Amour Comments

  • Stan 2022-03-29 09:01:03

    I didn't cry anyway. This kind of movie seems pure and close to the essence of the movie; but the impact is extremely bad, and it can only be watched by directors and actors with decades of skill. That's not how the movie was shot, and Haneke has only...

  • Dee 2022-03-29 09:01:03

    Haneke's level was only maintained for about thirty minutes, and the last ten minutes felt contrived. The place where the old lady suffocated can be handled better. Disappointing, three and a half stars, the old lady played really...

  • Cassandra 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    I can only understand that this is French love. Chinese love is not like that. I will not accept this way of handling the old man. The way in "The Notebook" is what I can accept. But if you're talking about how to relieve your loved one from pain, that's another topic on euthanasia. Here, I only see the lack of responsibility of the old man, the desire to control gradually revealed, the two are withdrawn and unwilling to accept help, it is a perfect match!...

  • Laurie 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    It's not easy for Haneke to make all the stories in his hands into subheadings in the social news section of the...

  • Kylee 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    The apartment has become a love grave, and has been hit by both internal and external forces at the same time: the nurse, the daughter's visit, the pigeon and the broken lock in the title are all external forces that threaten "closed love"; in the face of death, each other's love is the only one The spiritual sustenance, this is the inner strength, even "love you to kill you" is the supreme state of...

  • Evans 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    The love that came together in the first place has been praised too much, but how many are the poor, the poor, the poor, the rich, the noble, the health and the disease, and have come to the end. What my sister cried out was neither pity nor emotion, but all regret! When I was young and ignorant, I did not take good care of my loved ones in pain. Emotions also need to be learned. Although he has a prejudice against Haneke, this move does not have a sword in his hand but has a sword in his...

  • Dorothy 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    It's this stupid movie, what values, I'm going to vomit. How can a murderer be an object of...

  • Kacie 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    After re-reading it, I have to admit that I lost sight of it. What the film really wants to express is the respect for the personality of the intellectuals and their pursuit of the integrity of personal dignity and love that transcends the physical existence. However, the catching pigeon scene at the end highlights the intentional instillation of meaning, which can be...

  • Sammy 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    After re-reading it, I have to admit that I lost sight of it. What the film really wants to express is the respect for the personality of the intellectuals and their pursuit of the integrity of personal dignity and love that transcends the physical existence. However, the catching pigeon scene at the end highlights the intentional instillation of meaning, which can be...

  • Clarissa 2021-12-18 08:01:03

    Painful viewing. Attached to the truth: classmates grandparents, grandma's dementia, grandpa guards, and feeds porridge three meals a day. Back then, he always went to his house to play chess, and was stared at by the old grandmother up and down. It was like two living eyeballs attached to an inanimate body. After 30 to 50 years of care, it may be due to unfilial piety or other reasons. Later, grandpa strangled grandma, hanged himself, and both disappeared. Back then, I just felt scared after...

Extended Reading

Amour quotes

  • Anne: What would you say if no one came to your funeral?

    Georges: Nothing, presumably.

  • Georges: [telling a childhood memory] ... some banal romance or other about a nobleman and a lower middle-class girl who couldn't have each other and who then, out of sheer magnanimity, decide to renounce their love - in fact, I don't quite remember it any more. In any case, afterwards I was thoroughly distraught, and it took me a bit of time to calm down. In the courtyard of the house where grandma lived, there was a young guy at the window who asked me where I'd been. He was a couple of years older than me, a braggart who really impressed me. "To the movies," I said, because I was proud that my grandma had given me the money to go all alone to the cinema. "What did you see?" I started to tell him the story of the movie, and as I did, all the emotion came back. I didn't want to cry in front of the boy, but it was impossible; there I was, crying out loud in the courtyard, and I told him the whole drama to the bitter end.

    Anne: So? How did he react?

    Georges: No idea. He probably found it amusing. I don't remember. I don't remember the film either. But I remember the feeling. That I was ashamed of crying, but that telling him the story made all my feelings and tears come back, almost more powerfully than when I was actually watching the film, and that I just couldn't stop.