-
Shawna 2022-04-19 09:02:48
On the night when 12-year-old Heidi picked up the first cigarette because of insomnia, the father and daughter had a long-lost emotional exchange. This is the most touching moment of the film. Stanley, a middle-aged man played by John Cusack, takes his two daughters, who don't know the truth, to their long-awaited playground after learning of his wife's death on the front lines. This healing film doesn't have a moment of sensationalism to elicit tears of sympathy, and the details of life are...
-
Reba 2022-04-19 09:02:48
quiet and sad...
-
Elouise 2022-04-19 09:02:48
I just want to find a suitable one to watch...I can't stand watching this kind of tragic film and resist the invisible...
-
Deontae 2022-04-19 09:02:48
124 Road movie sketches. Recently I was moved.
-
Ephraim 2022-04-19 09:02:48
Delicate and touching, but hard wounds are...
-
Marcus 2022-03-19 09:01:09
The script is average, the soundtrack is average, and cusack plays...
-
Eddie 2022-03-19 09:01:09
Not bad, Cusack performed well this time. Just the soundtrack is too...
-
Juvenal 2022-03-19 09:01:09
Delicate and profound film, the great and real...
-
Fern 2022-03-18 09:01:08
The helpless parting, the metaphor of the anti-war sentiment becomes deeper and...
-
Evangeline 2022-03-18 09:01:08
20110719 ky The major impact on the family caused by the departure of relatives. Warm colors, warm music, warm plots, small costs are small, but they are more infectious and warm. The beauty of the road movie dilutes the sadness, but every sentence my father calls the answering machine at home will deeply touch my soul. War shouldn't exist, and the one who saves all of this can only hope for love and peace. 3 and a half stars
Grace Is Gone Comments
-
Heidi Phillips: What do you do at work Dad?
Stanley Philipps: I sell shit.
-
John Phillips: It's important that people have their own views based on an understanding of facts. But, it's also important not to trust the facts, because most of them are lies.
Heidi Phillips: I don't get it.
John Phillips: It basically comes down to a gut thing. You just have to be open to allowing for a truth which differs from your own opinions. Or else you'll never actually see the truth at all.