A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood evaluation action
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Andre 2022-03-26 09:01:09
Based on true events, the famous American TV host Rogers brings himself into a family feud as a comedian. I don’t know if it’s based on feelings or homage. This little story is told relatively passively, and the switching between perspectives lacks the proper explanation. All forms of the text seem to revolve around a few sentences hidden in the best-selling books. Chicken Soup for the Soul. Personally, I prefer the dialogue between the actor and Mr. Rogers in the previous meetings. Rogers used his cunning veteran and sharp edge to abduct the reporter's interview rights and turned against the guests. The lines were neatly written. In addition, I don't know why Tom Hanks shaped Rogers, is it to restore the character's own temperament or has another purpose? Overall, I feel that this character is a bit out of place, and the audience can neither enter his heart nor arouse curiosity about him, and Tom Hanks also deliberately used a kind of sinister micro-expression to separate from other characters and even the audience. distance between. It was only when the set of lights on the set was withdrawn that he smashed the bass keys at the end of the curtain and began to come alive. "Normal life is inseparable from pain", deeply agreed.
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Alena 2022-03-25 09:01:13
In-depth reporters and language show hosts rhetorically attacked each other PKhhh During the interview, they were ridiculed by the rhetorical questions, and they had a great sense of professional substitution. The overall movie is slow and bland, especially since we don't know much about the Rogers show's background, so it's easy to fall asleep. The first film I watched in the theater after the epidemic. Making Rogers too much like a priest, with a kind of loving aura, the ending is the most intriguing, and the priest also has moments when he secretly vents his anger.
A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood quotes
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Fred Rogers: You know, death is something many of us are uncomfortable speaking about.
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Fred Rogers: I don't think anybody can grow unless he really is accepted exactly as he is.