Leslie Simms

Leslie Simms

  • Born:
  • Height: 5' 7" (1.7 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Noelia 2022-01-29 08:06:33

      Marlowe in the 70's

      It's really impossible to know what the considerations are in dragging Marlowe into the 1970s and assigning him a lot of female neighbors who like to do yoga and spiritual lessons half-naked.
      At the beginning, I interacted with the cat and dumped the cat food into the can that it likes to eat,...

    • Kimberly 2022-01-29 08:06:33

      more desperate than the original novel

      Whether or not to read the original novel before watching this movie is definitely a Hamlet-esque question. Because if you have read the original novel before, then let me tell you, this movie has all adapted the storyline (especially the deleted characters), the background of the era, and the...

    • Lamont 2022-04-21 09:03:29

      A classic neo-noir movie, Marlowe is a chess piece from start to finish, used by friends, used by women, at the mercy of gangsters, and in the end, he has nothing, even the cat is lost, and he has to break his loyalty to friendship with his own hands. But I like this version of Marlow very much. It looks like a fool, but in fact it is smart and righteous, and the plot ends neatly and neatly. (Maybe reading the original book will change your mind?) I like the shots of chasing cars on the road, and the shots of the seaside and the house overlapping through the glass. Want to move into the apartment where Marlow lives.

    • Bernadette 2022-04-19 09:02:55

      In fact, it is a story about a cat slave who was forced to enter the dog-loving world. After meeting the heroine for the first time, the cat disappeared. Compared with his younger generation, David Robert Mitchell, Altman focuses more on the weakening of events, the characters and narrative are completely liberated, and the audience is always pulled by trumped-up forces. "Enter" or not determines the understanding of it to the greatest extent.

    The Long Goodbye quotes

    • Det. Green: He's the cutie pie, you're the smartass, you little honky bastard.

    • Philip Marlowe: Listen Harry, in case you lose me in traffic, this is the address where I'm going. You look great.

      Harry: Thank you.

      Philip Marlowe: I'd straighten your tie a little bit. Harry, I'm proud to have you following me.