Extended Reading
  • Brody 2022-02-11 08:02:24

    "Working Girl" movie script

    "Working Girl" screenplay

    produced by American Twentieth Century Fox in 1988.
    Screenplay: Kevin Wade
    Director: Michael Nichols
    Starring: Melanie Griffith, Harrison Ford, Sigourney Weaver
    Award: won the 46th Golden Globe Awards in 1989 for Best Picture, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress, Best...

  • Arden 2022-02-11 08:02:24

    Hard work + mind + keenness = break through class constraints

    Effort + Mind + Sensitivity = Breakthrough of class constraints. Just like the title, what the whole film radiates is exactly the mythical power that all sentient beings need to break through class constraints.

    On the current China, just like the United States in the 1980s, the class and ranks were...

  • Joannie 2022-04-21 09:02:32

    Harrison Ford's first rom-com? In fact, he is quite suitable for such a wooden and ruffian role, and he can't quite get the charm of Melanie Griffith, both his looks and his voice. Contrary to most of the short reviews, I like the style of dressing in the 80s, with big shoulder pads and a bonnet head, strong and vibrant.

  • Bria 2022-02-11 08:02:24

    Emotional drama accounts for too much. In the workplace drama, the three lines of relationship between the heroine and the boss, the customer and the partner are not focused, and the flat and straightforward narrative is embarrassing. Perhaps the experience of a clerk may resonate even more. ps Harrison is really not suitable for the role of picking up girls in a romantic and chic bar; Melanie, although small and revealing, has a horrible figure.

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Working Girl quotes

  • Alice Baxter: Uhm, Ms. McGill?

    Tess McGill: Yes.

    Alice Baxter: [pointing to private office] That's your desk... in there...

    Tess McGill: I don't think so.

    Alice Baxter: Oh, yes.

    Tess McGill: Sorry, I thought the secretary would sit out here...

    Alice Baxter: That's right, I'm the secretary. If you don't mind, I'd prefer assistant.

  • Tess McGill: [from her new, private office] Hey, Cyn. Guess where I am.