Movie Talk [0207] The Cider House Rules There is always a sun

Sarina 2022-04-23 07:02:10

2013-01-31

"Good Will Hunting" has two Chinese names, "Soul Catcher" and "The Sun Is Like Me". And the translation of the name of this "The Cider House Rules" is obviously not through the brain.

Homer, who has always been calm like a lake, has an epic name, but lives the most prosaic life. The moment he boarded the St. Clouds train, the fate of most of his life was already certain, and he would spend his final days in an orphanage just like his "father". This fate seems too sinking. Picking apples must follow a certain order, and brewing fruit wine naturally requires strict rules, but the movie has given us a great impact on our understanding of the word "rules", and there are deviations from traditional rules everywhere. Charlize Theron (Charlize Theron) plays Candy as her boyfriend flies over the hump route, lingering with Homer Wells in the humble room, and she shows the joy of the moment with one of the most beautiful backs. But when her man came back completely paralyzed, she still chose to return to the most orthodox way; Homer has always refused to abort women, but in the face of Rose Rose's turn of fate, he had no turning back, believing that he would return to the orphanage to inherit the mantle , he will also behave differently to all the women who come to ask for help. If cheating and abortion are still worthy of debate, after all, in traditional human thinking, all kinds of contradictory views still exist reasonably. The bigger challenge to the rules in the movie is Rose Rose's child. Is this child really her dad's? I still have some doubts. Can a director really treat the rules as nothing?

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Extended Reading

The Cider House Rules quotes

  • Fuzzy: Is your father dead?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: Cirrhosis. It's a disease of the liver.

    Fuzzy: What, a liver killed him?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: No, alcohol killed him. He drank himself to death.

    Fuzzy: But did you know him?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: Barely. But it hardly mattered that I knew him.

    Fuzzy: Did you know your mother better?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: Mm-hmm. She's dead now too. She was a nanny.

    Fuzzy: What's a nanny do?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: She looks after other people's children.

    Fuzzy: Did she grow up around here?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: No. She was an immigrant.

    Fuzzy: What's an immigrant?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: Someone not from Maine.

  • Homer Wells: I was wondering if you could give me a ride.

    Wally Worthington: Sure. I'd be glad to. A ride where?

    Homer Wells: Where you going?

    Wally Worthington: We're heading back to Cape Kenneth.

    Homer Wells: Cape Kenneth? That sounds fine.