James Barton

James Barton

  • Born: 1890-11-1
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Esmeralda 2022-05-31 16:07:28

      Junk of the times

      The high overlap and intertextuality between the characters in the play and the life outside the play, the struggles and compromises between the junk of the three eras and a woman who does not know where to go in a world that identifies them as "untimely people".

      Gable is aging and outdated. The...

    • Janiya 2022-05-31 17:17:34

      Gable was tired, Monroe was tired too, they both died later

      This is really an amazing movie! The story behind the film, what happened after the film and the film itself are completely combined.
      This is Clark Gable's last film and Monroe's last film (afterwards, Monroe also made a "On the verge of collapse" but died before finishing it, now there is only a...

    • Jaiden 2022-05-31 20:40:37

      The Chinese translation of the name was too misleading, and a sad Western literary film was crowned with the name of a romantic comedy. The whole film is dull and depressing, Monroe's character is like herself, mentally free, innocent or crazy. My Gable is old, but he still looks cynically at the world, hides the sadness and fear in his heart, and goes to prove his existence like a farewell. Gable, Monroe, and Clift are the common posthumous works of the three "beauties".

    • Myrna 2022-05-31 12:21:39

      This Houston script reminds me of Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises", especially the last part of Gable's horse training, which is very tough. Monroe's role is like Brett, full of maternal love. Gable, Montgomery and the "little guys" are Jack Barnes, Robert Cohen, and Michael: living in confusion and loss, saying something inconspicuous, drinking and smoking, living without a goal, fortunately one of them will end. Embrace the beauty.

    The Misfits quotes

    • Gay: Did you ever hear the story about the city man out in the country? And he sees this fella sittin' on his porch. So he says, "Mister, could you tell me how I could get back to town?" The fella says, "No." "Well, could you tell me how to get to the Post Office?" The fella says, "No." "Well, do you know how to get to the Railroad Station?" "No." "Boy," he says, "you sure don't know much, do ya?" The fella says, "No. But I ain't lost."

    • Gay: Hey, you really go all out, don't cha? Even the way you eat. I like that. Women generally pick.

      Roslyn: [smiles] You like me, huh?