Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Why did The Listening Girl win the best Oscar? what do you think?

Why did The Listening Girl win the best Oscar? what do you think?

The Listening Girl focuses on the disadvantaged group-the hearing-impaired people. You can call it the "theme" of America, but I must make sure that the emotional core of this film is enough to move people's hearts. "Deaf-mute" and "music" are both related to sound. The sound is a clue carefully designed by the director, which triggered a series of dramatic conflicts and connected the whole plot.

The film revolves around a special fisherman's family. Except Ruby, a girl, her parents and brother are deaf and deaf, with hearing impairment. Ruby is a communication channel between the family and the outside world. She is responsible for translating the sign language of her family to normal people, and then conveying the words of normal people to her family in sign language.

The obstacle of "sound" leads to bad interaction, which leads to dramatic conflicts. If it is good-looking, Listening Girl is the simplest and least tiring of the ten nominated films. From this perspective, the award "Listening Girl" caters to the audience's emotions to the greatest extent. Winning the prize really caters to the audience's voice to the greatest extent.

The Listening Girl also won the Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor. "Listening Girl" won only these three nominations at first, but all won awards. The winning rate reached 100%. It can be said that this is the biggest winner, not one of them. The film seems to be discussing the social challenges faced by the deaf, but the director skillfully shows the unknown side of these special families and their deeper predicament through the role of Ruby.

When they come from a deaf-mute family and only have their own hearing, coda individuals like Ruby feel lonely because of their differences, but many times their feelings for the sandwich layer are even incomprehensible to their relatives. Loneliness surrounded by warmth is a true portrayal of its irony. Is family a sweet personal responsibility or an inescapable shackle? And standing at the crossroads of life, can Ruby strike a balance between her hometown time and her dreams? These problems have become the core performance problems of the movie "Listening Girl".

However, although The Listening Girl was adapted from the French film The Bellevue Family, American director Sian Heder made a good partial re-creation of the full text. The core interpretation is a combination of the humorous expressions of American red-necked class and deformed group, and the cultural construction of "family" plot in American movies for a long time-the same expression strategy as American movies such as Out of Reach, Green Book and Wonder Boy.