always answer questions

Palma 2022-03-29 08:01:02

This movie doesn't seem like a popular genre, it's dull and seems to have been told for a long time without telling a storyline.
The only plot is all sorts of moral depravity,
I don't want to judge how bad this 60-year-old man is doing,
but at the end of the movie, wife Nancy is sitting in the chair they used to know, waiting for him, Then he smiled at him indifferently and warmly, feeling very sad.
She asked him why he didn't go to therapy, and
he answered irrelevantly. When he
talked about when his life began to change, it
became a mess,
there was no rules,
no morals, and
no bottom line.
He talked about feeling empty and lonely,
wandering alone. Some
repentance...

Suddenly I feel very scared,
afraid of becoming like him,
blindly pursuing what I want,
letting go of all my passions,
ignoring the restraints I should have,
while enjoying, tearing and hollowing out my own Heart...

I know the feeling of wanting to be stable and looking for passion,
I know the feeling of always following the rules and suddenly finding no reason to continue,
I know the feeling of suddenly waking up, why should I The feeling of restraining myself,
I know the feeling of just going on like this, sinking all the time...

Too bad, it
seems that everything is in my own hands, the game life, the game woman,
in fact, is outside the right track, getting further and further away,
More and more empty, more and more confused...

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Extended Reading
  • Gia 2022-04-21 09:03:52

    A good movie, even though the last baggage is a bit unnecessary, but every paragraph is brilliant, Michael Douglas's best character type, take the easy family route, much better than Wall Street 2.

  • Jennyfer 2022-04-24 07:01:26

    The foreign father-daughter relationship is really equal. . . If you want us to do this, it will never be your turn to comment on the juniors! ! ! After realizing it again, it turns out that there is jesse

Solitary Man quotes

  • Jimmy Merino: When my father gave me this place years ago, I used to dream about these girls. Every night, dreams, all kinds of dreams about 'em. But then I'd see them coming back after graduation. They'd come to homecomings, ballgames. They'd sit at the same tables, eat the same food. And I'd look at them and I noticed, they don't stay like this. None of 'em. They put on years and pounds and wrinkles. And I got one like that at home. So. And we can talk to each other. I know her and I'll always know her.

  • Ben Kalmen: You got your little jokes, you know, the Spanish thing, interests are the same, and the studying. But, um, are you getting it, you know, where it counts?

    Maureen: Oh, Ben. Cheston thinks you care about him.

    Ben Kalmen: This has nothing to do with him. He's never gonna know about this. Never.

    Maureen: Aren't you a little old for all this?

    Ben Kalmen: You're still standing here, aren't you?

    Maureen: Yeah, 'cause I'm contemplating throwing this drink in your face. But I'm not going to, because I don't want Cheston to know what you just tried. So you can just walk away. Please.

    Ben Kalmen: Nothing personal.

    Maureen: Hey. That is it, actually. Since you asked, that's what I get from him. Something personal. Besides getting it done where it counts, which he does. Cheston and I reach each other. He's tender and sweet and smart and funny and a million things that you aren't.

    Ben Kalmen: I was once, honey. It doesn't last.