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Nannie 2022-04-20 09:01:49
Generally speaking, the role played by song and dance in musical films is an important event in a direct and coherent narrative, but this film almost empties the song and dance into a parallel, reflective, critical part, and the harvest in each song and dance The laughter was not only a short breath from the gloom of cruel reality, but also the silent screams of fear and the tears of lost...
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Eloisa 2022-04-20 09:01:49
Play is like life, the stage of the "hotel" is an abstract life, only the wonderful performance can attract the audience, and the audience is just a passerby who stays in front of the stage for a certain period of time. On the other hand, the movie sets the characters and era background of the reality line very special, creating a strong sense of conflict, a little absurd, and moving closer to the "stage". The end of the film is very interesting. Through the blurred mirror, it is found that the...
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Bryon 2022-04-20 09:01:49
1. It was pleasant at the beginning, and it became more and more profound later, but the music and dance were well connected with the plot, dialogue, etc., and some parts were edited very interestingly. 2. The directing style with ease, in fact, has deep inner strength. 3. The European aristocrats originally wanted to compete with snipe and clam, and let the Nazis and the Communists kill each other, but can they really control the situation? THE REMAINS OF THE DAY covers the same...
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Ryleigh 2022-04-20 09:01:49
Turns out this is Broadway and musicals! Consider the birth of World War II. Basically the search for love. The heroine is really a peculiarly beautiful lucilletwo ah ha ha. Visually bold and brilliant. The beauty and joy in the cabaret are so thrilling. I was popularized in advance by the beautiful nazi brother's songs. The process of watching the movie is very...
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Kelli 2022-04-20 09:01:49
Dreaming of Berlin. . . . The singing and dancing part is excellent, self-contained, and has its own display space, without making people feel embarrassed to sing while talking; and the singing and dancing part has the role of hinting and promoting the reality narrative, and the two complement each other. . . Kudos to the director for his...
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Dominique 2022-04-20 09:01:49
This movie is really hard to describe... The style of singing and dancing is really too violent, at least beyond my ability... Joel Grey is really impressive, but not in a good way... But Liza Minnelli is really awesome! I would like to have a friend like Sally, life will be a lot more...
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Jamil 2022-04-20 09:01:49
MONEY...Bang, Bang, Bang, MONEY...Bang, Bang, Bang! !...
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Laurianne 2022-03-28 09:01:04
Liza Minnelli, you and your mom are classics. Joel Grey is a stunner too (The Outer Limits and Touched by an Angel and Buffy the Vampire...
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Felicia 2022-03-28 09:01:04
A score of 8.7 cannot be regarded as a musical, but the performance of the song and dance in the hotel is used to better show the content of the film. It has more connotation than other musicals and can capture the hearts of the audience...
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Ebba 2022-03-28 09:01:04
Tag: Berlin in 1931. A tolerant attitude towards homosexuality. These are the focus of future...
Cabaret Comments
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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?
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Brian Roberts: How's the, uh, gigolo campaign going?
Fritz Wendel: Terrible. This week, already I'm giving up three dinner invitations to spend thirty-two marks on her.
Brian Roberts: That's quite a sacrifice.
Fritz Wendel: And here's the craziness: I like it. God damn it!
Brian Roberts: What?
Fritz Wendel: I think I'm falling in love with her.
Brian Roberts: Oh, I'm so sorry.
Fritz Wendel: So am I.