saving Mr.Bank

Addison 2022-03-18 09:01:04

I feel that the Chinese translation of the name is not so relevant, but it is not important.

Important: Tom Hanks is so handsome! The image of the heroine pamla is so vivid, and Thompson played it well! And the driver Ralph, such a warm presence, the hug at the end and the heroine when I met again moved me to tears!

Many of the novels written by female writers are allusions to childhood experiences. It was an unbearable memory for the heroine. Indeed, it is too difficult, it is too difficult to reveal one's own scars! All unwanted objects are escapes from childhood hurts. At the end, the heroine couldn't help crying when she watched the movie adapted from her novel, which was so distressing.

I still like the way the film is shot. The novel adaptation line and the childhood memory line are interspersed and parallel, and the conflict is brought to a climax when it is known that the words of the father and the words of the song written by the screenwriters overlap. I liked that part so much!

There is also a beautiful picture of the movie, whether it is the part of the memory or the part of reality. Disney really satisfies the fantasy of boys and girls about fairy tales, this castle is so exciting!

Finally, I still have to confess to Tom Hanks. Although I don't feel that there are so many scenes, you can always trust Tom Hanks' acting skills!

View more about Saving Mr. Banks reviews

Extended Reading
  • Tina 2022-03-24 09:01:46

    only old man and granny movies

  • Freddy 2021-11-30 08:01:28

    The whitewashing work is undoubtedly, but I have absolutely no ability to parry the father-daughter line. Many details make people feel extremely desolate in the comparison of memories and reality, especially the pear that has fallen to the ground. We are all stubborn for various reasons, unwilling to let go of some things, stubborn and powerless to protect our unique Mr. Banks, because there will be no Mickey Mouse to save them. The interruption is a bit messy. Emma Thompson and Paul Giamatti are awesome!

Saving Mr. Banks quotes

  • Walt Disney: I have my own Mr. Banks. Mine had a mustache.

    P.L. Travers: [sarcastically] So it's not true that Disney created man in his own image?

    Walt Disney: No, but it is true that you created yourself in someone else, yes?

  • Walt Disney: Have you ever been to Kansas City, Mrs. Travers? Do you know Missouri at all?

    P.L. Travers: I can't say I do.

    Walt Disney: Well, it's mighty cold there in the winters. Bitter cold. And my dad, Elias Disney, he owned a newspaper delivery route there. A thousand papers, twice daily; a morning and an evening edition. And dad was a tough businessman. He was a "save a penny any way you can" type of fella, so he wouldn't employ delivery boys. No, no, no... he used me and my big brother Roy. I was eight back then, just eight years old. And, like I said, winters are harsh, and Old Elias, he didn't believe in new shoes until the old ones were worn through. And honestly, Mrs. Travers, the snowdrifts, sometimes they were up over my head and we'd push through that snow like it was molasses. The cold and wet seeping through our clothes and our shoes. Skin peeling from our faces. Sometimes I'd find myself sunk down in the snow, just waking up because I must have passed out or something, I don't know. And then it was time for school and I was too cold and wet to figure out equations and things. And then it was back out in the snow again to get home just before dark. Mother would feed us dinner and then it was time to go right back out and do it again for the evening edition. "You'd best be quick there, Walt. You'd better get those newspapers up on that porch and under that storm door. Poppa's gonna lose his temper again and show you the buckle end of his belt, boy."

    [Travers looks noticeably unsettled by his story]

    Walt Disney: I don't tell you this to make you sad, Mrs. Travers. I don't. I love my life, I think it's a miracle. And I loved my dad. He was a wonderful man. But rare is the day when I don't think about that eight-year-old boy delivering newspapers in the snow and old Elias Disney with that strap in his fist. And I am just so tired, Mrs. Travers. I'm tired of remembering it *that* way. Aren't you tired, too, Mrs. Travers? Now we all have our sad tales, buy don't you want to finish the story? Let it all go and have a life that isn't dictated by the past? It's not the children she comes to save. It's their father. It's *your* father... Travers Goff.

    P.L. Travers: I don't know what you think you know about me, Walter...

    Walt Disney: You must have loved and admired him a lot to take his name. It's him this is all about, isn't it? All of it, everything. Forgiveness, Mrs. Travers, it's what I learned from your books.

    P.L. Travers: I don't have to forgive my father. He was a wonderful man.

    Walt Disney: No... you need to forgive Helen Goff. Life is a harsh sentence to lay down for yourself.