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Blaze 2022-03-31 09:01:03
Picture this: When you do something you regret and want to apologize to someone, it feels like they don't even remember the whole...
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Lea 2022-03-31 09:01:03
Julianne Moore's acting in this film is like Alice's Alzheimer's disease. It's getting worse and worse. Since I can't find a toilet to pee my pants, I'm getting more and more sad. As for the story, I personally prefer "Alice with memory loss is following Alice's words in the video and taking medicine...", so the dramatic ending design will be more powerful (not to hurt the hearts of the family), but the movie chooses Continue to develop the story lively....
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Jerald 2022-03-31 09:01:03
When I get older, I really like restrained films. Don’t always be so drama. How many people can escape the pain. I don’t want to see life and death, and I just want to see the irresistible reality of returning to...
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Roger 2022-03-31 09:01:03
"The art of losing isn't hard to master. So many things seem filled with the intent to be lost. That their lost is no disaster....
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Giuseppe 2022-03-30 09:01:04
Female version taking leave (leaving): King Lear -> Angel is in the United States, three daughters -> two daughters and one son, and the last one left is the youngest...
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Nikita 2022-03-30 09:01:04
I know that the evening wind blew away the little...
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Jacklyn 2022-03-30 09:01:04
Nominated for the most unsuspenseful actress at the 87th Academy...
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Gus 2022-03-30 09:01:04
pls do not think tht i am suffering, i am not sufferin', i am...
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Amber 2022-03-30 09:01:04
I Moore propped up the entire movie on my own. If there is anything in this film, it is also because Moore used her restrained and completely unmarked performance and powerful life insights to present such a desperate and strong woman. The story is flat, not choosing a dramatic climax with more ups and downs, but only from a personal point of view, telling her love, her lover, her children, her career, her despair and...
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Lynn 2022-03-30 09:01:04
This film is beautiful... The director has a strong sense of camera, the scenery and characters are beautifully shot, and there is a warm love flowing throughout the...
Still Alice Comments
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Leonard 2022-03-24 09:01:47
"Quotes"
"I know what I'm feeling! I know what it's feeling and, and it feels like my brain is fucking dying. And everything I've worked for in my entire life is going. All... all going."
"I wish I had cancer.
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Don't say that.
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No, I do. I mean it. I mean, I wouldn't feel so ashamed. People have cancer... -
Trycia 2022-04-20 09:01:41
my brain is dying...
"Still Alice"
has been following this movie for a while. Today, I saw the release of resources, and even the raw meat without subtitles gnawed it down
. Julianne Moore is one of my favorite acting actresses. She's not very famous, but she's very good at acting, especially in some of the more...
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Dr. Alice Howland: Hi, Alice. I'm you. And I have something very important to say to you. Huh... I guess you've reached that point when you can answer any of your questions. So this is the next logical step. I'm sure of it. Because what's happening to you, the Alzheimer's - you could see it as tragic. But your life has been anything but tragic. You've had a remarkable career, and a great marriage, and three beautiful children. All right. Listen to me, Alice. This is important. Make sure that you are alone and go to the bedroom. In your bedroom, there's a dresser with a blue lamp. Open the top drawer. In the back of the drawer, there's a bottle with pills in it. It says 'take all pills with water'. Now, there are a lot of pills in that bottle, but it's very important that you swallow them all, okay? And then, lie down and go to sleep. And don't tell anyone what you're doing, okay?
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Dr. Alice Howland: Good morning. It's an honor to be here. The poet Elizabeth Bishoponce wrote: 'the Art of Losing isn't hard to master: so many things seem filled with the intent to be lost that their loss is no disaster.' I'm not a poet, I am a person living with Early Onset Alzheimer's, and as that person I find myself learning the art of losing every day. Losing my bearings, losing objects, losing sleep, but mostly losing memories...
[she knocks the pages from the podium]
Dr. Alice Howland: I think I'll try to forget that just happened.
[crowd laughs]
Dr. Alice Howland: All my life I've accumulated memories - they've become, in a way, my most precious possessions. The night I met my husband, the first time I held my textbook in my hands. Having children, making friends, traveling the world. Everything I accumulated in life, everything I've worked so hard for - now all that is being ripped away. As you can imagine, or as you know, this is hell. But it gets worse. Who can take us seriously when we are so far from who we once were? Our strange behavior and fumbled sentences change other's perception of us and our perception of ourselves. We become ridiculous, incapable, comic. But this is not who we are, this is our disease. And like any disease it has a cause, it has a progression, and it could have a cure. My greatest wish is that my children, our children - the next generation - do not have to face what I am facing. But for the time being, I'm still alive. I know I'm alive. I have people I love dearly. I have things I want to do with my life. I rail against myself for not being able to remember things - but I still have moments in the day of pure happiness and joy. And please do not think that I am suffering. I am not suffering. I am struggling. Struggling to be part of things, to stay connected to whom I was once. So, 'live in the moment' I tell myself. It's really all I can do, live in the moment. And not beat myself up too much... and not beat myself up too much for mastering the art of losing. One thing I will try to hold onto though is the memory of speaking here today. It will go, I know it will. It may be gone by tomorrow. But it means so much to be talking here, today, like my old ambitious self who was so fascinated by communication. Thank you for this opportunity. It means the world to me. Thank you.