Dana Rohrabacher

Dana Rohrabacher

  • Born: 1947-6-21
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Suzanne 2022-01-17 08:02:45

      The soul of the king and the shoemaker

      Watch this movie carefully twice from beginning to end. I have been hesitating to write a film review. I personally like this film very much. The director wrote an epic poem of success and failure with an extremely magnificent scene. But apart from the tragic and tragic narrative with a lot of...

    • Obie 2022-01-17 08:02:45

      Meet with a smile

      The movie "Gods and Generals" was only watched after I watched the post "American Anecdotes-Civil War" by Jing Huzi. Someone in that post recommended this film. I didn't really want to watch it at first. Because I heard that the total length is more than 200 minutes, it is really big, and when I...

    • Chase 2022-04-21 09:03:05

      The battle of faith, to put it bluntly, has nothing to do with black slavery. There are a lot of dogmatic references and miraculous scenes in the film. This history can be regarded as the beginning of the current dispute between evangelicals and liberals in American society.

    • Roger 2022-04-22 07:01:48

      I remember going to the late show alone at the show, there were only scattered old white men in the theater

    Gods and Generals quotes

    • Col. Porter Alexander: [Speaking with General Lee on the Confederate positions on Marye's Heights] General, they going to come at us here?

      General Robert E. Lee: Colonel Alexander, Federal troops amassed across that river are watching us prepare for them. If I were General Burnside, I would not attack here. I'd move back upstream, come across from above us. But Burnside is not a man with the luxury of flexibility. He's being pushed from behind by loud voices in Washington, by newspapers who demand quick action. But we're here, and so he will attack us here.

    • [first lines]

      Title Card: A human life, I think, should be well rooted in some spot of a native land, where it may get the love of tender kinship for the face of the earth, for the labors men go forth to, for the sounds and accents that haunt it, for whatever will give that early home a familiar unmistakable difference amidst the future widening of knowledge. The best introduction to astronomy is to think of the nightly heavens as a little lot of stars belonging to one's own homestead. - George Eliot