life is worth waiting

Rachelle 2022-03-20 09:01:10

2008-7-28

"Do you, at this time, have any fear of returning to your own country?"
"Is home.I am not afraid from my home."

"Life is waiting" is this The TagLine of the film.
From the beginning of the film until Viktor and Amelia were talking in the empty airport,
I realized the existence of the word Waiting.
I am a person who has a particularly slow understanding of drama and film,
although I don't think a person is because of the war in the motherland. Losing his nationality and staying in the airport,
and his Destination--NewYork is at the end of the airport exit. Such an encounter is a comedy.

I like to stage scenes of life in a small space,
in JFK Airport. , Viktor, a person without nationality and identity, stayed for nine months.
He went from language barrier to able to understand English smoothly and communicated more fluently.
From no food to driving the airport car to make some money. The money for food,
from when he was constantly squeezed out by the airport boss to helping the boss at the end,
he settled himself in Gate67, got a job, and the salary was even higher than that of the boss.He
helped people achieve a good marriage, he even After getting his short-term love,
he found a stable and comfortable space in an unfamiliar airport,
where all kinds of people were gathered together because of some kind of power from Viktor.
All this happened in an airport. The

airport . Here, in the oppression of space, the malleability of time is fully contrasted,
People come and go, only Viktor stays in the airport. He can't go out,
but he is always behind his destination.
He can't cross only a short distance. He is waiting, waiting for confirmation of his identity, waiting for the stability of the state power, Waiting for him to step out of the airport, to the gate, and to New York.
For his father's long-cherished wish, he got the signature of the last person in the group of 57 people. After

watching the movie, I found out online .It’s the work of Steven Spielberg, I was surprised.
From hisIt seems that to, All heavy and magnificent,
and then toAnd this, I saw the change and courage of this great director.

In short, entertaining and entertaining in the context of this tragic story:
the camera that followed Viktor and Viktor spoke awkwardly to the camera in English With "i wait.i, wail!"
that Gupta smiled cheerfully as people walked over the wet ground he made,
and Gupta initially speculated
that Viktor was a spy. How many deliberate arrangements were made to let him The coincidence that Amelia sat on Viktor's lap,
and that viktor finally can afford HugoBoss's high-end clothes to invite Amelia to eat various funny scenes,
in this small space, I can feel Spielberg's childlike innocence everywhere in the film. The expression.

I like Spielberg because it reflects the heavy depression of the blockbuster , ,
or the relaxed and playful and joyful and .
With his care for childlike innocence, he has expressed a high degree of humanity and strongness. It
is he who makes us feel that life has always been hopeful, even if it is disappointed and bloody, we always hope to greet us at the next entrance.

Despite The ending was a bit superfluous or even unreliable,
but seeing Viktor finally stepped out of the airport gate and stood in the snowy New York, all the waiting came to an end.
He finally fulfilled his father's long-cherished wish and gathered 57 jazz The signature of
the hand, when he sat in the taxi and said to the driver, "im goin home", he felt that life is really so good.

life is worth waitin.
isnt that right?

View more about The Terminal reviews

Extended Reading

The Terminal quotes

  • Frank Dixon: Do you know, one of my own men came up to me the other day, asked me if I wanted to join the big pool. Look at 'em, look at 'em, look at 'em. Place a bet on when Navorski was gonna leave this airport. Have you heard about this?

    Thurman: [nodding] I have January 3rd.

  • Amelia: I just keep injesting these poisonous men until I make myself sick.

    Viktor Navorski: You're not sick, Amelia, no. You're a little far-sighted.