Sabrina movie plot
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Merle 2022-03-25 09:01:10
1. It may be that the culture and aesthetics are really different. The part when the Bao family went to the tennis court with champagne was like an old hooligan, both in behavior and appearance. The latter is slightly better, but I don't know how Hepburn fell in love with this kind of person. 2. Hepburn's part-time job is very beautiful, and the temperament is different before and after the performance. Movies under the big star system also have great advantages! Several paragraphs are so beautiful! 3. The speed of the plot entering the main topic is a little slow, and the plot behind is not too novel, but the classic method is used skillfully and correctly, which is reassuring and comfortable. Focus on the chemistry of the two actors and appreciate each passage. 4 is very imaginative, creating some small comedy spots, light and casual. Wilder's comedy is really good!
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Chelsea 2022-03-26 09:01:07
One of Wilder's films is more general, mainly because the layout is relatively small. But the lines are still great. Hepburn is also quite suitable for the role, and it is not annoying to play such a silly girl at all; although the setting of Bogart's CEO's handsome man's plan is a bit of a second and moral judgment is a bit hehe, but he actually plays it well. Not dirty at all, which is the magic of this movie. In the end, I actually felt sympathy for Huahua's younger son. What's going on? ! To be able to make this kind of nonsense film so beautifully, Old Wilder is too strong. The lines are also word-by-word, and they play all kinds of puns, which has always been very cool. The supporting roles are excellent. It would have been better to use more of the parody of French food. The part of Bogart on the boat was too imposing. This kind of star was born for this kind of pose, but the two did not match up a bit, but there was an inexplicable sense of mild joy.
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The Professor: [inspecting the students' soufflés] Too low. Too pale. Too heavy. Too low. Too *high*, you are exaggerating. Fair. So-so. Sloppy.
[he gets to the Baron]
The Professor: Mm. Superb. My dear Baron, you have not lost your touch.
[he looks at Sabrina's]
The Professor: Much too low.
Sabrina Fairchild: [looking at her soufflé] I don't know what happened.
Baron St. Fontanel: I will tell you what happened: you forgot to turn on the oven.
Sabrina Fairchild: Oh!
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Linus Larrabee: [after Sabrina puts a romantic record on the phonograph] Sabrina.
Sabrina Fairchild: Yes?
Linus Larrabee: Do you mind if we turn this off?
Sabrina Fairchild: Why?
Linus Larrabee: [pained] Because.
Sabrina Fairchild: Don't you like it?
Linus Larrabee: I used to like it.
Sabrina Fairchild: [taking the record off] Certain songs bring back certain memories to me, too. Did you love her?
Linus Larrabee: I'd rather not talk about it.
Sabrina Fairchild: I'm sorry.
Linus Larrabee: That's all right.
Sabrina Fairchild: It's so strange to think of you being touched by a woman. I always thought you walked alone.
Linus Larrabee: No man walks alone from choice.
Sabrina Fairchild: As a child I used to watch you, from the window over the garage. Coming and going, always wearing your black homburg and carrying a briefcase and umbrella. I thought you could never belong to anyone. Never care for anyone.
Linus Larrabee: Oh, yes, the cold businessman behind his marble desk, way up in his executive suite. No emotions, just ice water in his veins and ticker tape coming from his heart. And yet... one day that same cold businessman, high up in a skyscraper, opens a window, steps out on a ledge... stands there for three hours wondering... if he should jump.
Sabrina Fairchild: Because of her?