Lost Middle Ages & Fantasy Schools

Tatum 2022-10-29 00:24:45

The music in the film is the highlight, but the values ​​of the male lead are really incomprehensible.

When the male protagonist had a mid-life crisis, he thought that the friends around him were doing better than him, and his heart was filled with all kinds of anxiety, and he brought this anxiety and confusion to his wife and son, but fortunately the male protagonist's wife and son Really detached and calm.

Then, when he went to study in Boston, he learned that his son had hopes of going to Harvard and Yale. The sense that his life was about to be changed, and he could understand that his son missed the interview time at Harvard, so he tried his best to ask his old classmates for help.

Then I met two Harvard female students discussing feminism and politics. I felt that I recalled the time when I was studying, and I imagined that if I went to Harvard and met such a girl, I could live the same life as an old classmate. Having a fresh sexual relationship, a certain amount of financial freedom, and the feeling of being respected in life brought about by money and status.

In fact, there are many people who feel this way in real life, and there will be more and more. But it definitely shouldn't be a plot for elite students like Harvard and Yale.

I still like what Gao Xiaosong said, the famous school is the most important weapon for the country, and the students of the famous school are people who want to make the country believe in the truth, change the nation and society, and have the world in mind.

In today's society, personal wealth, social status, and awareness are all important. That's right, but these should all exist as added value of personal talent and the corresponding value provided to the society, and should not be measured and evaluated by a person. life-time values.

The son's sentence: I love You can't save the male lead, he will keep figuring it out, and he can't figure it out...

This film reminds me of a debate in the school when I was a sophomore. After the debating between the non-legal people and the people from the Philosophy Society, the guests and the audience asked their own questions and feelings. He stood up and said his feelings, from the overall appearance of the debate team, the quality displayed on the debate field, to the foothold of personal views, etc., and comprehensively analyzed the debate on the field.

All the teachers and students present were impressed by it. This is the gap between the pattern, vision and bearing of the students from famous universities and ordinary universities. This is the reality of today.

Admonish yourself:

1. In your lifetime, if you have the ability and opportunity, you still hope that graduate students or even Ph.Ds can become famous students;

2. The vision and pattern of my parents’ view of the world may only be 45°, and through the accumulation of experience, it may reach 60°. I hope I can have more than 90°, and I want to know more people. The perspective of seeing the world may be 270° Or 360, never limit your pattern with things you don't understand;

3. Do the thing at hand well, and see everything by yourself.

View more about Brad's Status reviews

Extended Reading

Brad's Status quotes

  • Brad Sloan: [narrating] Her friend, Maya was equally captivating, equally compelling. I suddenly felt a deep grief... for all the women I would never love and all the lives I would never live. I imaging running away with them both and starting again and what that might look like.

  • Troy Sloan: When we were walking around today and you embarrassing me, I kept thinking, like, you know, if I go to this school, everybody here's gonna remember this and I'm never gonna live this down. But... you know, they're not gonna remember. Because, everybody's just thinking about themselves. You know? Nobody cares. Like, the only person that's thinking about you, is me, so... the only person's opinion that you should really care about is mine.

    Brad Sloan: Yeah. What's your opinion?

    Troy Sloan: Well, I love you.

    Brad Sloan: Thank you.