Trainspotting (V) December 1, 2011 at 5:36 pm
Under the cold and melancholy melodies from ldquo;Perfect Dayrdquo; of Lou Reed, the unconscious Mark was pulled into the hospital. When he was staying in the bed, he was continuously annoyed by terrible illusions. He saw Diane singing songs naughtily; he saw Spode sitting behind the iron gate of prison with handcuffs and anklets; he saw the dead baby on the roof crawling closer and closer to him; he even saw Babe, the man with serious violence tendency, getting into his bed. Mark struggled and screamed in these nightmarish liiusions.
If the film was just a movie only rendering the degeneration of youths, then it should be dumped into the dustbin after watching it. However, this film was not such simple movie. Every time I watched it, I would be grasped by a heavy sadness. Behind the degeneration of these youths, I saw their painful struggling and heard their despaired shouting. Those youths leading by Mark didnrsquo;t go astray due to their fatuity and ignorance. Actually, they could be deemed as those drug abusers with self-consciousness. They just wanted to avoid facing all kinds of annoying problems in the real life. From some point, you could recognize their profligacy on youth as a helpless release of their anger. They didnrsquo;t want to follow the straitlaced life style their parents had, but they also didnrsquo;t figure out the real road they actually wanted to take, so they felt they were like the ground in Scotland and they were abandoned by the whole world. This might be the psychological process everyone would experience during his/her growth. We all knew we might live a life just like others did sooner or later. We just didnrsquo;t want to believe it was true. The difference was we didnrsquo;t have the courage to commit the last revolt with youth just like Mark did in this film.
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