Extended Reading
  • Jennings 2022-04-19 09:01:51

    Don't you think the heroine is a bitch?

    The heroine just got married with her boyfriend. In this state, she can be ambiguous with another boy in just one month, which is really convincing!

    After watching it, I was very angry, and regretted that I didn't want to watch this movie. If the heroine had a relationship because of the car...

  • Geo 2022-03-25 09:01:08

    U.S. imperialism will not die in my heart!

    This can definitely be the official USCIS movie. Work? Help you find good; study? Free your tuition; love? Men post backwards; nostalgia? Sorry, my home is in the United States~Brooklyn~. I absolutely do not believe that the girl would "resolutely" go back to the poor Italian plumber if the mean...

  • Colleen 2021-12-01 08:01:26

    I think this story is very moving and the portrayal of love is delicate and warm. Tony is an uncertain beauty on the other side of the ocean, and Jim is the mediocre tenderness of his hometown. Eilis' struggles, her yearning for the big city, and her nostalgia for her hometown should be felt by everyone who has left home and wandering away. The popularity of online languages ​​is also quite terrible, "Green Tea Bitch" is now a word that keyboard guys blurt out.

  • Maverick 2022-03-20 09:01:42

    After she set foot on the land of the United States, the distance filtered out the dullness, triviality and hopelessness of the Irish town. At this time, nostalgia was an obsession with "the moon is the hometown"; when she returned to Ireland, the reason for choosing the United States was Resurfaced again, as Brooklyn nostalgia turned into a new nostalgia. Where there are people to care about, where is the hometown. Fresh and refined and natural and smooth movie, the costumes are too good-looking.

Brooklyn quotes

  • Mrs. Keogh: I'll tell you this much: I am going to ask Father Flood to preach a sermon on the dangers of giddiness. I now see that giddiness is the eighth deadly sin. A giddy girl is every bit as evil as a slothful man, and the noise she makes is a lot worse. Now, enough.

  • Frankie Fiorello: So, first of all, I should say that we don't like Irish people.

    [General cries of outrage around the table]

    Frankie Fiorello: We don't! That is a well known fact! A big gang of Irish beat Maurizio up and he had to have stitches. And because the cops round here are Irish, nobody did anything about it.

    Maurizio: There are probably two sides to it. I might have said something I shouldn't, I can't remember now. Anyway, they probably weren't all Irish.

    Frankie Fiorello: They just had red hair and big legs.