Current location - Health Preservation Learning Network - Slimming men and women - The Danish Girl prototype story
The Danish Girl prototype story
The prototype story of The Danish Girl is the story of transsexual artist Einar Wegener and his wife Gerda Wegner in 1930s.

Einar became popular in the art world as a model with his wife dressed in women's clothes, which awakened her real gender-conscious women. After some struggle, she finally got forgiveness from her wife, bravely underwent sex-change surgery and became the real Lily Wegener. Unfortunately, she died of rejection in the second stage of the operation.

In this film, Einar Wegener and Gerda Wei Gena were originally a pair of painters. They are brilliant, love each other and are immortal couples. But one day everything changed. Once Gerda was stood up by the invited model, and she temporarily decided to let her husband change into women's clothes as her model. At first, her husband was very repulsive, but later she liked this feeling.

Film evaluation

The core story of this film revolves around the first transsexual person in history-"The Danish Girl" Einar Wegener. Although Eddie Redmayne's performance is not as appropriate as Thunder in Silence in The Theory of Everything, it still accurately captures Einar's sensitive characteristics of wandering between gender identity, vulnerability and persistence.

"The Danish Girl" challenges the male audience's perception and gender stance to a certain extent, and it is still uncomfortable to see the close-up of the male protagonist's thigh-blocking organ when he takes off his clothes. However, there are no two identical leaves, and there are no people who look exactly alike. The biggest sociological significance of this film is to show the audience how beautiful and different each individual is.