Too many words, just take notes

Blaze 2022-01-26 08:03:06

"I would never want to join a club that welcomes me as a member"

There are lots of episodes inserted to watch in the talking story

The camera picture is very self-centered and subjective, including the protagonists. The characters are very independent and strong.

It’s interesting to recreate past transitions, objective chats, subjective empty shots, and even subliminal animations.

When the two chatted on the rooftop, their inner subtext became subtitles

In the bed scene, the heroine's soul sat on the chair beside

The director expresses his own voice very bluntly, the life experience of Jews in American families

The narrative time escapes but is complete

The communication between the protagonist and the characters in the past stories, the sense of communication between the protagonist and the audience (because you also saw it)

Jewish salvation? On the way of Annie's growth, the first time she sang before she met the male protagonist, there were many subjective perspectives, and the camera kept switching between her and her offstage. The second time, only she was singing her own song, immersed in it, confirming her personality change

When the two consulted, they were in the same picture but different shots. The male was in the night and the female was in the daytime, accounting for about 1:2.

As a comedian, the male protagonist is pessimistic, hates society, hates the powerful, and cannot really integrate into society (Jews); the female protagonist (American) eventually integrates and is recognized (Grammy)

Annie "You always think I'm not smart enough" at the beginning, "New York is on the brink" at the end, and the hero "I recommended you to read this book" (The Merchant of Venice)

Bumper cars in childhood, bumper cars in adulthood

Annie grew up, from a girl who sang "Latida, Latida, La La" and wore cool clothes to become a talkative, skirt-wearing artist.

"Egg" Love Theory: I'm reminded of that old joke. A guy went to a psychiatrist and said, 'My brother is crazy, he thinks he's a hen. The doctor said, then why didn't you bring him? The guy said, I want to, but I also need eggs. I think that's how I think about relationships between men and women right now.

- Woody Allen's life experience as a Jew in New York gave him a heightened level of hatred, sex, and death, which are largely on display in his films, which he uses witty, through New York intellectual wit The expression, playfully shows New York. We need him this way, that's my take on Woody Allen.

View more about Annie Hall reviews

Extended Reading
  • Kody 2022-03-22 09:01:21

    When I watched it before, I hardly remembered anything, but when I watched it again, I found it very cute. It may be because of living in New York for a few years. The intellectual superiority that pretends to be modest by little intellectuals, the vigorous look of when you like a person, the enchanting details and small humor in life, the picky and unhappiness of the New York left are all talked about. . I should be very annoyed to get along with this kind of people in my life, because I am already hypocritical enough.

Annie Hall quotes

  • Alvy Singer: Probably on their first date, right? Probably met by answering an ad in the New York Review of Books. "Thirtyish academic wishes to meet woman who's interested in Mozart, James Joyce, and sodomy."

  • Alvy Singer: Whatta you mean, our sexual problem? I - I mean, I'm comparatively normal for a guy raised in Brooklyn.

    Annie Hall: Okay, I'm very sorry. My sexual problem!

    [loudly]

    Annie Hall: Okay, my sexual problem! Huh?

    [man standing in front of Alvy and Annie turns around and looks at them]

    Alvy Singer: I never read that. That was - that was Henry James, right? Novel, uh, the sequel to "Turn of the Screw"?