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Trycia 2022-03-23 09:03:24
The little boy is a bit, emmmmmmm...
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Rico 2022-03-23 09:03:24
Fairy tales are deceiving. Maybe the original intention was to make a warm anti-war film, but the reality is so cruel that even if the film ends with a great reconciliation and a reconciliation, it cannot cover up the incompetence of Christopher's parents, and the father is actually very pitiful, because The aftermath of the war; but the mother is too indescribable to love her children as much as a nanny. That little bear healed the world, but ruined C's...
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Geo 2022-03-23 09:03:24
The performances of Domhnall, Robbie, and the young actors are all weird and awkward. The director uses a lot of similar editing techniques, and not all of them work. Very, very good story, but when the boy came back and had to reconcile with his father, I was totally in a bad mood. The last shot is even weirder, the boy is no longer someone else's Robin, but his...
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Dean 2022-03-23 09:03:24
The subject matter is good, the theme is good, "the film is as its name" is very, focusing on reality is cruel, there is no whitewashing and showing off famous gimmicks, but the guide is sincere: from anti-war to family repair to drifting away, the relationship between the three The transitional part is quite smooth, especially the second half, so that the father-son relationship is far less than the nanny...
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Missouri 2022-03-23 09:03:24
For the first time, I learned the story behind the creation of "Winnie the Pooh". My father had post-war PDST and was under great mental pressure. During the time spent alone with his son, he gradually found the feeling of home and the meaning of family affection, from strangeness to familiarity, from contradictions To the reconciliation, the film always looks at it with kindness and kindness, let love start from the heart, and slowly seep out the moving, recalling the most unforgettable years...
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Lorenz 2022-03-23 09:03:24
The last few lines of subtitles hide the cruelty of life, and I still can't bear to think of the real Christopher Robin. This fictitious boy wants to teach people to grow up with innocence and innocence. Children's dreams fly from generation to generation, but his childhood is lost. Kelly Macdonald is the best...
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Kaelyn 2022-03-23 09:03:24
The fine art photography is good, the acting is great, and the story is boring, but if you take him as a Hux prequel and an alternate universe story of the...
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Americo 2022-03-22 09:02:55
It's hard for doctors to govern themselves. It is also the first time I know the story behind Winnie the...
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Deja 2022-03-22 09:02:55
I admire the director's ability to tell the story as something related to the war, but I don't find it very interesting and not very provocative. Commemorating the first time to watch a full-length, non-subtitled, non-animated film in English from start to finish without any obstacles and the first time to enter a cinema in...
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Dessie 2022-03-22 09:02:55
I admire the director's ability to tell the story as something related to the war, but I don't find it very interesting and not very provocative. Commemorating the first time to watch a full-length, non-subtitled, non-animated film in English from start to finish without any obstacles and the first time to enter a cinema in...
Goodbye Christopher Robin Comments
Goodbye Christopher Robin quotes
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Daphne Milne: You know what writing a book against war is like? It's like writing a book against Wednesdays. Wednesdays... are a fact of life, and if you don't like them, you could just stay in bed, but you can't stop them because Wednesdays are coming and if today isn't actually a Wednesday it soon will be.
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Christopher Robin Aged 18: There it all is. Just as I left it. As if nothing had happened.
Alan Milne: When I came back, everything seemed wrong. I didn't fit anywhere. Until I came here. Those days with you... I wanted to keep them all. Put them in a box.
Christopher Robin Aged 18: The things that I said before I left...
Alan Milne: They were all true. You're here. That's all that matters.
Christopher Robin Aged 18: In the desert, we were under fire... and one of the men started singing one of the hums of Pooh. He changed the words a bit, but...
Alan Milne: [low chuckle]
Christopher Robin Aged 18: You know. And I thought, "How on earth do you know that song?" And then I remembered...
Alan Milne, Christopher Robin Aged 18: Everyone on earth knows that song.
Christopher Robin Aged 18: But I knew it first. It was mine before it was anyone else's.
Alan Milne: Then I gave it away.
Christopher Robin Aged 18: When they were singing, they were remembering. It was like a magic charm... it took them home to a fireside and a storybook. You did that.
Alan Milne: [inhales] Thank you. I'm sorry you paid the price for it. If I'd known, perhaps I...
Christopher Robin Aged 18: What? Not written it? No. You reminded people what happiness was... what childhood could be when everything else was broken.
Alan Milne: But your own childhood.
Christopher Robin Aged 18: Was wonderful. It was growing up that was hard.
Alan Milne: [smacks lips] Who would have guessed that bear would swallow us up?
Christopher Robin Aged 18: Exactly. This was all ours, wasn't it? Before it was anyone else's.
Alan Milne: Yes. And it always will be.