Clive Swift

Clive Swift

  • Born: 1936-2-9
  • Height: 5' 7" (1.7 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Danielle 2022-03-15 08:01:02

      the director said

      British director David Lean is known for "Late Me" (1945), "Lone Star and Tears" (1946), "Oliver Twist" (1948), "Bridge on the River Kwai" (1957), "Lawrence of Arabia" (1962), "Doctor Zhivago" (1965) and other classic films shocked the film industry. After "Ryan's Daughter" (1970), he was silent...

    • Lysanne 2022-03-15 08:01:02

      trip to india

      EM Forster traveled in India in 1912-13, but soon after the outbreak of the First World War, he joined the Red Cross and served in Alexandria, Egypt. There he met the Greek poet CPCavafy and published his collection of poems, Pharos and Pharillon. In 1921 Forster returned to India to work as a...

    • Gertrude 2022-03-15 09:01:11

      The violin is a good thing, especially for exotic movie soundtracks. The paintings outline the imagination of India. Judy Davis is really good-looking, the kind that is different from the West, who was talking about the floating corpse on the Ganges before, the music played, everyone was solemn in the first shot, and the river water rippled in the moonlight in the second shot. The conflict of the lens itself, the contrast montage, forms a sense of dislocation and association of summoning, and completes the summoning structure. 47 minutes later, the first conflict came to an end, and the scene where the monkey sounded again in the theme soundtrack was very interesting. The man and the monkey were never in the same scene. At such a price, I went to make a movie, so there will be no David Lean today. Have a chance to watch it.

    • Susanna 2022-04-21 09:03:46

      The posthumous work of David Lean, he is the first British director in my heart. The theme of Lean's films is often the story of a lonely ordinary person fighting against the environment in which he lives. It is full of noble temperament, integrity and elegance. Humble but arrogant. After his death, no one has been able to photograph classicism as epic and bold

    A Passage to India quotes

    • Mrs. Moore: Sometimes I think too much fuss is made about marriage. Century after century of carnal embracement, and we're still no nearer understanding one another. Goodnight.

    • Mrs. Moore: Good? You're speaking about power. The whole of this entertainment is an exercise in power, and the subtle pleasures of personal superiority.