Tootsie Comments

  • Emilia 2023-08-03 12:27:01

    The Man Who Plays the Living Woman - yet another film that exemplifies Dustin's virtuosity, light-hearted, fun, and hilarious despite its...

  • Micheal 2023-07-18 18:15:21

    Dustin Hoffman IS the film...

  • Josue 2023-06-27 14:20:16

    I love Dustin...

  • Burdette 2023-06-18 05:19:43

    Hoffman alone holds up a play. Dramatic upper body,...

  • Kirstin 2023-06-16 02:42:22

    This woman is very cute, sturdy, charming and lonely. Too bad his name is...

  • Kiarra 2023-06-13 02:14:14

    The atmosphere is warm and the theme song is classic Dustin Hoffman's acting is really infuckingcredible It's not easy to have such a creative film in the...

  • Josiane 2023-05-28 17:04:19

    Dustin Hoffman's performance in disguise is naturally wonderful! The characters in it are actually very cute, especially the father of the blonde beauty, there are also bill murray and geena davis who just appeared on the screen at that...

  • Orpha 2023-05-16 16:52:48

    If you interpret the film from a gender perspective, there is a lot of room for interpretation. And it seems that the movie also has a dialogue with "Passionate"? The dialogue is constantly connected with the "soap opera", which seems to be a kind of regret, memory, and lament more than a real ridicule. 3.5 almost gives this script....

  • Duane 2023-05-14 06:53:22

    I want to see Hoffman play Big...

  • Evie 2023-05-10 21:24:37

    Very different feminist topic film, Dustin's acting is amazing! When I watched it, I thought of a dark joke from DC: the leader of sovereignism should be male, so as to truly liberate women...well, if this film is released now, it is estimated that there will be a lot of...

Extended Reading

Tootsie quotes

  • Sandy: I'm going to feel this way until I don't feel this way anymore.

  • Dorothy Michaels: Thank you, Gordon. Well, I cannot tell you all how deeply moved I am. I never in my wildest dreams imagined that I would be the object of so much genuine affection. It makes it all the more difficult for me to say what I'm now going to say. Yes. I do feel it's time to set the record straight. You see, I didn't come here just as an administrator, Dr. Brewster; I came to this hospital to settle an old score. Now you all know that my father was a brilliant man; he built this hospital. What you don't know is that to his family, he was an unmerciful tyrant - a absolute dodo bird. He drove my mother, his wife, to - to drink; in fact, she - uh, she she she went riding one time and lost all her teeth. The son Edward became a recluse, and the oldest daughter - the pretty one, the charming one - became pregnant when she was fifteen years old and was driven out of the house. In fact, she was so terrified that she would, uh, that, uh, that, that, that the baby daughter would bear the stigma of illegitimacy that she, she - she decided to change her name and she contracted a disfiguring disease... after moving to Tangiers, which is where she raised the, the, the little girl as her sister. But her one ambition in life - besides the child's happiness - was to become a nurse, so she returned to the States and joined the staff right here at Southwest General. Well, she worked here, she knew she had to speak out wherever she saw injustice and inhumanity. God save us, you do understand that, don't you, Dr. Brewster?

    John Van Horne: I never laid a hand on her.

    Dorothy Michaels: Yes, you did. And she was shunned by all you nurses, too... and by a, what do you call it, what do you call it, a - something like a pariah, to you doctors who found her idealistic and reckless. But she was deeply, deeply, deeply, deeply, deeply, deeply loved by her brother. It was this brother who, on the day of her death, swore to the good Lord above that he would follow in her footsteps, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just owe it all up to her. But on her terms. As a woman. And just as proud to be a woman as she ever was. For I am not Emily Kimberly, the daughter of Dwayne and Alma Kimberly. No, I'm not. I'm Edward Kimberly, the recluse brother of my sister Anthea. Edward Kimberly, who has finally vindicated his sister's good name. I am Edward Kimberly. Edward Kimberly. And I'm not mentally ill, but proud, and lucky, and strong enough to be the woman that was the best part of my manhood. The best part of myself.