You would say that I am not free, but I am not worried at all

Emerson 2022-01-11 08:02:37

One afternoon this summer, Nashville was screened at the Museum of Moving Images. This time, I am no longer impressed by Ultraman's grass snake gray line and laying ability.

Just as I finally saw "Guling Street" on the big screen after watching many DVDs, for me, Nashville has also changed from a spectacle to a personal memory.

I am most fond of the little character "Los Angeles Joan" played by Shelley Duvall. That may be the first time Shelley and Ultraman have collaborated. They are thinner than later, and are still a teenager, acting as a heartless person who only knows how to dress up. Bone and flesh, I went back to Nashville and said she was visiting the aunt who was hospitalized, but when she got off the plane, she ran out and played all the way to the west. The elderly uncle followed and chased her until the aunt passed away. She never visited her. . And she said, "Don't call me Martha, everyone in Los Angeles calls me Joan."

Everyone used to be a problematic teenager who made adults unable to do anything , thinking that they would be reborn after going out.

Most of the movie is noisy, not only the extras say one sentence, but the election car also broadcasts political declarations all the way. This is Ultraman's consistent ambition: to act out life itself, not to set up a filter. So some quiet moments are particularly noticeable.

For example, the heartbreaking story of the prodigal son (almost every character is pathetic), he is the three-person band Bill Mary, Tom in Nashville, similar to the well-known peter, paul and mary in the 1960s.

Bill and Mary are husband and wife, but Mary loves Tom like other female fans. One morning, Mary lay in Tom's arms and said rhythmically that I love you. Tom smoked afterwards with a blank face. Mary has a typical 70s hippie face, long yellow hair, a tight face, and no expression.

Tom also easily got a nympho BBC reporter (played by Chaplin's daughter). But he seems to be most interested in Linnea, a local singer who has had a relationship, and keeps harassing phone calls to her. One night at the music bar, three women were present. Tom came on stage to perform a new song that he wanted to dedicate to a special person, called "i'm easy", sad melody, real lyrics, three women without knowing of course I think Tom is singing to himself. (This song unexpectedly won the Oscar original music award that year!)

That night, Linnea went to the hotel with him, and was going home in the middle of the night to take care of his son and husband. Tom was playing tricks, taking her to comb her hair in the toilet, and calling other women. Linnea seemed to understand the tempers of these boys, kissed him on the forehead before leaving, and bid him goodbye.

The old lady with a thick throat, the wife of the godfather of music in Nashville, is like a shotgun, she only talked about supporting Kennedy when she was young, with tears in her eyes and choking in her throat. She couldn't speak, like talking about old lovers. .

There is also a man who has no lines and rides a quirky long motorcycle to shuttle through various scenes. Sometimes a group of actors and actresses have a comment or two, and sometimes they carry the main character. Not long after the movie started, the main character’s car was accidentally crashed. Blocked on the highway, only his car can swiftly pass through the rear-end car array and leave in the dust.

After the concert shot at the end, the microphone was accidentally passed to Babara harris, who had always wanted to be a singer and repeatedly hit the wall. She stood tremblingly on stage, but sang more and more bravely, finally leading the whole scene to sing. This song and "I Like'm Easy', it was also written by Keith Carradine, who played the prodigal son Tom, but the atmosphere was much grander. It was called "I'm Not Worry".

"I am not worried at all. You will say that I am not free, but I am not worried at all." (It don't worry me none, it don't worry me, you may say that I ain't free, but it don't worry me) The

camera shakes up during the singing, past the iconic Parthenon Temple in Nashville, the election slogan, the American flag, and it ends in a blue sky.

Also: the second year after the Nashville screening, the two actresses karen black and babara harris in the movie both starred in the last film of Hee Fat.

And the suspenseful TV series "Hitchcock Theater" produced by Xi Pang in his later years had hired young Ultraman to be the director. After shooting two well-regarded scenes, it is said that he was at odds with the producer, and Ultraman quit the job. .

In the 1990s, Altman was filming "The Player" which talked about the background of the Hollywood film industry. There was a scene on the set. An extra line was like this: "Do you know? My dad used to work under Hitchcock."

I don’t know if it’s the original words of Ultraman’s son, Stephen, who is a stage set designer and designed the old house in "Gosford Manor" with his father.

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Extended Reading

Nashville quotes

  • John Triplette: I just want to tell you a little bit about what we're trying to do. I'm not - I know you're astute politically and I'm certainly not here to sell you a bill of goods.

    Bill: I don't care. I don't care about politics.

    John Triplette: Okay, great. Well, let me tell you then, I've got a problem that I think would work to your advantage. As you know this redneck music is very popular right now. And I've got an awful lot of these local yokels on the bill, you know, singing...

    Bill: Your basic country folk...

    John Triplette: Crapola...

    Bill: Right

    John Triplette: So, I think - what I'm going for is a broader appeal, you know.

    Bill: Which is where we would fit in.

    John Triplette: More than just this Southern thing. And I think that you could really - a really hip group, like yours, could walk off with the evening.

    Bill: Yeah, probably the only rock group on there?

    John Triplette: Absolutely.

  • Mary: You see, it really doesn't make any difference because we're registered Democrats.

    John Triplette: Well, I'm a registered Democrat!

    Bill: The only reason we're registered Democrats is because your father was a registered Democrat and his father's a registered Democrat!