Tangled and moved

Muhammad 2022-04-21 09:02:24

Ah, a very familiar little old lady (yes, I just can't remember the name and the face is familiar) The most ingrained feeling about the monastery and the nuns is the two nuns described by Maupassant in "Ball of Suet", one with a smallpox face After the acne pit, a young but heartfelt heart grows in the chest of tuberculosis. So when the nun said it was the suffering she deserved during the birth, what I thought was: Ah, that's the tone. The first time I was touched was when one of the nuns (sorry can't remember the name) secretly shoved Philomena a candid photo of Anthony. Grandma Judy can really compete with Aunt Mei, the deep love in her eyes and the chattering in the airport, but when she tells the novel in a coherent manner, she is about to be turned over. The video of Anthony's growth is divided into paragraphs that connect the whole film. So there is no disconnect in the whole movie. Overall 4 stars.
I have an obsessive-compulsive disorder that combines movies with my own understanding. When watching this movie, my heart was tangled and moved, and it was like playing a "World War III". Write a movie review and record it in the hope that some friends can communicate or wait for a while and then review it to understand.
1. Knowing that Anthony had passed away, Philomena was about to leave for Ireland and suddenly said at the airport: "I've been waiting for a sign, but I didn't find it, so I should stay in this place for a while." Is it true in real life? There will be an omen who will appear like a flash of lightning and then know which direction to go and how far to go. What are you waiting for?
2. Philomena followed Martin to meet Anthony's former close friend Marcia, and her friend's daughter Mary, and kept asking a question: "Has Anthony mentioned Ireland?" It means that he is even ready to stop inquiring about his son's life history. Why do you always expect something, expecting that the son will always remember his mother, his birthplace, remember everything, and what will three years of life leave a child? Is the giving of parental love necessarily based on a certain premise? For example, you must remember everything your parents have paid for you, not asking you to do something but you must remember. In disguise it is similar to mental stress and restraint. Philomena completely forgot the child and the monastery after seeing the organ brooch pinned to his son's collar. Perhaps it is because he realizes that he has not been betrayed and has been missed and remembered. Maybe Philomena is a little old lady who needs a sense of security.
3. Regarding Philomena, I would like to give her a definition, or use a few adjectives to describe her. She is willing to endure pain and torture because she has always firmly believed that she is guilty and should atone for it. She is ignorant and pure; she is good at reading words and feelings and will complain about the BBC's political anchor to comfort Martin; she chats and laughs with the Mexican chef in the restaurant, because she is happy and respectful because of the dazzling breakfast. People are polite; slightly capricious and easily moved; brave. . . . . To clearly define a person is inherently self-defeating.

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Extended Reading

Philomena quotes

  • Sister Hildegarde: Let me tell you something. I have kept my vow of chastity my whole life. Self-denial and mortification of the flesh; that's what brings us closer to God. Those girls have nobody to blame but themselves and their own carnal incompetence!

    Martin Sixsmith: You mean they had sex.

    Sister Hildegarde: What's done is done. What do you expect us to do about it now?

    Philomena: Nothing. There's nothing to be done or said. I found my son, that's what I came here for.

    [reprimanding]

    Philomena: Martin.

    Martin Sixsmith: Hang on, hang on, I'll tell you what you can do. Say sorry, how about that? Apologize. Stop trying to cover things up. Get out there and clear all the weeds and crap off the graves of the mothers and the babies that died in childbirth!

    Sister Hildegarde: Their suffering was atonement for their sin.

    Martin Sixsmith: One of the mothers was fourteen years old!

    Philomena: Martin, that's enough.

    Sister Hildegarde: The Lord Jesus Christ will be my judge, not the likes of you.

    Martin Sixsmith: Really? Because I think if Jesus was here now, he'd tip you out of that fucking wheelchair - and you wouldn't get up and walk.

  • [repeated line]

    Philomena: Well I didn't see that coming, Martin, not in a million years!