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Meredith 2022-03-26 09:01:11
Insecurity and Addiction
This is a typical chatter film, there is no ups and downs in the plot, just two men talk all the way, and there are not many scenes of women appearing. In this film, perhaps it is a little higher than the dog's appearance rate, and some shots are divided by the snowy background.
As a film starring... -
Merritt 2022-03-23 09:03:01
distance between people
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How to treat others, and how others treat you, often bothers me, maybe just chatting and laughing with you on the surface, I can't help rolling my eyes at you in the next second, the closeness and distance between people is a very important thing. Wonderful thing. Are two strangers willing to open...

Gina Ferwerda
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Sam 2022-03-20 09:02:35
Gide said: "You will never know how much effort we have put in to make ourselves interested in life." The brief encounters wonderfully revealed Foster's loneliness, fear of the emptiness of life, and anxiety about life. The conversation is long and trivial, but the sincerity that suddenly appears will make people move deeply and can't help but feel sad. Foster once gave a speech about facing trivial life, about facing life, he finally chose another path.
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Marianna 2022-03-25 09:01:18
Hit hard by the last "We are both so young. He wants something better than he has. I want precisely what he has already." The reporter wanted to have as much material as possible, and the interviewee was always worried about misunderstanding and understanding, resonance and suspicion, with an invisible media (a tape recorder) in between. It is rare to meet a few people of the same kind in a lifetime, and the final disappointment makes people infatuated.
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David Foster Wallace: It's so much easier having dogs.
David Lipsky: Ha, ha - I'm sure.
David Foster Wallace: I mean, yes, you don't get laid, but you don't have that feeling, like you're hurting their feelings, all the time.
David Lipsky: Right, right.
David Foster Wallace: I'd like to emphasise strictly platonic relationship with the dogs.
David Lipsky: He he; I'll make sure I'll highlight it in the article, sure.
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David Lipsky: Do you wanna have kids?...
David Foster Wallace: Yeah, I think that writing books is a little like raising children, y'know -you have to be careful; mm; it's ok to take pride in the work, but I think it's bad for someone to want the glory to reflect back on you.
David Lipsky: I mean, sounds like you're worried about having children.
David Foster Wallace: I'm not wanna say anymore about that - if that's ok?