A Summer Social Observation from An Anthropological Perspective

Ericka 2022-03-21 09:02:22

Directed at the name of Scarlett Johansson, only the ordinary film with this name was included. At first I thought it was another kind of mindless family comedy, but after ten minutes of the film's opening, the preconceived impression disappeared. It is a very memorable film, full of human feelings. The sullen young woman in Lost in Tokyo is really like a girl who just graduated from college. Where is this woman, she is a fairy. Apart from her body, what hasn't changed is her unique, helpless, forbearing, kind eyes.

Don't go into the technical details of the movie, just tell the story. It seems to be censoring some of the little thoughts that have been bothering me from time to time.

The material life of New York's Upper East Side seems so harmonious, but it cannot help but look deeply and for a long time.

Do you know who you are when you are new to the workplace? Do you know what you want and how to achieve it?

If you can't have both fish and bear's paw, do you know how to balance it? The concept of focusing most of your energy on making a living to support your family seems like a paradox.

If either spouse loses the direction of his life, how will the relationship be maintained? How to find a perspective outside the besieged city to review yourself regularly?

If life is really becoming more and more complicated with the great abundance of material, how can I give up all this and just pursue a simple life?

If a man grows older and bears more than the sustenance of his family, but more of a small group and even social responsibilities, how can he devote more energy to loving his family?

Let these if and if all come one by one with the passage of time, not you choose life, more often life chooses you.




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Extended Reading

The Nanny Diaries quotes

  • Annie Braddock: Okay Mrs. X, now it's time for a few simple childcare rules.

    Jane Gould: Oh, alright, the teddy bear has been compromised.

    Annie Braddock: Slamming the door in your kid's face is *not* okay. Spending more time on a benefit for kids that you've never met than you do with your own blood is *not* okay. Going to a SPA when your son has a fever of a hundred and four and not answering emergency calls, that officially makes you an unfit mother.

    Mrs. X: This is outrageous. Stop the tape.

    Jane Gould: Uh, no. This is clearly a disgruntled nanny. W-we might have something to learn here.

    Annie Braddock: Now I know that you're all pretty busy with your hair appointments, and your watsu massages and your attempts to stay young so your husbands won't leave you. But here's an idea! Why don't you try eating dinner with your child every once in a blue moon. And heads up here, lady, try smiling once in a while. People hate you.

  • Jamaican Nanny: Stop eatin' them boogers!