If you lack patience, you will regret to miss it

Tara 2022-03-26 09:01:15

I read the introduction that it was a youth comedy about boys who are determined to take the Cambridge and Oxford high school exams, so I watched it, because recently I need something funny to stimulate my nerves. . . Unexpectedly, it is very deep, and you may even feel a little dumb at first glance. . . After watching it for half an hour at noon, although I didn't wait for the expected funny plot, I had a good feeling: this is a good movie worth waiting patiently. So I didn't rush to go home after working overtime for a while, but continued watching the place where I stopped at noon, and I didn't feel hungry until 7 o'clock. . .

Sure enough, looking at it reaffirmed his sixth sense. What a pleasant "dialect" from all over the UK, what a lovely bunch of liberal arts boys, what three teachers with distinct personalities, what an Oxford campus that makes me drool, what an ending that is beyond imagination~~~~~ many times, This film gives me the feeling of "group cross talk", but it is not the kind of "burden" that is purely funny. A group of teachers and students quoted the scriptures, babbled, witty and humorous, and easily and naturally completed the discussion of profound topics: education, life, literature, philosophy, history, politics, homosexuality, sexual harassment~~~

This movie is definitely the more The more interesting one is in the back.

That fat old gay teacher Hector who looks like Coach Anxi (plus, is that a molester?) is really cute and respectable, except for the little things, he is the one who really wants to shape these children. "Pass the parcel. That's sometimes all you can do. Take it, feel it and pass it on. Not for me, not for you, but for someone, somewhere, one day. Pass it on, boys. That's the game I want you to learn. Pass it on." It can be regarded as inheriting civilization. . . In the end, the episode where the heartthrob boy threatened the principal so that Hector would not be fired was a bit unexpected and very warm~~ It changed my impression of this somewhat self-righteous character slightly.

The "heartbeat" also said "The more you read though, the more you'll see that literature is actually about losers. It's consolation. All literature is consolation." Hearing this, I thought of blogs and bloggers People, although our blog is not a literature at all. But is it true that the more loser you are, the more you talk here? I remember someone saying this before, "Look, this person hasn't blogged for a long time, it means that he has a good life and is very fulfilled. If he starts writing all day, it means that he has been sad and sentimental recently..." Not necessarily accurate , Just a sudden association~~~ Some people are naturally autistic and boring, they just like to write more than they say~~ During

the mock interview, the teacher asked the classmates to define the history, that Rudge is a bit boring sports student Saying "Well, history is just one fucking thing after another, isn't it..." As a liberal arts child who used to love history, I think this summary is quite concise, to the point... History, really is a piece of broken things TM. . .

And that little gay-minded kid. . . Ha cute, always frowning, but not that unhealthy blue. . . Somehow, he reminded me of Xiao Mao in "Cooking Class"~~"Unfortunate Child" posture"I'm a Jew... I'm small... I'm homosexual... and I live in Sheffield. I'm fucked." Later, he got a scholarship and got a long hug from the "heart boy" he liked. . . I most remember his sentence at the end "I'm not happy but I'm not unhappy about it." He summed himself up too accurately. In fact, this is a good attitude to life. . .

In addition, after reading it, I feel again that compared with these children, I have completely read high school and college for nothing. . . It's like I haven't experienced it before, hey, China's education. . .

Very good movie, just need a little patience to watch it slowly~~

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Extended Reading

The History Boys quotes

  • [talking about Tom Irwin]

    Headmaster: He comes highly-recommended.

    Mrs. Lintott: So did Anne of Cleves.

    Headmaster: Who? He's up-to-the-minute, more "now".

    Mrs. Lintott: [dryly] Now? I thought history was "then".

  • [Dakin is groping Fiona, using World War I as a metaphor for his "assault" on her body. He moves his hand up her thighs but she pushes it away]

    Dakin: What's the matter?

    Fiona: No-man's land.

    Dakin: Ah, fuck. What do I do with this?

    [he points to his erection]

    Fiona: Carry out a controlled explosion?