Matthew Morrison

Matthew Morrison

  • Born: 1978-10-30
  • Height: 5' 11½" (1.82 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Gloria 2022-03-23 08:01:05

      Lust and Madness

      Lust and Madness

      There are two main contents of the film, one is the background of the Netherlands at that time: "speculation and sale" of tulips. Trade tulips like stocks and play silly games. And simply the epitome of modern stocks. There is also a story about a rich man who "bought" a young girl...

    • Delpha 2022-03-23 08:01:05

      A hot pun

      In response to sister Duan's good appointment, I saw the German version of "Tulip Fever/Tulpenfieber/Tulip fever" that was released on 9.1 in North America? Very beautiful picture, detached concept, with the tulip fever of the first world economic crisis as the background, I feel It is a metaphor...

    • Torey 2022-03-24 09:03:53

      Three and a half. A movie that makes me want to watch just by the name of the movie. The ending is rather gratifying. What impressed me the most was the tears that the heroine quietly shed because of the rich husband's grieving reaction when she was suspended from death. ps: When I first saw the second girl, I felt that she was more rich and noble than the heroine, and wearing brocade clothes was more in line with the temperament of a lady.

    • Lesly 2022-03-23 09:03:36

      72/100 The Dutch mania for tulips and fever, just complement the passion of the young women and painters in the film. The film tells a wonderful love story that is not necessarily profound, and the suspense of the fate of the characters remains until the end. It can be seen that multiple deletions and changes have made some plots incomplete, but fortunately, these deficiencies can be improved through brain supplementation. The film's art direction, makeup and costumes could have been nominated, but now...

    Tulip Fever quotes

    • Sophia: [Henrietta enters the room] What are you looking at?

      Jan Van Loos: What am I *looking* at?

    • [first lines]

      Maria: [narration] Before you were born, Amsterdam was captivated by a flower: the tulip. They came from far away in the East and were so rare and beautiful that people lost their senses in wanting to own them. Rich and poor were spending and borrowing money to join the trade in bulbs, which were going up in price all the time. None more so than the rare striped tulips that were called breakers. A new breaker came from nowhere like an act of God, and it changed people's lives. A white flower with a God-given crimson stripe turned our lives upside down, mine and my mistress Sophia's.