Chris Sharp

Chris Sharp

  • Born:
  • Height: 5' 11" (1.8 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Alexanne 2022-03-25 09:01:14

      Film Review, I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore, Reality in Madness

      "Crazy reality" and "real madness" are like "me in the mirror" and "me outside the mirror", they seem different, but they are actually the same.


      The movie I'm introducing today, Nowhere to Be Home, has a similar feeling. As an award-winning film in the American Drama Unit of the 33rd Sundance Film...

    • Reynold 2021-12-27 08:01:50

      The film is full of a touch of comedy.

      The film is full of a lot of comedy, very light, but it exists everywhere. The patients in the female main ward are still talking swearing before they die, the bureaucracy and inaction of the police, and the male main can speak quiet Chinese words to the dog. The male protagonist nunchakus is very...

    • Abe 2021-12-27 08:01:50

      The two character settings are actually quite cute, and the various small details are abundant. It's just a bit too general. In recent Netflix movies, this one is much worse than "Blue Jay".

    • Tyrel 2022-04-21 09:02:51

      Very interesting black humor crime film, worth recommending.

    I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore. quotes

    • [first lines]

      Mrs. Hamble: [watching news report about a riot from her hospital bed] Just look at those goddamn monkeys.

      Ruth: Why don't we turn this off, huh?

      Mrs. Hamble: The way they shoved this country right down the fuckin' stinker. Keep your gigantic monkey dick out of my good pussy.

      [then breathes her last]

      Mrs. Hamble's Son: [a short time later her doctor] Did...? Did she have any last words?

      ER Doctor: [looks over to Ruth]

    • Ruth: Patient died today. I was in the room.

      Angie: Oh. She was special, huh?

      Ruth: No. She sucked. Oh, yeah. She was a real shithead. But it doesn't matter. They'll roll her out... and she'll become smoke. Just... carbon. My grandma Sally, that was her silver that they stole, you know?

      Angie: Yeah.

      Ruth: She literally breathed life into people who'd been exploded. She was a war nurse.

      Angie: Yeah, I remember.

      Ruth: Spent her retirement bringing dinner to folks with cancer. And then she had a stroke... and she was just... just carbon too. And now I'm the only one who remembers any of that, and pretty soon... I'll just be carbon. So none of it matters.