Bastard

Emie 2022-01-02 08:02:09

When I saw two-thirds of this film, I smelled the ordinary taste of ordinary independent inspirational movies, and I was able to figure out the context of similar movies-encounters, falls, depressions, introspection, repentance, and found that everything is actually fine. Stand up and start anew.
The same is true for this film. No wonder Roger Ebert only gave two stars, probably because he read countless films. For me, Amy Adams and Emily Blunt’s catching screen looks are really hard not to stare at the screen. It was the meticulous aftertaste process after the whole film was over that prompted me to give 5 stars.
Your high school is gorgeous, dating the quarterback of the football team, everyone remembers your beauty. Later, you became a maid who cleaned up people. When the quarterback got bigger, you married someone else. The stomach was held back in exchange for a boy who the school felt was too avant-garde. You have a sister who seems to be always in the rebellious period, an old naughty dad, and those nights in the motel where the quarterback cheats. You clean up the rooms where the dead have stayed, and run wherever there is blood, violence or tears. You also have a mother who committed suicide. She will always live in the memory of you and your sister.
You are forced to be invited to drive a shabby pickup to the high school classmate's home for the baby welcome party, with Porsches and BMWs parked at the door. You got your hair, changed your clothes on your body, sat down tight, defending your intriguing career, and endured the celebrities' eyes.
In fact, you have also seen the life of a celebrity, you may be envious, you may feel that you are a loser. But you know, this one hour and 33 minute movie belongs to you, not to them.
Sunshine Cleaning shocked me just like Juno shocked me in 2007-it showed me a person's life in a panoramic view. The protagonist Rosa's life is very unsatisfactory. There are ways to kill her in all aspects of life. The screenwriter's name is not well known, and this is her first feature film script. In the past few years, she herself, like Rosa, was tossed in various humble jobs for a living. She also has a dilapidated pickup truck. When she was at work, she heard the story of two women cleaning up the crime scene on the radio-I was shocked. She was listening to NPR's All things consider. This reminds me of the touching stories that I remember when I listened to NPR Story of the Day in my freshman year. I decided to reopen iTunes and subscribe to this Podcast. ——I got inspiration, and then I did careful research and investigation on related aspects, combined with my own experience, and wrote such a script.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=101794925
In the program linked to this link, the screenwriter talked about the experience from the whole play to the completion of the film, full of gratitude to friends and life Feelings. She is not from a major class and has no vocational training, but she is the material for the entire movie, just like Juno's screenwriter used to be a stripper. Their lives are destined to be unusual, and they have different views on life from those of us who are calm, or a deeper insight.
Tablets Rosa child asked her mother: "What illegitimate births?"
Sister Norah replied:
"That is your mother when pregnant without being married to you
it's no big deal
you know that in a few years you will find that this will Cool,
right? Maybe you can form a band
called Bastard.
You can use it to pick up girls
. Everyone will be crazy for you.
I know you are the coolest bastard."
I don't know if the child will remember these words when he grows up, or if he really formed a band with beautiful girls around him. At the end of the film, the child showed off his fake tattoo to the girl he likes, which is cool.
I remember when I heard someone my age went to the cinema to sell popcorn, I yelled: What a cool job. I also remember that she actually didn't think this job was cool because she needed this job. I think that being cool may be a response to misfortune, and an attitude toward misfortune. Rosa cleans up the dead and asked me to say it must be cool in the past, but after experiencing her 1 hour and 33 minutes, I think I want to change the word.
A lot of people are in bands, a lot of people go to bed, a lot of people are in movies, and a lot of people do things that ordinary people seem to be cool. But who of these is really cool from the bottom? ——Have a different thinking and attitude towards life and the world from the bottom of my heart, and dare to practice it?
The screenwriter said in the show that she is still cooperating on several other books, but she doesn't know how long this situation can last. Maybe tomorrow she will have to find a part-time job in another fast food restaurant. It can also be seen that cool things can't always go to the end. The celebrities may not care if they can be made into a movie.
As the movie itself, this film does not have too many surprises. And as another work that influenced me, it gave me endless aftertaste.

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Extended Reading

Sunshine Cleaning quotes

  • Joe Lorkowski: You get bored a lot?

    Oscar Lorkowski: Yeah.

    Joe Lorkowski: You look out the window?

    Oscar Lorkowski: All the time.

    Joe Lorkowski: Well, see that proves how intelligent you are. They should be catering to you. They should be doing something special for you.

  • Rose Lorkowski: I don't want this anymore.

    Mac: So, that's it?

    [Rose nods yes]

    Mac: [long pause] That's it then.

    [Mac walks away]