One Sings, the Other Doesn't

One Sings, the Other Doesn't 7.0

Through the lives of two women from the 1960s to the 1970s, Varda constructed a history of feminism. The story describes the 15-year relationship between two very different women. They all realized the famous saying of Simone Beaufort: "Women are not born women, they later become women." Middle-class girls in Pauline city. Contrary to the traditional conservatism of her family, she left home when she was 17 and decided to become a singer. Suzanne is a little older, a country girl whose lover committed suicide. She is alone with two illegitimate children, and the third is about to be born. Although the two women have little in common, they still get along well with each other. Then they were forced to part. Suzanne went to the south of France and set up a family planning center. Pauline organized a female minstrel band to awaken people with their songs. Years later, Pauline and Suzanne met again at a rally for abortion rights. They went back to the way they were.