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Ole 2022-03-29 09:01:04
Although the story is old-fashioned, its outline is acceptable. The problem is that there is absolutely no chemistry between the two leading actors. Every gesture is a farce, and there is no emotion at all. This is probably the most boring piece of Woody Allen in recent...
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Alexandria 2022-03-29 09:01:04
It's the same old way, but I like...
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Stephan 2022-03-29 09:01:04
Woody's soundtrack and pictures are beautiful to the bone, but this one does have a bit of love. I thought it would have an unexpected ending. Seeing the two hugging and getting back together is really a bit of a downgrade... But if you lie, you can make people Why not be a little more...
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Adelbert 2022-03-29 09:01:04
Reason versus emotion. The retro piano and the warm sunlight are pleasing to the eye, and the long shots don't feel tedious under the barrage of sharp dialogue. The male protagonist is once again possessed by Woody Allen, who has been mean and vicious and arrogant for a century. Although the male protagonist's psychological changes were a little sudden, the story was still a little surprising, not to mention that Sister Shitou was too amazing, and Uncle Face was still a gentleman and stylish,...
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Kirsten 2022-03-29 09:01:04
@AF382 to watch the first half of sceptical, then take @AF381 to see the second half of romantic in three weeks. Woody always makes optimistic films after pessimism, and the arguments are both concise and self-evident (a bit like the mystery of the jade scorpion). The people named Sophie are really smart and outstanding women. The optimistic and emotional idealism in love will eventually overcome and influence the pessimistic and mechanical materialism, because rationality is actually just...
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Davonte 2022-03-29 09:01:04
It was a magical magic of the 1920s (it didn't), and then when Colin Firth stepped off the stage, the little old man was possessed and turned on the nagging mode, and I laughed. The struggle between reason and emotion, and the unexplainable flash of light, not only exposes the liar, but also affirms the existence of a marginal world outside of rational cognition. The British gentleman's elegant taste and stubborn conceit are rare from American directors. The stone is also so beautiful, with a...
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Salma 2022-03-29 09:01:04
The plot setting is reversed twice, the lines of Woody Allen's locomotive are interesting, the art to the soundtrack has a strong sense of the 1920s, and the actors are also hardworking, but the male and female protagonists are so different, the audience would rather watch the wisdom of the aunt or the magician. Subtle friendship... So the casting is really important, how good it would be if Uncle Colin in 1995 played this Emma, or Emma in 2025 played this Uncle...
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Kasey 2022-03-29 09:01:04
Uncle face with stone, a combination of...
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Ocie 2022-03-28 09:01:07
A bad ending ruins everything, otherwise you can get five...
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Mariela 2022-03-28 09:01:07
For a cynical, stubborn, nagging and sour intellectual, once you subvert his worldview from the front, then congratulations, you will have another loyal dog willing to subvert the world for...
Magic in the Moonlight Comments
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Stanley: The comparison makes me laugh! Olivia is a person of accomplishment and charm. Sophie's a street finagler who makes her way living off one bit of hokum to the next.
Aunt Vanessa: Well, I don't see how you can compare the two.
Stanley: Well, don't put ideas into my head!
Aunt Vanessa: Well, far be it from me!
Stanley: Of course, she does come from dire circumstances. I mean, it's very easy to be judgmental about people who are born into circumstances less fortunate than one's own.
Aunt Vanessa: Well, life is harsh. One must do what one must to survive.
Stanley: Well put. And people do sometimes make the wrong choices, which they regret, even though no serious harm was done.
Aunt Vanessa: Which of us has not made some blunders in life?
Stanley: And there is a rather appealing quality about Sophie. Despite her disgusting behaviour.
Aunt Vanessa: Yes, her smile is rather winning. Of course, it depends how much value you put on the purely physical.
Stanley: Well, no, I... I, for one, esteem the higher virtues.
Aunt Vanessa: Hmm... Beauty of the soul...
Stanley: Although her eyes are rather pleasant to look into. And that she can be amusing, under the right circumstances.
Aunt Vanessa: Oh, but Olivia is an educated, cultivated woman. One that befits a man of your artistic genius.
Stanley: Yes, now, my genius must be factored in. On paper, there's really no reason to prefer Sophie to Olivia.
Aunt Vanessa: Well, I would say the opposite.
Stanley: ...And so your, your suggestion that I, I be honest with Olivia and tell her that as irrational as it seems, I've fallen in love with, with Sophie - that's a preposterous notion.
Aunt Vanessa: It's lunacy.
Stanley: ...Yet I can't help feeling that...
Aunt Vanessa: ...That you love Sophie. Yes, I understand. You're puzzled and bewildered; because your foolish logic tells you that you should love Olivia.
Stanley: Foolish logic?
Aunt Vanessa: And yet, how little that logic means when placed next to Sophie's smile...
Stanley: What are you saying?
Aunt Vanessa: ...That the world may or may not be without purpose, but it's not totally without some kind of magic.
Stanley: ...I have irrational positive feelings for Sophie Baker. It's like witnessing a trick I can't figure out.
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Aunt Vanessa: Which of us has not made some blunders in life?