Wow. . . You can learn the business skills of little girls

Retha 2022-04-19 09:01:25

After watching the film, I feel that the biggest highlight is not how human nature is, or anything else, but that the heroine is young, but her thinking mode is very mature.

If you read the beginning, you will know that she will be able to hunt down and avenge her father.

How the process in the middle is really not very attractive to me. How many westerns are about something like atmosphere. Not to mention.

The accents of the characters are very interesting.

The little girl is strong-willed at a young age, and the first manifestation of this willpower to achieve her goal completely occurred in a business negotiation. Obviously inheriting her father's business experience, she can talk about the lowest price offered by an "old friend" in a mall, up to three hundred and twenty dollars, and then immediately start the next business negotiation.

Since then, she has used this business technique when negotiating with special teams from Texas when hiring "policemen." That kind of old-fashioned, bold, self-confident, and skillful, really admirable.

I have to say, actually, when I watched this movie, I was looking forward to her business acumen from head to toe.

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Extended Reading

True Grit quotes

  • Rooster Cogburn: [referring to the defense attorney] Pencil-necked son of a bitch!

  • Mattie Ross: Who's the best marshal?

    Sheriff: I'll have to weigh that. William Waters is the best tracker. He's half Comanche, and it is something to see him cut for sign. The meanest is Rooster Cogburn; he is a pitiless man, double tough, and fear don't enter into his thinking. Loves to pull a cork... The best is probably L.T. Quinn; he brings his prisoners in alive. Now, he might let one slip by now and again, but he believes that even the worst of men is entitled to a fair shake.

    Mattie Ross: Where can I find this Rooster?