友面前介绍自己以获得安全感并一次次以爱之名半胁迫,完全不顾对方也只是一个刚被掰弯自己心理建设都没有做全的自己的爱人,后来身份被承认之后又被迫害妄想症觉得对方理想的是男生并自己逼迫自己往那边靠拢,却始终不敢坦诚地与对方就这一方面进行交流,可能一开始看了会觉得mae很可怜,焦虑得睡不着觉,自卑不自信,但自信是自己给的,交了那么多女朋友首先要对自己有身份认同,我是女生我喜欢女生,对方喜欢我是我这个人不管男女,不是因为男性特质也不是因为女性特质,自己就是自己。然后就去爱对方,如果对方最后真的选择男性了,那就是对方的问题,而我(mae)有真诚地去爱你,展露真实的自我,那你不喜欢我我难过但也没办法,恋爱中忌讳的就是很多过度的焦虑破坏了爱情本身的美好,然后分手后又陷入自卑之中无法自拔。恶性循环。和男性相比之后的自卑其实在很多t的心里都会有,但请相信如果你的爱人是真的爱你,你不要被这个所桎梏,你就是真诚地去照顾对方表达自己的爱,这样才是一个良性循环。而且在剧中很明显的一点是,mae因为自己的自卑其实把对方也带入了消极,正如最后George把这形容为包袱就可以体现。自己的自卑自己无法处理还要对方的包容理解来哄着你,自己被分手消极还和别人make love。真的幼稚!
爱得真诚坦荡,不要伤害自己深爱的人。
剧里那么开诚布公的讨论性别标签和成瘾性人格,评论里还一嘴一个t,粘人这种词,,唉,只能说这么私人化的经历分享给你们看真是糟践了
看片名以为又会是我最喜欢的尴尬贫穷爆笑蠢蠢剧,没想到质量竟然有点超出预期!前面几集颇为老梗,后面两集扭转颓势渐入佳境。表面是个姬姥&直女的故事,稍深一点的层面上又讨论了依赖心理、成瘾心理、对身体的接纳和探索、围绕身体的自我认同。难得的是它愿意深入直掰弯这种常规故事的心理层面,而不是将它消解在简易的浪漫中,同志与前·直女交往中双方完全不同又最最微妙的心理焦虑,在第五集的脱口秀一幕被推至舞台最中央,那种实感,足以将所有拉拉的直女PTSD和所有直女的掰弯PTSD激发出来。我站Lava。【以及,我实在是想吐槽一些短评很久了,总是带着莫名其妙的男性标准去审视拉拉中短头发的女生,嫌弃人家“铁踢”,又嫌弃人家“黏人”,好像T最好不要铁,当了T就最好不要黏,你想想你的话有逻辑吗?
过气乐队SUM41宣传片(不是
这个快而有序的节奏和妈妈是Phoebe值得加星加快乐;六集内容算是粗略描绘了瘾和自我认同这个困境,mae的毒瘾表面来自于依赖和焦虑,但可能深层次的东西和George意外出柜后的漂流感没什么太大差别,是自我认同这个过程太不顺利了,顾虑太多不会如意,毫无顾忌也不见得就能骄傲做自己,难免自卑自艾,需要找一些东西或一个人,借一段关系来放置自己,emm,相互扶持很重要,但自我成长能够自我解决其实更重要。
从未见过如此聒噪、烦人、自怨自艾、毫无自信的踢,我甚至怀疑她都没能做到自我认同,却还非要逼着自己的直女女票出柜,无语…这剧完全不像lgbt剧,两个人没有cp感,看她俩谈恋爱挺糟心的…拉瓦和菲比加一星
Mae Martin怎么搞的30岁还像17岁 Hot mess with puppy eyes and dark histories. IM ADDICTED
Refreshing并且金句频频。“你喜欢跳舞是因为你出身在富有的家庭,是白人,是直女,长得漂亮,你周围都是想fuck你的人,所以你自信,如果你也想让我自信的话,那么就握住我的手,在人群里握住我的手。” (一晚上就看完凭记忆瞎写)
搞错没有,皮肤苍白,情感脆弱,有各种issue还是脱口秀演员,编剧是不是抄袭我脑子里的理想女孩。(除了发型)
在我十九年的人生里 我从未见过如此粘人的t
“如何让一个t爱上你?” “装直女。” 啊啊啊为什么不选lava啊lava多可爱呜呜
Lava我可以
"you are loved"
除了女主帅爆了,剧情以及everytheng else 都好难看…
人还是要有一个宏愿给自己作为定锚。现代社会饿不死大部分人了,女主妈妈“菲比”也说,“我们给了你所有你想要的,但你还是去当毒贩。你就是个被宠坏的小公主。”其实所有让你成瘾并且产生负面影响的行为依赖都应该被检视一遍。人就像小小星火在自己的欲望和懦弱之塔里燃烧,从小最早接触的是俄国文学的人,看这个是会难受的。因为它把苦难抹掉了,有爱缝补一切。正如我们生活的日常。但终归,还是粗放了些。爱,是那些溺水之人的辅助呼吸机,能救他们一命,但也仅此而已。苦难才能让他们顺畅呼吸。但这是个喜剧小品,松弛温暖,女朋友大度真诚。感情戏拍的很真实。成年人的成瘾生活还有待挖掘。
从剧作结构来说其实并没有跳脱出同类型题材的常规叙事,可预料可借鉴。成瘾心理和亲密关系的情感表现和处理上加入了拉拉对直女的特定境遇,人类还是有情绪互通、焦虑共享的层面。先确认肉体,再确认精神,灵肉合一需要刻意追求。Mae算百合中的小奶狗,Phil说得对,每只puppy都像她😂
这部细腻的生活叙事,是给OCD、PTSD、焦虑症、双相情感障碍、边缘人格障碍等等,受过焦虑、脆弱、低自尊等情绪困扰的人看的,观影体验是私人的、疗愈的、自我对话的,如果你无法代入,不是LGBT角色与你的刻版印象不符的问题,是你活得太“光明”了,get不到这些暗角。
就我觉得那个lava很可吗,想被🌞
太超预期!好多细节touching极了!不愧是mae的亲身经历改编:struggle with drug 背后是因为对自己存在意义的不确定冰冷的妈妈毫不犹豫张开怀抱等她归来 女友精准准备一切想破镜重圆 女主看似很惨 实际上是最幸运的一个 有那么多爱包围她 期待有第二季啊!
性的探索性向的探索和上瘾问题,以及英国年轻人可以多么的mean。直女的诱惑 plus 瘾君子的诱惑。有些似曾相识的问题让我有非常多的不安全感……封城第4天,一天刷了一部剧。
so,t的心态是,我在某种程度上把自己当作男人,但你不能把我当成男人?