Alice Sapritch

Alice Sapritch

  • Born: 1916-7-29
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Tatyana 2022-03-12 08:01:02

      Lightness and sadness that have nothing to do with grandeur

      This semester I took a class on post-1970 American cinema, starting with New Hollywood and the "Movie Brats" generation. Naturally, the new wave cannot be avoided. The New Wave had a profound impact on New Hollywood, and many films of the 1970s had a very obvious tribute to the New Wave.

      Today, I...

    • Charlie 2022-03-12 08:01:02

      gun pianist

      After watching "Shooting the Pianist", I kept thinking about a question: how did this come up? How can you make it up like this?

      The background information tells us that Truffaut was inspired by an American novel "DOWN THERE". The story, background and character description follow the genre model...

    • Merl 2022-03-21 09:03:26

      Truffaut stated that his main intention in the film was not to tell a typical crime suspense story "to express all my views on glory, success, depravity, failure, women, and love in the form of a detective story." I can understand him using his second movie to talk about the mentality of a guy who just made a name for himself but I don't agree with his views on women and love...

    • Makenzie 2022-03-17 09:01:10

      The clips are very imaginative! I kept using the same action scenes shot many times to cut into the action of the main narration, especially when I entered the heroine's room and flashed back to that scene. The chase scene is still full of Truffaut's style, running around in Paris. The version I watched was probably a castrated sex scene that was handled in a mess. The ending was too rushed and strange, but it still couldn't cover this amazing film/Women who expect their love to become famous and their dissatisfaction with their married life may be right for Lena's death She's a better ending and the hero is acquainted and goes back to the tavern to play the piano he likes

    Shoot the Piano Player quotes

    • Thérèse Saroyan: When you're lost in the night, you can't stop the shadows from closing in. It gets darker and darker. You feel trapped, you don't know what to do.

    • Thérèse Saroyan: You know how a spider works on her prey? It is as if he were cutting me in two. As if the heart were one thing and the body another.