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Joe 2022-04-20 09:01:40
life is to fight
In fact, I didn't understand many parts of this film, such as the story at the beginning, and the meaning of the result, etc. I don't even know what the center of this film is trying to tell me. However, this does not affect my admiration for this film at all. Maybe everyone will find out the...
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Rowena 2022-04-20 09:01:40
We're just the ones being played
You're ready to take a serious life, but God prefers to play dark humor with you, life is just that.
I really like the streets and roofs in the opening scene looking down under the falling snow. The picture is very beautiful, but unfortunately it is only seen in the eyes of God. You can only see...

Lauri Mueller
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Javonte 2022-03-26 09:01:05
[720P] Nominated for Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay at the 82nd Academy Awards. If it took two hours to explain a simple Schrödinger's cat, then it would be a pity, either too sensational or too ignorant. Does this simple truth, "life is full of unknowns", need to be said in such a difficult, obscure and tangled way?
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Eryn 2022-03-26 09:01:05
The Coen Brothers' modern version of Job has a very personal feel, and its existentialism is embodied in a modern individual's questioning of metaphysical forces. The deeds of God cannot be fathomed, and the interpretations of the rabbis are more mysterious than each other. A serious and mathematically rational way of life is no longer possible, but the evil irony of Cohen is that they let God's wrath actually fall on the world and the protagonist in the end. There is a subtle American theme in the film. In the United States in the 1960s, sin meant a financial debt relationship, and the debt was always repaid, which is clearly explained by the parallel plot line of the protagonist's son. In the end, the end of the world has come to the town with the stars and stripes rolled up - Americans probably owe too much money.
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Sy Ableman: Open it. Let it breathe. Ten minutes. Letting it breathe, so important.
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Sy Ableman: I insist! No reason for discomfort. I'll be uncomfortable if you don't take it. These are signs and tokens, Larry.
Larry Gopnik: I'm just-I'm not ungrateful, I'm, I just don't know a lot about wine and, given our respective, you know...
[Sy abruptly hugs him]
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Arlen Finkle: We, uh, we decide on Wednesday, so if there's anything you want to submit in support of your tenure application, we should have it by then. That's all.
Larry Gopnik: Submit. What. What do you...
Arlen Finkle: Well. Anything. Published work. Anything else you've done outside of the institution. Any work that we might not be aware of.
Larry Gopnik: I haven't done anything.
Arlen Finkle: Uh-huh.
Larry Gopnik: I haven't published.
Arlen Finkle: Uh-huh.
Larry Gopnik: Are you still getting those letters?
Arlen Finkle: Uh-huh.
Larry Gopnik: Those anonymous...
Arlen Finkle: Yes, I know. Yes.
Larry Gopnik: Okay. Okay. Wednesday.
Arlen Finkle: Okay. Don't worry. Doing nothing is not bad. Ipso facto.