Marion Marshall

Marion Marshall

  • Born: 1929-6-8
  • Height: 5' 6" (1.68 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Nona 2022-02-02 08:02:37

      Gentleman's Agreement: The Silent Majority [Best Picture at the 20th Academy Awards]

      http://blog.trivialfilm.com/2012/06/gentleman-agreement20.html

      Gentleman's Agreement (1947)

      The film won Best Picture at the 20th Academy Awards.

      The film tells the story of a writer. In the age of anti-Semitism, the leading actor, a well-known author, was invited to a magazine whose...

    • Cameron 2022-02-02 08:02:37

      born a woman

      I have seen an old Hollywood movie "Gentlemen's Agreement", and I still remember it to this day because of a special feeling. Among them, Gregory Peck plays an extremely successful social journalist who is tasked with covering the current state of Jewish discrimination in contemporary American...

    • Foster 2022-03-28 09:01:13

      It really doesn't work from the current point of view.

    • Jeremy 2022-03-18 09:01:09

      Winning the Oscar can only be a political need. How can you say that Jews discriminate against blacks in the United States? It's a coincidental movie of the era, and it's almost as empty as the red movies made in China today. In addition to being angry, the male protagonist is still angry. The supporting actress won the best supporting actress after throwing a few winks. The most disgusting thing is that the two are together again at the end. It turns out that the Oscar judges like this kind of bloody drama

    Gentleman's Agreement quotes

    • Mrs. Green: Are you very disappointed, Phil?

      Phil Green: Yes, I am. I was almost sure he'd hand me the Stassen story or Washington. Oh, I wasn't looking for an easy one, Ma, but I did want something I could make good on. I'd so like the first one here to be a natural. Something I know they would read.

      Mrs. Green: Oh, you mean, there's enough anti-Semitism in real life without people reading about it?

      Phil Green: No, but this one's doomed before I start. What can I say that hasn't been said before?

      Mrs. Green: I don't know. Maybe it hasn't been said well enough. If it had, you wouldn't have had to explain it to Tommy just now, or you father and I to you. It would be nice sometime, not to have to explain it to someone like Tommy. Kids are so decent to start with.

    • Phil Green: Ma, I've got it! I've got the idea, the angle, the lead. I'll be Jewish! Why, all I've got to do is just say it! No one around here knows me. I can live with myself for six weeks, eight weeks, nine months. Ma, this is it!

      Mrs. Green: It must be. It always is when you're this sure.

      Phil Green: Ma, listen, I've even got the title. "I Was Jewish for Six Months."

      Mrs. Green: It's right, Phil.

      Phil Green: Ma, it's like this click just happened inside me. It won't be the same, sure, but it'll be close. I can just tell them I'm Jewish and see what happens.

      Mrs. Green: It'll work fine, Phil.

      Phil Green: Dark hair, dark eyes. Just like Dave. Just like a lot of guys who aren't Jewish. No accent, no mannerisms. Neither has Dave.