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Verda 2022-04-30 06:01:09
Thoughts
After watching "Mr. Diez's Into the City", this 1936 movie is really wonderful. It is recommended to everyone in life who is regarded as a "freak". In the movie, the media deliberately cast a stranger who is out of place with the city into a madman and a laughing stock; take him to court to take...
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Freda 2022-04-30 06:01:09
Real best wishes
It’s an old movie from 1954, and the black-and-white picture shows a strong American comedy style, but I want to talk about the protagonist Diez.
He is a businessman in Manpu Town, he doesn't care about money, he loves to live the life he wants to live. He loves music and can play the trumpet,...

H.B. Warner
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Michele 2022-04-30 06:01:09
In fact, this story of "justice youth in the country falling in love with a female reporter in disguise" is not the first time I have seen it, but Capra is capable of photographing his inspirational sense. I was worried about how this story would end, but I didn't expect that there would be such a wonderful court trial at the end hahaha. In fact, when I saw Cooper's silence in the first half of the trial, I felt confused and I knew that this role was written successfully.
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Karson 2022-04-30 06:01:09
Some are like the gender-swap version of "One Night Love", female reporter routines male heirs, routines gradually become true love. Most of the comedy jokes used are based on the incompatibility of identity, the difference in thinking between cities and towns, and the opposition between the upper class and the poor in the countryside; and based on this, there is a not-short preaching on the equalization of the rich and the poor after the love scene. The story The focus was a little erratic in the middle, but fortunately, the last court scenes came back successfully.
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[last lines]
Jane Faulkner: He's still pixilated.
Amy Faulkner: He sure is!
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Morrow: You hop aboard my magic carpet and I'll show you sights that you've never seen before.
Longfellow Deeds: Well, I'd kinda like to see Grant's tomb and the Statue of Liberty.
Morrow: Well, you'll not only see those, but before the evening's half through, you'll be leaning against the Leaning Tower of Pisa, you'll mount Mount Everest, I'll show you the Pyramids and all the little pyramidees, leaping from sphinx to sphinx!