This is a movie about teenagers, and what are you looking forward to?

Marcelino 2022-06-02 23:33:23

I watched a lot of people compare it with "Disconnected". How does this compare with Disconnected? Does the egg hit the rock? No, this is not the same theme as "Disconnection". Okay, are you sure that the theme of this movie is about the Internet? In addition, on what aspect did the director tell you that this movie is actually a lot of people who are not related to each other, but something related to each other has happened? Obviously everyone in the movie is connected to each other! Compared with the disconnection, what are you looking forward to! !

At the end of this movie, I think the most talked about is the direct struggle between the child and the parent. In the end, the child and the parent change each other, don’t they? And finally returned to the theme "Men, Women & Children" completely, isn't it?

It can be said that this movie almost tells all the things that are not so beautiful but not too bad and typical of youth, so for me I am very aftertaste. At this stage, I feel pretty good when I look at the past. .
It’s not that when the heroine in "Star You" was found to have committed suicide by the heroine, what made me emotionally exploded. Instead, I looked at the whole thing quietly, because when I was 16 I didn’t know how many times I thought about suicide. , Hey, it's a pity that I don't have the courage and I have prescription drugs to buy like I did.
What made my emotional explosion was that the hostess’s mother saw the couple lying in the hospital bed in the hospital. Her mother seemed to slowly shed tears. I think this point, this point is approaching the end, as if everything is complete. My mother found her mistake, and I have to say that during adolescence, I don’t know how many times I tried to prove that I was right and my parents were wrong, but I failed repeatedly. I said that repeated defeats are too absolute, because in the end, everyone has little results. Parents will change in the end, and the relationship with their parents will gradually improve. It turns out that the father who hates the father will gradually become love. Father, I am already twenty years old, and I am beginning to have some insights.
All about sex/game/family or friends relationship/parents' problem/schoolmate and school stuff/pregnant at the young age things/parents have problems with children stuffs/single mom or dad with her or his only child things/And finally the boyhood things in this movie is Incisively and vividly.
It’s a great movie. I didn’t put the proportions of this movie on the extramarital affairs because I haven’t reached that stage yet.
(PS: Although there are no subtitles, it is very clear.)

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Extended Reading

Men, Women & Children quotes

  • [Last lines]

    Narrator: [recites extract from Carl Sagan's Pale Blue Dot, A Vision of the Human Future in Space] That's home. That's us. On it, everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was lived out their lives. Every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there on the mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam. How frequent their misunderstandings, how fervent their hatreds. Our imagined self-importance, the delusions that we have some privileged position in the Universe are challenged by this point of pale light. Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves. Like it or not, for the moment, the earth is where we make our stand.There is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits, than this distant image of our tiny world. It underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another and to preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we've ever known.

  • Chris Truby: I've got, like, a pretty hard test tomorrow. So, I'm gonna go study.

    [goes upstairs]

    Don Truby: Yeah... studying.

    Helen Truby: What are you talking about?

    [Don gestures]

    Helen Truby: You know, you're gross. He's 15.

    Don Truby: That's all I did when I was 15.

    Helen Truby: Yeah, that I believe.