Is it easy to be young? Valeria-Guy Germanika's "Everybody Dies and I Stay" won several awards at Cannes and sparked fierce debate among viewers. Their main reasons certainly became how the life of modern youth and their relationship with each other and parents is depicted.
It was like an official part of the review. The neo-official is about to begin. Youth over time is colored in the memory of pink and rainbow houses and recalled all sorts of crazy antics, sometimes even the scale of the drunk, but at the same time a person does not remember what it cost him all these “feats” and what a terrible morning hangover. The film shows primarily this hangover. What the heroines of the film went through actually went through every young man. Yes, the guys were a little different, they had no deprivation of innocence, but they had their probably no less cruel problems, up to turning the opposite sex into an object for sex and nothing more.
It was in any schools, only in elite institutions to a nice cocktail – cigarettes, alcohol, sex were added even drugs and perhaps even greater loneliness due to the huge study load.
And someone who ran away from home at the age of 15, in fact, could well understand someone who studied in a special school.
Of course, you can perceive this disco as a turning point for these girls, as the border of two worlds: child and adult. But I’m not sure that’s the case, just because this disco didn’t change anything even in Katha, which only became harder to send parents, before that it sent mainly teachers.
In the late 80s, there was a movie called Is It Easy to Be Young? The Germanic answer is clearly negative.
And the viewer can only remember his experience and admit that in fact the world goes in circles, well, or not to accept the film as such.
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