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Jonas 2022-04-22 07:01:05
four kinds of life
"I also want to be passionate about something, and I want to know what that feels like," Susan wrote in the film. "
Charlie asked the teacher, how to write a story that has no climax, no conflict and no ending, just like a bland story in reality? The teacher was angry on the spot. "Oh... this... -
Eldridge 2022-03-17 09:01:03
What's the meaning of adaptation?
If you want to understand someone, what should you do? Is it face-to-face interviews, or reading relevant material, or a combination of the two? I'm afraid it's not right. What you get by observing your words and deeds is always superficial. What you need is to put yourself into his position. In...

Litefoot
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Julie 2022-03-24 09:01:27
It can be regarded as a side retelling of Spike Jones' puppet life, not only in the crossover from the perspective of the movie's main character prototype Charlie Kaufman, but also in the twin relationship between the fictional twin screenwriter brothers. This film, like Puppet Life, is a work in which reality transcends into the film, and the film derives reality. In addition, this dark and cold "adaptation" is full of the Coen brothers' breath, and Jones is obviously too relaxed.
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Danielle 2021-10-22 14:41:51
Fantasy and troubles of playwrights, Kaufman's edition [eight and a half]. 1. A meta-film from the perspective of a screenwriter, art film and commercial entertainment, real life and fictional fantasy, failure and success are juxtaposed and deconstructed, which evokes reverie while blurring boundaries. 2. The process of Charlie Kaufman's adaptation of the screenplay and Susan's experience in writing novels were cross-edited, and Charlie's sexual fantasies were inserted occasionally. 3. Hilariously pungent self-deprecating, Kaufman said to the handheld tape recorder what he said to the tape recorder... The infinitely nested play is like the ultimate movie-in-picture of [the person with the camera]. 4. The thematic montage of ancient times-biological evolution-human society is unexpectedly moving. 5. Nicholas Cage plays two roles with very different personalities and plays impeccably. 6. Robert McGee may become the biggest winner? 7. The three-fold meaning of the title: script adaptation, biological adaptation to nature (evolution), and people completely abandon their old enthusiasm and adapt to new hobbies. 8. Aunt May and Chris Cooper imitated the telephone dial tone together over the phone, with a strange sense of joy. 9. [Puppet Life] The crew enters randomly. 10. You are what you love. (9.5/10)
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Donald Kaufman: [spying on Susan with binoculars] She's crying. She's at her computer.
Charlie Kaufman: This is morally reprehensible.
Donald Kaufman: United... to Miami. Eleven... fifty five am tomorrow. I thought she was down with Laroche.
Charlie Kaufman: Her parents live in Florida, Donald.
Donald Kaufman: That was no parent phone call, my friend.
Charlie Kaufman: Don't say "my friend".
Donald Kaufman: A guy entering. Handsome.
Charlie Kaufman: Must be her husband.
Donald Kaufman: She's acting weird with him, though, right? Don't you think? What's she hiding from him? Maybe she's a lesbian and doesn't know how to tell him. What do you think?
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Susan Orlean: [stoned] Very happy now.