Kate Mulvany

Kate Mulvany

  • Born: 1977-2-24
  • Height: 5' 1¾" (1.57 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Katlyn 2022-03-18 09:01:02

      American Dream: A touch of green in Gatsby's eyes

      In the 1920s, the Western powers just put aside the smoke of the First World War and invested in production and construction in peacetime. The First World War hurt the vitality of the traditional European industrial powers, but it also made the United States the number one economic power. In the...

    • Camron 2022-03-21 09:01:07

      A glorious and tragic image of Gatsby's characters

      Aside from the original work and the adaptation, the movie has already moved me as far as the story itself is concerned. Every line in the film is not nonsense, empty talk, all coherent, and can be used for taste analysis. The scenes in the film are never wasted, and every scene and even the props...

    • Kasey 2022-03-25 09:01:05

      This filming method is not to shape the characters but to restore the original emotions: unswervingly believe in the unalterable death of the life experience and the flying hearts of the people. Perhaps it is because of being too loyal to the original to think of using the retelling of classic sentences and letting the letters. It’s a pity that when you watch the tricks one by one (though you can't find a better one), it still seems to be contrary to the accidental lack of jazz spirit in the other film. The saxophone has no supplement.

    • Ernestina 2022-03-22 09:01:06

      The original work becomes like this, I don't know what to say. Let's delete the word the great.

    The Great Gatsby quotes

    • Nick Carraway: Stocks reached record peaks, and Wall Street boomed a steady golden roar. The parties were bigger, the shows were broader, the buildings were higher, the morals were looser, and the ban on alcohol had backfired. Making the liquor cheaper. Wall Street was luring the young and ambitious, and I was one of them.

    • Daisy Buchanan: Open another window.

      Nick Carraway: There aren't any more.

      Daisy Buchanan: Then telephone for an axe.