This movie really touched me. I was so crushed in the end my head was hurting me from all this thinking. But it was worth it. I learned a lot from that movie. I learned how to be a better person, how to be modest and that every single little thing is going to work out in the end. Like John Lennon said: "Everything will be okay in the end. If it's not okay, it's not the end." I'm kinda trying to live up to that oh-so-smart quote that really is something. That really brings out those emotions in you - comfort and zen. That someone really guarantees you it will be alright - the words you are so longing to hear. Now, in this movie, though, everything seemed to go down. I mean, if we first stop by the families George's family wasn't so honest, if I may say so, and Sally's wasn't real. The mother was still living the youth that passed her long time ago and has real complexes in her head which, surprisingly, didn't much effect on our little Sally as I thought it would. I've seen many cases like this.
Even though I expected a different ending, the real one wasn't bad at all. I was just surprised how George still accepted Sally after all she's done to him, but in the way: she hasn't done anything, she was just living life and it was hard for George to accept that and it would be for anyone, if you think about it. George was a sensitive human being who was overthinking while Sally was a realist and that's just funny how this movie showed us that when we meet totally different people, we sometimes open our eyes. George was a dreamer and I totally got him, that's the point. He was thinking out of the box, yet sometimes, to survive, you must adapt. He found that useless and a waste of time, but in reality he just couldn't face the world. Besides him being a total dreamer, he was also very sad. I completely figured that out, when he got out with Sally and they were dancing and she lost him and broke the promise and so on. He felt for the fist time that he was cool. It actually kinda made me warm at heart. He was a little fragile creature that if you only touch could have fallen to million pieces. I mean, that's how I saw him. But for me, he was also pretty cool, even if he didn't seemed to very much. He was special and not many people could see that. For instance Dustin. He thought he was cool and all, but wasn't really interested in him since he couldn't see beyond the worn out coat and elongated shirts. Dustin thought he himself was too cool for George, even though, in my opinion, was exactly the opposite. Dustin was full of himself, arrogant and sassy. I mean, at first I liked him for being all artistic and all, but after the presentation in the school and later the scene in Dustin's studio where George introduces Sally and Dustin, I found him disgusting. Like not in the looks, but in the behavior, actions, body language. I knew it from the start that he and George will not get along as George hoped.
But the movie itself I found sad and nice at the same time. As sad I mean all the drama at both houses, George's mind, his poor little lonely soul and the shit he had to deal with in school, but I didn't pity him that much because we all have to go through this and I kinda disliked him for his opinion of school and all. I think he could try a bit harder. But I understand all these artistic minds and their rebellious hearts. He wanted to be significant in the world, yet he wasn't prepared until he met Sally. And I knew something like that was going to happen to him (I didn't watch the trailer - I never do because they always reveal the whole story instead of just a little part of the plot). I do believe in justice in this world and I knew everything was going to be fine for him. The school, family, his friendship with both Dustin and Sally. He was so rock bottom, I thought, that nothing could get worse for him. And right in that moment of collapse and desperation, he met her and in some meaning his life did turn around; on better or on worse, in the end, we found that it turned on the better.
And as nice I mean the greeting with Sally. Just the first time their eyes met, which was on the roof, on the top of the school. And how he took all the risk, all the bullshit just so Sally could walk away without a scratch. It kinda shows his gentleman side, how he took all the responsibility. Not many had (or have) that and Sally saw that. She saw the sweet part in him, even though she so used him on the Valentine's Day, I was so pissed off. He really didn't deserve that and I'm happy that he just walked away. I mean, he knew his limits, he knew to where a girl can play with him, but not crossing that line. Although I must say, he should've said something to Sally about his feelings. I know that he was really afraid, but he shouldn't be! I'm telling that to all guys out there ... Tell her that you love her now. Or it might be too late tomorrow. You never know if she feels the same and if you know that she's the one, she won't just quit all connections with you. If she's the right one. I know girls who would use guys, too, and however you (girls) want to revenge yourself or your girl-friends and how other guys hurt them, you have no right whatsoever to hurt another guy, who has completely nothing to do with it. It is totally unfair and it makes you no different than those guys who hurt your friend. I wish girls would just understand that. But they're not all the same, just like guys aren't (I'm probably the only girl who've said this). I know the difference and I know who's worth the effort, even though I mix it up sometimes (since I only fall for them bad boys). I wish I could meet a guy, too, who feels the same.
Anyway, what I loved the most about the whole movie is the very end. And I mean two parts. First: how Sally cancelled all the plans with Dustin just to be with George, how she finally understood. I wasn't sure, though, if she's really gonna go back to him until she appeared at those doors. My heart skipped a beat when I saw the surprise in George's eyes. I was so happy for him and in that very moment I knew everything was going to be okay. I was starting to get that feeling when he finally got to his senses and decided to graduate (although it wasn't sure until the end) and make something out of himself (even though I hate it when people say that only education can make you worth something, it is mostly true these days). I really felt happy when they were just standing there in the Art classroom, how the New York was shinning in the background out of the windows like never before, how they slowly hold hands and confessed their mutual affection and how they together stared in the beautiful painting George has painted. I found her more similar to Eva Green, but in general, it was a beautiful and meaningful painting. It reflected Sally in George's point of view. I understood the mix of so many colors as how he saw her as a person full of energy and positive power and also how she could be down and sad in a moment. He painted her in all her colors and still thought of her as a gorgeous woman; inside and out, and that, in my opinion, is love. How he accepted her after all she's done to him. That is love.
But the movie itself I found sad and nice at the same time. As sad I mean all the drama at both houses, George's mind, his poor little lonely soul and the shit he had to deal with in school, but I didn't pity him that much because we all have to go through this and I kinda disliked him for his opinion of school and all. I think he could try a bit harder. But I understand all these artistic minds and their rebellious hearts. He wanted to be significant in the world, yet he wasn't prepared until he met Sally. And I knew something like that was going to happen to him (I didn't watch the trailer - I never do because they always reveal the whole story instead of just a little part of the plot). I do believe in justice in this world and I knew everything was going to be fine for him. The school, family, his friendship with both Dustin and Sally. He was so rock bottom, I thought, that nothing could get worse for him. And right in that moment of collapse and desperation, he met her and in some meaning his life did turn around; on better or on worse, in the end, we found that it turned on the better.
And as nice I mean the greeting with Sally. Just the first time their eyes met, which was on the roof, on the top of the school. And how he took all the risk, all the bullshit just so Sally could walk away without a scratch. It kinda shows his gentleman side, how he took all the responsibility. Not many had (or have) that and Sally saw that. She saw the sweet part in him, even though she so used him on the Valentine's Day, I was so pissed off. He really didn't deserve that and I'm happy that he just walked away. I mean, he knew his limits, he knew to where a girl can play with him, but not crossing that line. Although I must say, he should've said something to Sally about his feelings. I know that he was really afraid, but he shouldn't be! I'm telling that to all guys out there ... Tell her that you love her now. Or it might be too late tomorrow. You never know if she feels the same and if you know that she's the one, she won't just quit all connections with you. If she's the right one. I know girls who would use guys, too, and however you (girls) want to revenge yourself or your girl-friends and how other guys hurt them, you have no right whatsoever to hurt another guy, who has completely nothing to do with it. It is totally unfair and it makes you no different than those guys who hurt your friend. I wish girls would just understand that. But they're not all the same, just like guys aren't (I'm probably the only girl who've said this). I know the difference and I know who's worth the effort, even though I mix it up sometimes (since I only fall for them bad boys). I wish I could meet a guy, too, who feels the same.
Anyway, what I loved the most about the whole movie is the very end. And I mean two parts. First: how Sally cancelled all the plans with Dustin just to be with George, how she finally understood. I wasn't sure, though, if she's really gonna go back to him until she appeared at those doors. My heart skipped a beat when I saw the surprise in George's eyes. I was so happy for him and in that very moment I knew everything was going to be okay. I was starting to get that feeling when he finally got to his senses and decided to graduate (although it wasn't sure until the end) and make something out of himself (even though I hate it when people say that only education can make you worth something, it is mostly true these days). I really felt happy when they were just standing there in the Art classroom, how the New York was shinning in the background out of the windows like never before, how they slowly hold hands and confessed their mutual affection and how they together stared in the beautiful painting George has painted. I found her more similar to Eva Green, but in general, it was a beautiful and meaningful painting. It reflected Sally in George's point of view. I understood the mix of so many colors as how he saw her as a person full of energy and positive power and also how she could be down and sad in a moment. He painted her in all her colors and still thought of her as a gorgeous woman; inside and out, and that, in my opinion, is love. How he accepted her after all she's done to him. That is love.

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