Lane Bradbury

Lane Bradbury

  • Born: 1938-6-17
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Colleen 2022-03-13 08:01:01

      Atypical Martin Scorsese Videos

      Martin Scorsese, who has made several rock music documentaries, also clearly loves jazz, so the protagonists of his films are not just violent and restless gangsters. In 1974, "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" with the theme of everyday little people, the performance and lines can be regarded as...

    • Xzavier 2022-03-13 08:01:01

      Two early works by Martin Scorsese

      "Who is knocking on my door? (1969) and Goodbye Alice (1974) were two of Martin Scorsese's early films. "Who is knocking on my door? "Before, Martin had only made some short films and won several awards at some small film festivals. "Who is knocking on my door? " is old Martin's debut feature film,...

    • Alanis 2022-03-13 08:01:01

      Making a good half of a movie is far less difficult than making a good one. This movie is only half a good movie (the first half) for me. The pain and toughness of single mothers struggling to make ends meet is deeply moving, with the raw weird power of the 1960s and 1970s. After showing love and applauding in front of everyone, it almost became a love soap opera, and it completely subverted the feminist color of the first half. It seems that women find the right man, and all struggles are not worth mentioning.

    • Haylie 2022-03-27 09:01:21

      Golden Strawberry: It is still too mediocre and awkward on the whole to review. The son who inherits his mother's neuroticism is actually the same as his mother, who has many difficulties in finding the happiness that can only be given by a third party. The dilemma in career and love is a portrayal of ordinary people's ups and downs. Sensitive, fragile and mediocre, it is easy to get sympathy, but it is always difficult to empathize. Martin is still struggling to handle this subject matter.

    Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore quotes

    • Alice: We decided we wanted to go into show business from the movies.

      David: Why did you leave?

      Alice: I got married and Donald wanted to live in his hometown. I wanted to go on singing. He said, "No wife of mine is going to sing in a saloon." I said, "Yes, master." I kind of liked that.

      David: You liked it?

      Alice: It was like, you know, my idea of a man: strong and dominating.

      [laughs]

    • Audrey: My dad was a bastard, all right. He used to make me bend over while he whipped me with his belt. I still think about going up to him and saying: "All right, Harry, bend over. You're going to get the belt for that."