Finlay Currie

Finlay Currie

  • Born: 1878-1-20
  • Height: 6' 2" (1.88 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Tre 2022-03-13 08:01:01

      lines

      376
      00:26:06,431 --> 00:26:08,850
      What wind blows you here, Pip?

      377
      00:26:16,357 --> 00:26:20,193
      I went to Richmond yesterday
      to speak to Estella, Miss Havisham,. ..

      378
      00:26:20,319 --> 00:26:23,572
      ..and finding that some wind
      had blown her here, I followed.

      379
      00:26:23,697 --> 00:26:27,700...a

    • Andrew 2022-03-13 08:01:01

      After YY male self-hypnosis is broken

      In the era of black and white movies, it may not be easy to make movies, so there are fewer bad movies, and 5 stars are given to the era of movies. I have read the novels. In the classic European novels, there are few endings in which the daughter-in-law becomes the mother-in-law after many years...

    • Olen 2022-03-26 09:01:14

      "Great Expectations", which is deeply embedded in the traditional film grammar, will inevitably be forgotten more and more with the times. Lean's classical background only comes in handy in melodrama or later big productions, and these early adaptations of famous plays make people feel that he is secretly solidifying his upper-middle-class attributes, and there is no such thing as Dickens's novels. A bottom-up critical force.

    • Durward 2022-03-19 09:01:10

      In fact, I saw it a long time ago. On TV, I was deeply impressed by the house, but I never knew the name of the movie. I rewatched it again today and found that I still basically remember the plot. PS. The truth when the heroine was a child Vivien Leigh

    Great Expectations quotes

    • Pip: Mr. Wemmick, I don't quite know what to make of Mr. Jaggers.

      Mr. Wemmick: He don't mean that you should know what to make of him. Deep, that's what he is, as Australia.

      Pip: Who was that he shouted at so fiercely in the office?

      Mr. Wemmick: That was his housekeeper, name of Molly. He got her off on a murder charge.

      Pip: Murder? Isn't he frightened of having her about?

      Mr. Wemmick: Not him. When you come to see us again, take a good look at her.

      Pip: Shall I see anything very uncommon?

      Mr. Wemmick: You'll see a wild beast tamed. Keep your eye on it.

    • Pip: Why are you going to Richmond, Estella?

      Estella: I am going to live, at a great expense, with a lady there who has the power or so she has of taking me about and introducing me, and showing people to me, and showing me to people.

      [sipping tea]

      Pip: You'll have a gay time and be much admired. You must look forward to that, Estella.

      Estella: It's part of Miss Havisham's plan for me, Pip. I shan't take any great pleasure in events which I don't shape, but I shall be beautiful and I shall be gay, I shall be obedient and I shall write regularly of my gaiety.

      Pip: Will you always be part of Miss Havisham's plan, Estella?