implicit love, persistent love

Cletus 2022-03-24 09:01:54

I just happened to see this film on movie-star recently. To be honest, watching this film now, especially on TV, I can’t watch it if I can’t calm down.

I really liked the way this film was expressed, so I kept watching it. The story is very simple, and there are no violent conflicts and climaxes, but it makes you feel very comfortable watching it. It can be said that the film is very human, very life, and very real.

What do people live for? Who do you live for? In this film, several people in the United States, which we think most advocate freedom, have chosen to live not only for themselves, but for their responsibilities. I hope that when I encounter a similar decision, I can think and face it with courage.

View more about The Cider House Rules reviews

Extended Reading

The Cider House Rules quotes

  • Fuzzy: Is your father dead?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: Cirrhosis. It's a disease of the liver.

    Fuzzy: What, a liver killed him?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: No, alcohol killed him. He drank himself to death.

    Fuzzy: But did you know him?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: Barely. But it hardly mattered that I knew him.

    Fuzzy: Did you know your mother better?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: Mm-hmm. She's dead now too. She was a nanny.

    Fuzzy: What's a nanny do?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: She looks after other people's children.

    Fuzzy: Did she grow up around here?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: No. She was an immigrant.

    Fuzzy: What's an immigrant?

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: Someone not from Maine.

  • Homer Wells: I was wondering if you could give me a ride.

    Wally Worthington: Sure. I'd be glad to. A ride where?

    Homer Wells: Where you going?

    Wally Worthington: We're heading back to Cape Kenneth.

    Homer Wells: Cape Kenneth? That sounds fine.