Goodbye Christopher Robin Comments

  • Gayle 2022-03-21 09:03:21

    The first movie I watched in the UK, the audience were all lovely grandpas and grandmas~ It was a bit long and no climax, but after the end, I still heard the sobbing sound of the grandma in the back row. Their...

  • Skylar 2022-03-21 09:03:21

    Bewitched by the beauty of...

  • Dorian 2022-03-17 09:01:09

    Tears. From the first time I contacted Pooh, I felt that there was an inexplicable loneliness, loneliness, and sadness in this story for no reason... It turned out that I was not thinking too...

  • Braden 2022-03-17 09:01:09

    Childhood is beautiful, growing up is...

  • Tyreek 2022-03-16 09:01:09

    Writing a book about you doesn't mean writing a book for you, "Against war, it's like against Wednesday." My father escapes the trauma of war, my mother chases fame, and the only babysitter who cares about her will eventually marry, Throwing it into a boarding school to endure bullying... Even if the screenwriter has tried to beautify reality, it still looks too cruel, and it is extremely ironic to compare it with the subsequent Disney version of "Christopher...

  • Karson 2022-03-16 09:01:09

    The story itself is powerful, but the film is mediocre. The narrative is cut too much, and many plot points are like punch cards. The shaping of the characters is also not very three-dimensional. It is basically supported by the personal charm of the actors. For example, who is Daphne, besides loving the party, he relies on Margot's personality to make up his mind. And that old makeup, what the...

  • Melisa 2022-03-15 09:01:11

    "A Bear Named Winnie" (2004) with this, is a clear account of the history of Winnie the Pooh. But there are things that are not in line with historical facts, such as the illustrator EH Shepard played by SCM. He and Milne were not familiar with Milne at the end of the First World War. They became friends in 1923 because of work...

  • Curtis 2022-03-15 09:01:11

    The haze of war will be dispelled by innocence and kindness, and there is a little depression in the healing system. In the background of Winnie the Pooh's creation, there is a father who was traumatized after participating in World War I, a son who was willing to believe in fairy tales but grew up prematurely in the real world, as well as teddy bears, donkeys, pigs and tigers, who gave countless children A story that brings warmth and healing. Goodbye, Christopher Robin, and don't forget to...

  • Gia 2022-03-14 14:12:31

    There is no fairy tale behind the fairy tale. The little people in fairy tales also have parents who ruin their lives. The scenery is picturesque, but the performance is collectively terrible. Most touching line: "Blue, are we writing a book? I thought we were just having fun." —We are writing a book and we're having fun. —"I didn't know you could do both at the same time...

  • Colt 2022-03-04 08:01:32

    don't marry him, marry me! There's more to a nanny than a father or mother, or that fictional bear. Kelly Macdonald has been really nice for the past two years...

Extended Reading

Goodbye Christopher Robin quotes

  • 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.

  • 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 MilneChristopher 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.