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Lukas 2022-01-12 08:01:08
"Sullivan's Travels": Happiness is the greatest wealth of poverty (AFI100 TOP 061)
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Sullivan's Travels (1941) is
another Hollywood "Golden Age" Movie, I like it!
The film tells a story... -
Blaze 2022-01-12 08:01:08
Irony, over and over
7.4
Among the 1940s genre films, this one should be the most remake at this point in time. What I envisioned is that the director of the 93rd Academy winner moved into the van and started to travel west from Nevada to explore what kind of movie the modern nomads at the bottom look forward to—it’s...

Willard Robertson
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Deja 2022-03-17 09:01:06
It can be seen that it is the originator of woody allen comedy. A lot of lines, there are several boring bottlenecks in the middle
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Theron 2022-03-15 09:01:05
Drag racing avoiding the following bus but still returning to Hollywood, sleeping on the hay, riding the train, still going to Las Vegas, eating relief meals with the unemployed, sleeping in the lobby is just a life experience, and a six-year sentence-in blacks Watching cartoons in the churches of the community gave real revelations. What face do you, who know very little about life and suffering, tell it? It's better to let those who laugh and warm the souls of the humble ones. The structure and ending are outstanding.
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John L. Sullivan: There's a lot to be said for making people laugh. Did you know that that's all some people have? It isn't much, but it's better than nothing in this cockeyed caravan.
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Burrows: Good morning, sir.
Burrows: I don't like it at all, sir. Fancy dress, I take it?
John L. Sullivan: What's the matter with it?
Burrows: I have never been sympathetic to the caricaturing of the poor and needy, sir.
John L. Sullivan: Who's caricaturing?
John L. Sullivan: I'm going out on the road to find out what it's like to be poor and needy and then I'm going to make a picture about it.
Burrows: If you'll permit me to say so, sir, the subject is not an interesting one. The poor know all about poverty and only the morbid rich would find the topic glamorous.
John L. Sullivan: But I'm doing it for the poor. Don't you understand?
Burrows: I doubt if they would appreciate it, sir. They rather resent the invasion of their privacy, I believe quite properly, sir. Also, such excursions can be extremely dangerous, sir. I worked for a gentleman once who likewise, with two friends, accoutered themselves as you have, sir, and then went out for a lark. They have not been heard from since.