Extended Reading
  • Kasey 2022-03-23 09:02:21

    Make dreams come true

    After watching it for a few days, in retrospect, the movie still leaves a lot of touching scenes.

    In addition to the emotional debate with the Harvard team at the end, there are several details that impressed me.

    At the party celebrating the victory, Henry invited Samantha out. He rowed to the...

  • Nels 2021-12-26 08:01:01

    We write the beauty of life ourselves

    Now I write this film review in a solemn and beautiful melody at the end of the film.
    To be precise, there is no comment, only feeling. In the tears I can't hold back now, I can't use my logic to organize "comments".

    Just like the music at the end.
    Life is serious, even heavy, like the sound of a...

  • Lois 2022-04-24 07:01:15

    Accept the injustice of reality and strive for the relative fairness of tomorrow.

  • Henri 2022-03-27 09:01:12

    It seems Washington is trying to cast himself as Hollywood's black hero bird

The Great Debaters quotes

  • Melvin B. Tolson: Take the meanest, most restless nigger. Strip him of his clothes in front of the remaining male niggers, female niggers, and nigger infants, tar and feather him, tie each leg to a horse facing an opposite direction, set him on fire, and beat both horses until they tear him apart in front of male, female and nigger infants. Bullwhip and beat the remaining nigger males within an inch of their life. Do not kill them but put the fear of God in them, for they can be useful for future breeding. Anybody know who Willie Lynch was? Anybody? Raise your hand. No one? He was a vicious slave owner in the West Indies. The slave-masters in the colony of Virginia were having trouble controlling their slaves, so they sent for Mr. Lynch to teach them his methods. The word "lynching" came from his last name. His methods were very simple, but they were diabolical. Keep the slave physically strong but psychologically weak and dependent on the slave master. Keep the body, take the mind.

  • Henry Lowe: School's the only place you can read all day. Except prison.