Lucy, one of the hostess? Savage was born in the upper class of America. His family is in the arms business and is very rich. But her parents are very controlling. Under the education of such parents, she became a pure and earnest girl, just like a caged bird. It is precisely because of depression that the hostess yearns for married life very much. In order to expand his territory, her father paid the poor aristocrat to marry his daughter in exchange for economic benefits and Hugo's contacts.
The girl's feelings are always spring, and the woman was captured by this handsome and tall fiance and married him. As a result, slowly, she found that everything was different from what she thought. Their married life is in Morocco, a decadent, dirty, muddy and filthy country. Her husband doesn't touch himself because he is gay. He and the handsome and sexy Egyptian prince Adan? Abaza is a couple.
In the process of pleasing her husband, Lucy's repressed nature was slowly released. She made a guest appearance in a sad movie and publicly showed her dancing at the party. At this time, Lucy gradually understood her charm and became addicted to it.
Al's mistress? Sharifa is a famous prostitute in the local area. She gave up her escape for her boyfriend and returned to Tangier. ?
The two men, who had nothing in common, approached slowly. They are both equally wild and unruly, and they don't give in to power. Their light was appreciated by senior French officials. This is where they are alike, and it is also the charm of their mutual attraction. Therefore, women represented by them began to wake up, no longer controlled by male power, and did many things that seemed deviant at that time.
"Birds" takes an unusually gorgeous and fragrant retro style. The whole drama looks elegant and beautiful in costume design, and the color collocation is gorgeous and beautiful. The sky and light are colorful in the director's lens, and every picture is as refreshing and pleasing to the eye as oil painting. ?
I think I named it "bird" because it is a metaphor for repressed women, who can exert great power to break free from the cage. So, don't treat women as caged birds, or you will pay a painful price! ?