Big-Ben, Tanakasan, Naniodiska?

Laila 2022-04-19 09:01:43

Big-Ben once told me that he liked this movie very much. I haven't watched it. I
lost contact with him for so long. This time I watched it as a kind of memory:

I accidentally saw an episode of An Affair to Remember from Fox in the 20th century. Nostalgic. Anne and her friend Betsy read the lines with the heroine, weeping, saying that men would not understand this kind of feeling. Later even the little girl Jessica joined the team. In fact, I don't think that watching a romantic movie will be moved by gender. What struck me a lot was another passage:

Anne: Only then did people know love, and time and space couldn't separate them, because they knew
it was real...
Betsy: It was a movie!

I think when we tell people about the warmth and beauty of "Sleepless in Seattle", some people will say, "That's a movie."

Exactly these days reading the works of the French Romantic period. Sometimes when I read the depths of love, I will cry and feel heartache. I feel that the love there is the real love, and it is more real than reality.

Perhaps in this era, the air and soil around us are no longer suitable for the growth of that kind of love. Love in this era has been deformed and mutated...

The last thing I want to say is that I don't think the voices of several young people are well matched, but I like the episodes in the film very much. I don't know if there are soundtracks for sale.

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Extended Reading
  • Mona 2022-03-23 09:01:41

    What is fate like, the track where two hearts will eventually meet

  • Monte 2022-04-24 07:01:05

    love at first sight? Unfinished past life? Do you believe that when you see this person at that moment, do you think it is his feeling? I believe, I always believe. They also meet each other all the time.

Sleepless in Seattle quotes

  • Victoria: Can I bring something back for you? A souvenir? Does he like snow globes? You shake them up and then the snow floats down.

    Jonah Baldwin: [with extreme politeness] Sure. I'd really like that. Thank you so much.

    [Victoria looks up at Sam]

    Sam Baldwin: He's 8.

    Victoria: He's good at it.

  • Rob: [hands Sam a business card] Here. My shrink. Call him.

    [Sam stares blankly, then reaches into his briefcase and pulls out a stack of business cards]

    Sam Baldwin: Loss of Spouse Support Group. Chicago Cancer Family Network. Parents Without Partners. Partners Without Parents. Hug Yourself. Hug a Friend. Hug a Shrink. Or work. Work hard. Work will save you. Work is the only thing that will see you through this.

    [pause]

    Sam Baldwin: Don't mind him. He's just a guy who's lost his wife.