The Best Years of Our Lives Comments

  • Laila 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    A detail worthy of special attention: the brave and promising young Captain during the war could only earn a meager salary to make ends meet after the war, while the middle-aged Soldier during the war was pulled up by bankers who aimed at business opportunities after the war to make a living. Decent and rich, the battlefield and the market are not the same logic after all, and the glory of war also appears to be nothing. The trauma of the Great Depression was finally erased dramatically by...

  • Fay 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    It should all start with those heart-wrenching...

  • Dayne 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    Getting out of war may be more difficult than entering war, perfect...

  • Mozelle 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    One star for Harold Russell, one of two amateur actors to win an Oscar in the acting category. But the idea of ​​this film is really too main...

  • Horace 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    Women play the role of "women" (perfect to burst, just "perfect" to satisfy male machismo) to save ("castrated", war-torn, acclimatized) men. Like the tough Millie and the unintentionally funny Al, a high-society couple, but how could they have such a silly daughter who fell in love with the unreliable...

  • Lexie 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    It seems that our country has never paid attention to the movies of these...

  • Blake 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    Just too long. . . . Raw meat for so long. . . Really test... The part of the soldier with disabled hands is really...

  • Ivy 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    The difference between the eight o'clock file and the classic film may be that it starts from a starting point and ends at a different scenery. There are too few films with bloody plots but not annoying. I knew before that war is an economic shuffling. This movie is saying that war is a class The shuffle is like we went to another place to play for a while and come back to face it or face...

  • Bertram 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    The postwar life of 3 WWII veterans in the same place ends with all perfect endings....The story is simple but unreal. . But the film of nearly 3 hours does not feel...

  • Marvin 2022-04-24 07:01:14

    It was the best of times because the war was still over; it was the worst of times because the war for individual veterans was far from over. Taking off the military uniform and putting on a suit is far from easy. How to resolve and calm down the state of mind, how to re-accept the society, everything is still unknown, and it will end when you truly dare to face yourself. So in a way, our war is still not...

Extended Reading
  • Malvina 2022-01-03 08:01:16

    Director said

    After the war, the United States, although not like the war-torn and defeated countries in Europe and Asia, still faces a social issue that is closely watched by the whole country, how to treat and arrange demobilized veterans. In fact, this thorny social problem had already begun to show up a few...

  • Nakia 2022-01-03 08:01:16

    Return home

    The 19th Oscar Best Picture, tells the story of World War II veterans who returned to their homes after a few years of separation and readjusted themselves to adapt to their family, work, and society. However, their contribution to the war and the sacrifice of leaving this society were not Be...

The Best Years of Our Lives quotes

  • Mr. Mollett: Say, uh, do you mind if I ask you a personal question?

    Homer Parrish: I know what it is. How did I get these hooks and how do they work? That's what everybody says when they start off, "Do you mind if I ask you a personal question?" Well, I'll tell ya. I got sick and tired of that old pair of hands I had. You know, an awful lot of trouble washing them and manicuring my nails. So I traded them in for a pair of these latest models. They work by radar. Look.

    [He takes a scoop of his ice cream sundae with a spoon]

    Homer Parrish: Pretty cute, hey?

  • Wilma Cameron: Tell me the truth, Homer. Do you want me to forget about you?

    Homer Parrish: I want you to be free, Wilma, to live your own life. I don't want you tied down forever just because you've got a kind heart.

    Wilma Cameron: Oh, Homer! Why can't you ever understand the way things really are, the way I really feel? I keep trying to tell you.

    Homer Parrish: But, but you don't know, Wilma. You don't know what it'd be like to have to live with me. To have to face this

    [his hooks]

    Homer Parrish: every day, every night.

    Wilma Cameron: But I can only find out by trying. And if it turns out I haven't courage enough, we'll soon know it.