Richard Carlson

Richard Carlson

  • Born: 1912-4-29
  • Height: 5' 11" (1.8 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Kelli 2022-04-07 08:01:02

      She only dares to kill people she doesn't hate

      I don't know how the heroine of "Little Fox" in 1941 was reacted, but if this glamorous lady with water snake waist and fat skin came to the 2020s, she would definitely be "beautiful and miserable" that caused warm cheers.

      She is "greedy" - glamorous and enchanting, pampered, uneasy about the status...

    • Vanessa 2022-04-07 08:01:02

      It is necessary to talk about the role of aunt

      The character setting of Auntie is really layered.

      She should have been an optimistic and kind person, and she also had the desire to talk, especially after her husband treated her badly, she would have more desire to talk. The heroine asked everyone what they wanted to do when they got rich, and...

    • Kristoffer 2022-04-08 09:01:13

      With Renoir's game rules first, this movie doesn't make me feel particularly impressive, and indeed the story is just ordinary

    • Antonio 2022-04-11 09:01:07

      Scheduling textbooks, screenwriting textbooks, acting textbooks (except Wright). In the process of watching it, I was addicted to it. The sound of Duryea swallowing several times doesn't need to be that loud.

    The Little Foxes quotes

    • Regina Giddens: Alexandra, I've come to the end of my rope. Somewhere there's got to be what I want, too. Life goes too fast. You can go where you want, do what you want, think what you want. I'd like to keep you with me but I won't make you stay. No, I won't make you stay.

      Alexandra Giddens: [thoughtful] You couldn't, Mama. Because I don't want to stay with you. Because I'm beginning to understand about things. Addie said there were people who ate the earth and those that stood around and watched them do it. And just then Uncle Ben said the same thing. Really the same thing. Tell him from me, Mama, I'm not going to watch you do it.

    • Ben Hubbard: Down here we have a strange custom. We drink the last drink as a toast. That's to prove that the Southerner's always on his feet for the last drink.

      [later he admitted to making that up for the occasion]