Lee Perkins

Lee Perkins

  • Born: 1966-12-16
  • Height: 5' 10" (1.78 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Luisa 2022-03-24 09:01:43

      Come! Dry this bowl of negative energy

      At the end of the year, it was once again a carnival for the Olympic Games. It may be that 2015 has come too naturally. This year's blockbusters have a tacit understanding with a hurricane of negative energy, smashing people who are addicted to the New Year's joy into disorientation.
      In David...

    • Maybelle 2022-04-21 09:01:55

      The darkness behind the screen may be more than you think

      John. DuPont (John Eleuthère du Pont, 1938--2010) was born in the rich DuPont family in the United States (the DuPont Group is theirs). His father abandoned his wife and children when he was 2 years old, and DuPont and several of his older siblings were raised by their tough mother alone on...

    • Wilbert 2022-04-02 09:01:02

      The story is flat, completely creating a depressing and dull atmosphere a little bit, until the last shot breaks the calm. I could think of a conflict in the end, but I didn't expect that the disagreement between DuPont and Mark made Dave a cannon fodder. Carell's change in the face of an anti-comedy character is profound. The three people's transformation from cooperation to breakup is mostly a delicate relationship between psychological activities.

    • Toby 2022-03-30 09:01:03

      【A-】It is rare to see such a restrained and restrained sports movie, the coldness conveyed through the space is terrifying. There is no doubt that Mark Ruffalo has contributed the best acting of his career, but it still falls short of Steve Carell's introverted psychopathic display. DuPont's initial kindness and enthusiasm were strongly purposeful: the approval from his mother and the establishment of Mark's position of power. In the whole play, he has clearly expressed his desire to manipulate all his athletes. If he fails in the matriarchy, he must dominate the patriarchal part. And then his attack on the brothers Mark David was also for this reason. The control and domination of power is one of the themes of the film. As for the "era of elegance" DuPont's mother called and the "American spirit" that DuPont expected, or the collapse of the "American Dream" shown in the whole film, it does not hold true, because the "American Dream" never existed. What the film shows is nothing more than a process in which social illusions are constructed and collapsed.

    Foxcatcher quotes

    • [John du Pont drives up to see Dave Schultz, makes a stop, backs up his car, drives forward and parks up beside Dave]

      David Schultz: Hey John, What's happening? Hey Whoa!

      Wayne Kendall: [from Wayne in the passenger of Mr. du Pont's vehicle] No.

      John du Pont: You got a problem with me?

      Wayne Kendall: John. Don't, John!

      David Schultz: No, John, I don't have a problem. Hey... John -

      [gunshot from du Pont]

      David Schultz: Argh!

      Wayne Kendall: [Wayne leaps out of du Pont's vehicle] John, No! Stop, John. Stop!

      [Dave tries crawling away on the ground, grunting]

      Nancy Schultz: [Nancy Schultz runs out the front door and screams] John, no!

      [another gunshot is fired at Dave Schultz]

      Nancy Schultz: [Nancy runs back into the house when she see's Mr. du Pont aim the gun up towards her]

      [Dave grunts continuing to try and crawl away]

      Nancy Schultz: [final gunshot to Dave Schultz ending with a final scream, Mr. du Pont calmly drives away as Nancy holds onto her dead husband laying in the snow]

    • End Title Card: Dave Schultz was posthumously inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame. He is survived by his wife and two children.

      End Title Card: Mark Schultz retired from competitive wrestling after the 1988 Olympics. He now lives in Oregon, where he offers wrestling clinics.

      End Title Card: John du Pont died in prison on December 9, 2010.