Gosford Park movie plot
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Adolphus 2022-03-24 09:01:55
Sure enough, it is a combination of "Rules of the Game" and "No Survival", and Harry Potter...
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Devante 2022-03-26 09:01:06
Another masterpiece by Robert Altman. With a family gathering and the murder of the male master, it deeply exposes the hypocrisy, degeneration, relationship chaos, and the difference and estrangement between the master and servant classes in the upper class society. Almost everyone is intrigued, each has his own thoughts, and each has a ghost. A detective film is just a shell, and even a detective who is so stupid that he can't tell the direction and pretend to be. Due to the large number of characters and complex relationships between characters, and identity information, past history and mutual relationships are only given through realistic dialogues, it takes two or even more brushes to fully get every detail. Ultraman really doesn't give audiences any roadmaps or ladders for easy viewing. Most of the scenes feature motion shots, with servants present, the conversation is fairly fast-paced (although there isn't a lot of overlapping dialogue), and the group portraits are presented fluidly and deftly. The collective hunting scene is like a variation of Renoir's [rules of the game], and the hunting of birds and small animals are also real shooting and real hunting. In the cast list and the manor space, the upper and lower floors are used to distinguish the master and servant classes. PS: The stars of the United Kingdom are all gathered in this film. (8.5/10)
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Isobel McCordle: [faints]
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Morris Weissman: How do you manage to put up with these people?
Ivor Novello: Well, you forget I earn my living by impersonating them.