Some lines:
A million dreams that keep me/you awake. A million dreams for the world we are gonna make.
Never expected the first tear to come so quickly, only ten minutes into the film. A pair of poor boy and rich girl, lovely daughter, fluttering cloth curtains, moonlight on the roof in the wind. The adventures completed by the youth and the endless stories to be told, the magic lamp conjured from the magic box casts the phantom on the curtain and rotates - that is the magic of the poor life.
Never enough for me.
A circus invited by the royal family, a dazzling female singer, dozens of tours and thunderous applause. The lyrics overlap with the chorus of the protagonist couple, and the different parts of the lyrics clearly distinguish the life pursuits of the two women and the mood changes before and after Mr. Barnum became famous. Digression, in this scene, Uncle Hugh's shining eyes perfectly explain what "the joy of success jumps in his eyes".
I owe no apology. This is me.
When the "minorities" are blocked, they speak out in anger, unafraid to pass through the decent crowd of high society, unafraid to face the abusive slogans of the protesters. It's an affirmative content of the main theme, but seeing them dancing proudly in the snowy square, it's hard not to feel warm.
You don't need everyone to love you, just a few good people. The
same villa, the time of being newly married and separated in childhood, the hugging silhouette under the warm sunset and the blue scarf fluttering in the wind, it is boring to return to a good plot Old-fashioned, but this line really hit me.
This is the greatest show.
Who said it wasn't. Those with inferiority complex gained respect, those who were bound gained freedom, those who were abandoned gained family affection, those who were denied insisted on love, those who were burnt were rebuilt, those who were lost were recovered, and their dreams came true.
This is not only the greatest show. This is the greatest life.
View more about The Greatest Showman reviews