Linda Manz

Linda Manz

  • Born: 1961-8-20
  • Height: 4' 10" (1.47 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Benedict 2021-12-21 08:01:19

      Heaven and hell

      The poor and tricky Bill finally died at gunpoint. Before he died, he killed the farmer who discovered that he and his girlfriend were tricked into marriage. The death of two men caused his girlfriend Abby to instantly lose two men who loved him. Let the young sister lose her relatives. The passing...

    • Amiya 2022-03-23 09:02:11

      Small comment

      Photography is awesome. The picture pursues a kind of ultimate beauty, and the magic of creation is in the mirror painting. It is because of the excessive pursuit of photography that the director ignored the most important narrative, and the flaws in the narrative failed to make this flawed and...

    • Vince 2022-03-21 09:02:11

      Slightly lacking in drama

    • Naomie 2022-03-26 09:01:07

      4.0+. The film perhaps illustrates that Malick's style should not be limited to editing techniques alone. In parts other than those transitions, even when the film is in a fluid narrative, the language of the shots is completely different from the strategy employed by traditional dramas. The most obvious is that the stable theatrical space constrained by the axis and visual positional relationship is disintegrated, so the third-perspective narration representing the driving force of the stream of consciousness can arbitrarily dominate the narrative, and the image can also be attracted by the natural landscape and sound at any time. Take a moment to leave the trajectory of the plot. But at the same time, the situation and the characters remain present, which are complete in some invisible exterior of the film (perhaps the director's conception), but fragmented in the film's narrative perspective and tone, from the "poor mountains and bad waters" An evolutionary route to "The Tree of Life" and later works is a process of more complete construction and more fragmented presentation.

    Days of Heaven quotes

    • Linda: Why are you doing this?

      Abby: When I was your age, I was all by myself in the world. I used to sit and wrap cigars - until after dark. My skin was as white as paper. I never saw the daylight. This is not so bad.

    • Bill: I went to work in the mill. Couldn't wait to get in there. Begin at 7:00. Got to have a smile on your face. And one day you wake up, you find you're not the smartest guy in the world. Never gonna come up with the big score. When I was growin' up, I thought I really would.