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Edmund 2022-02-02 08:02:37
Intercultural Communication Issues in Gentleman's Agreement
Gentleman's Agreement is a movie that tells a story about a journalist's experience of pretending to be a Jew to write an article about anti-Semitism.
What is problematic?
Anti-Semitism was thriving at that time. Jewish people could not even have a job because of their racial identity. Dominant... -
Darby 2022-02-02 08:02:37
It's got to be more than talk.
The title is the deepest scene after watching the whole film. After the heroine and the Jewish male partner communicated in the restaurant, the heroine was enlightened. A good story is not necessarily a good movie. In the two or three years after the end of World War II, against anti-Semitism's...
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Enid 2022-02-02 08:02:37
In the context of that era, the questions raised by the film are still very courageous, but after all, there is only the theme, the execution is very weak, and the display of discrimination is more often used to assist the emotional ups and downs of the male and female protagonists. Gregory Peck is really handsome, and I don't think there's anything particularly memorable about that.
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Kurt 2022-03-25 09:01:22
Jean-Paul Sartre: "Not rebelling in dark times means complicity." The narrative is mediocre, and the best picture Oscars are the same old-fashioned films that hit the pulse of mainstream American thought, anti-Semitism in 1947 WWII just ended, didn't it?
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Phil Green: What makes you say that?
Bert McAnny: Oh, I don't know. You just seem like... a clever sort of guy.
Phil Green: What makes you think I wasn't a G.I.?
Bert McAnny: What? Now, Green, don't get me wrong. Why, some of my best friends are Jews.
Anne Dettrey: And some of your other best friends are Methodists, but you never bother to say that.
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Kathy Lacey: I called up my sister Jane and blurted it out, and she squealed, "Kathy!" as if she had given up any hope of anyone ever asking me. She's aching to meet you. She and her husband are giving a big party for us on Sunday. By the way, won't we have to let Jane in on it?
Phil Green: I hadn't thought so.
Kathy Lacey: But we will, won't we? Your mother knows.
Phil Green: She had to. Jane and her husband don't. If you want to keep a secret...
Kathy Lacey: But wouldn't it be sort of exaggerated with my own sister? Your sister-in-law, almost. I do think it would be inflexible of you.
Phil Green: I suppose it would be, inside the family. But they won't let anybody know, will they?
Kathy Lacey: They won't breathe it. They want to fight this awful thing just as much as you and I do.