You're Not You movie plot
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Dedric 2022-02-19 08:01:27
In order to prevent dizziness from watching dazzling action movies on the plane...it gave me too many surprises and warmth! ! ! The label of the film itself reminds people of the "Ice Bucket Challenge" a few years ago! Not only limited to patients, but also some very soapy love lines! It also provides a perspective of "respecting the wishes of patients" in all kinds of persuasion to "live actively"! At the same time, it also discussed whether "the care and love around him" is also a kind of discrimination! The soundtrack is very good. At the beginning, there was Stardust by Lena, the niche German female singer I love, almost screaming on the plane! The husband's "betrayal" and change of heart, the careful care of seemingly unreliable "care workers", and the optimistic attitude of patients are all considered the last "hospice care"! Finally, I pulled away from the sound system and relied on the soundtrack and silence. I really cried to death when I saw the mouth shape "I'm here"! The title You're Not You is not only patient Kate’s own declaration, but also Beka’s advice on self-awareness! / But then again, do you think "hospice care" is not good? ? ?
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Crawford 2022-02-19 08:01:27
Came for the eldest sister Emmy Rossum...mainly to pay attention to the performance of the eldest sister. ER still has the shadow of Fio, but at the end it performed the rare sorrow of Fio. (Although I still think that the section where the ceiling of the Shameless laundry shop fell off is too ridiculous) The story structure is like "Unreachable" is also a story of a disabled person and a carer.
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[last lines]
Bec: Now you gotta promise me something. I'm gonna pay you a compliment, and you just gotta lay there and take it. Thanks for the manolos, and for teaching me how to cook. But the biggest thing that I have to thank you for is that you didn't let me fuck this up. 'Cause no one in my life has ever done that for me.
Kate: [nod] Go now...
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John: Marilyn called herself the black Lou Gehrig. Most of you know what that means. But some of Marilyn's younger friends might appreciate knowing that LOu Gehrig was a baseball player for the New York Yankees. He played in a record 2,130 straight games over 17 seasons until ALS forced him to reture. He bud farewell to his fans and teammates by saying, "I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth." What he meant was that although adversity had weakened his body, it had strengthened his connection to those around him.