-
Vickie 2022-04-23 07:02:34
It's amazing, the plot is good, the music is good, and the heroine's singing and acting skills are really amazing! ! ! The ending of the story is also great! ! ! Influenced a whole generation of...
-
Vicenta 2022-04-23 07:02:34
Money makes the world go...
-
Kale 2022-04-23 07:02:34
Very wonderful movie! Suitable for petty bourgeoisie viewing. Secular singing and dancing complement the plot. In that year, he competed with "The Godfather 1" for the Oscar, and the film became a big winner, but the Godfather won the Best Picture...
-
Marcelle 2022-04-23 07:02:34
9 stars (I feel that if the stars are reduced at the end, it will be full) very amazing, the song and dance choreography is quite interesting, the very limited stage lays out the gorgeous space of infinite desire and imagination, and at the same time, it is not out of touch with the film at all. Promoting, it is rare. The clips are clean and the various insertions are spot on. Interesting and interesting, the heroine is too charming and cute, expressing a possibility of love: someone who loves...
-
Sammy 2022-04-23 07:02:34
I feel that the male and female protagonists are very strange. The heroine is still stepping on two boats in the first half. After being dumped by the rich man, she suddenly gave up on the male lead. As for the male lead, he is gay at...
-
Lyda 2022-04-23 07:02:34
Milestone Musical. Art, photography and editing are gorgeous. And it's actually a Nazi-themed musical. The dance is only presented on the stage, and it is a normal movie in other time and space. Several scenes: Nazi youth grass chorus, dancing as a gorilla, "So do I", the structure of traditional male and female...
-
Melba 2022-04-23 07:02:34
8 Oscars in 1972, the stage style on and off the stage influenced many musicals. Falling is pleasurable, and falling together in threesomes is a more intense pleasure. It freaked me out when it came to so do I. Liza's life ended like Sally's last song, a...
-
Teagan 2022-04-22 07:01:32
9.0/10. ①As written in the introduction: a love triangle in the period of the gradual rise of the Nazis (the heroine who dreams of becoming a star, the male protagonist of the British teacher & the hostess' roommate, the gay man of the male protagonist) and a pair of lovers (slutty Jews and Jewish rich girls) From falsehood to sincerity) story. ②A decadent and hedonistic temperament, rendering techniques such as: dim/hazy light + bright tones; all kinds of rich and colorful clothing; all kinds...
-
Catharine 2022-04-22 07:01:32
A musical film that is close to perfect in form (it feels like this is as good as it gets unless there is a genius to initiate a revolution in musical form). And this particular form (structure) gives the story a unique quality: we are no longer watching a story linearly, but in the director's crazy and genius weaving, like exploring a labyrinth (cabaret/hotel) Step by step into the space (internal structure) of this story three-dimensionally. From the beginning, I didn't know where to go, and...
-
Lucinda 2022-04-22 07:01:32
Berlin in 1931. When running to the viaduct and waiting for the train to pass by, yell \(^o^)/~. In the early days of the Nazis "it was reported every day in the newspapers". The clown in the hotel sings the part of money, the part of one man and two women....
Cabaret Comments
-
Sally: I suppose you're wondering what I'm doing, working at a place like the Kit Kat Club.
Brian Roberts: Well, it is a rather unusual place.
Sally: That's me, darling. Unusual places, unusual love affairs. I am a most strange and extraordinary person.
-
Sally: I saw a film the other day about syphilis. Ugh! It was too awful. I couldn't let a man touch me for a week. Is it true you can get it from kissing?
Fritz: Oh, yes. And your king, Henry VIII, got it from Cardinal Wolsey whispering in his ear.
Natalia: That is not, I believe, founded in fact. But from kissing, most decidedly; and from towels, and from cups.
Sally: And of course screwing.
Natalia: Screw-ing, please?
Sally: Oh, uh...
[thinking]
Sally: fornication.
Natalia: For-ni-ca-tion?
Sally: Oh, uh, Bri, darling, what is the German word?
Brian Roberts: I don't remember.
Sally: [thinking] Oh... um... oh yes!
Brian Roberts: Oh, no...
Sally: Bumsen!
Natalia: [appalled] Oh.
Brian Roberts: That would be the one German word you pronounce perfectly.
Sally: Well, I ought to. I spent the entire afternoon bumsening like mad with this ghastly old producer who promised to get me a contract.
[pause]
Sally: Gin, Miss Landauer?