watched dozens of movies

Alec 2022-03-22 09:01:24

Well, many people say it's a popcorn movie. I can watch it dozens of times and every time I feel that I see something different, I still enjoy watching it. Happy or not, I want to use it to review the past, um, I am a hypocritical person.
The first time I watched it, it was still before the new millennium. When I was using dial-up Internet access, I couldn't understand English very well. I bought a VCD and watched it, and I knew it was a happy ending. With the interface of Netscape, I started to study the computer, what is the network, and applied for an AOL account. I don't remember much of the plot of the movie, but I miss the interface of the laptop.
Well no matter what the plot of the movie is, the movie at least aroused the curiosity of the Internet when it was released, and it did. Does it count as the first movie I saw with an ad placement?
Off topic, Netscape was really good back then, it's a pity, alas. Pioneers are often shot dead on the beach.
The second time I watched it was n years later. This time, I liked the soundtrack of the movie. It was still the era of campus folk and rock. Listening to the jazz tune, "Over the Rainbow" is also a highlight, and I listened patiently. When it came to the subtitles, I felt instantly happy, and the original soundtrack was resolutely collected.
Well, I'm still not paying attention to the plot.
The third time I watched it, I came to see the acting when I knew that Hanks and Ryan were famous actors. As a popcorn movie with a relaxed and romantic tone, this movie is perfect, with a happy ending, no villain/mother-in-law, bad ex-boyfriend/friend, everything seems to happen naturally. Well, it's a film that can be used to practice spoken English.
The fourth time I watched it, I suddenly remembered Zola's "Women's Paradise". The story of the small handicraftsman's workshop and the big department store, although it is to reveal the dark exploitation of capitalism, does reflect the social development direction after the Industrial Revolution.
How similar is the small bookstore and large book supermarket in this movie, it turns out that this is not a simple popcorn show. For a more in-depth review, check out the book review of "Women's Paradise". Let's write another day about where the small handicraftsmen of capitalist development go.
The fifth time I watched it, I began to pay attention to the details, and I also found the whole script to read it intensively. Well, I admit that we are a true Virgo, and I used a 119-minute film as a research textbook to interpret it. I am already possessed by it. . petty said bought Intel at $6. It seems that Auntie is still very good at buying stocks. It is estimated that it is time to joke about Apple now. Another day to write about the buying timing of IT industry stocks.
The sixth time I watched it, this time I noticed the conversation between joe's father and him, well, julian ran away with the nanny, and started talking about homosexuality so early. Still chatting in such a humorous way, I think the writers started to set it up as a joke. Mainly I want to elicit Joe's awakening through the dialogue between father and son. Yes, I found true love, but I still hide it and don't pursue it? Resolutely send flowers to someone, to enhance feelings.
The seventh time I watched it, I felt that there were no bad guys in a movie, and the plot could still be ups and downs. It was not easy. The part of Joe rewriting the email was very touching. Hanks played the man's helpless appearance to the full. Joe has never lied to Kate once, and at the end, what I'm a little puzzled about is what kind of feelings Kate has for Joe?
The eighth time, when they began to know each other's identities and avoided each other, there seemed to be some kind of rule, that is, the person you follow will find him frequently by your side. Their stop-and-go has taken a small Manhattan street scene. This film is definitely one of the promotional films made for Manhattan.
The ninth time I watched it, I paid attention to the small stories of the supporting characters, and I also read the script again. It said that George, the clerk of kate, would not even think of working under him without a PhD degree. It's bright. When I bought books before, he said that he talked about the value of handmade books. I saw that he was a sloppy shop clerk, but he was the first to foresee the bomb. His emotional episode was also written in the whole script, but unfortunately it was not performed in the movie.
For the tenth time, I started to pay attention to the exes of the two protagonists. Random Bookseller has to be of Jewish descent to show the characteristics of a cold-blooded and shrewd businessman. In fact, the whole script still talks about her spiritual conversion. It seems that every character must have a happy ending.
Besides, Frank, the name has a bit of Eastern European flavor, and he also studies the unpopular stuff, suspecting that it is a little angry youth from Russia. But the sentence you are what you read he wrote is really fitting. What is the role of a bookstore? Has anyone thought about other things besides buying books, a kind of cultural inheritance. It's a pity that all shopping is online now, and the atmosphere of small bookstores has been replaced by Starbucks.

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You've Got Mail quotes

  • Miranda Margulies: We can get the Times to write something. Or that nut from the Observer.

    Kathleen Kelly: Wait, what... what nut from the Observer?

    Miranda Margulies: Frank something? The one who's so in love with his typewriter. This is just the sort of thing that would outrage him!

  • Joe Fox: Kevin, this is possibly the most adorable creature I've ever been in contact with, and if she turns out to be as good looking as a mailbox... I would be crazy enough to turn my life upside down and marry her.