A Room with a View Comments

  • Eliezer 2022-03-26 09:01:09

    This series of james Ivory is good, like a tribute to...

  • Gabe 2022-03-25 09:01:14

    Love the pronunciation of beebe so...

  • Queenie 2022-03-25 09:01:14

    It's really not even a bit of a movie from 1985, except that a few big stars in the movie are old now, which can remind us. . . . I will continue to be attracted by the costumes in the play. Now it seems that there are no fierce conflicts, no artificial hypocrisy, no old routines, and the background of World War II. It turns out that this kind of love can be really pure and soft like beautiful. "call me by your name" really has a similar tone, but the free-spirited, shy and frank mood of each...

  • Clarissa 2022-03-25 09:01:14

    It's really not even a bit of a movie from 1985, except that a few big stars in the movie are old now, which can remind us. . . . I will continue to be attracted by the costumes in the play. Now it seems that there are no fierce conflicts, no artificial hypocrisy, no old routines, and the background of World War II. It turns out that this kind of love can be really pure and soft like beautiful. "call me by your name" really has a similar tone, but the free-spirited, shy and frank mood of each...

  • Micheal 2022-03-24 09:02:44

    Love the pronunciation of beebe so...

  • Jermaine 2022-03-24 09:02:44

    The ancient costumes shot in the UK are very charming, the scenery and lighting are like neat academic oil paintings, the characters' clothing, hair accessories, every detail is just right, and every segment is pleasing to the eye. The controlled and elegant narrative pace implicitly speaks of an ideal classical love story. The love here is Chagall's love, holy, redeeming, and...

  • Chesley 2022-03-24 09:02:44

    The ancient costumes shot in the UK are very charming, the scenery and lighting are like neat academic oil paintings, the characters' clothing, hair accessories, every detail is just right, and every segment is pleasing to the eye. The controlled and elegant narrative pace implicitly speaks of an ideal classical love story. The love here is Chagall's love, holy, redeeming, and...

  • Tre 2022-03-21 09:02:34

    It was such a lovely story. I've seen it before, but I only remember the episode where Lucy passed out. All actors are treasures. When the inspector was young, Yan beat Qunfang and added one star. I watched it at station B, and I laughed and laughed during the bath, which was unexpectedly...

  • Cleve 2022-03-21 09:02:34

    "I don't care what I see outside. My vision is within. Here is where the birds sing. Here is where the sky is blue." "How do you do? → Come and have a bathe." "Do you understand how lucky people are when they find what's right for...

  • Elissa 2022-03-21 09:02:34

    It's really much fuller than the novel. Every character is very cute, beautiful and handsome. DDL is so funny in it. The cut-scene ppt was very attentive, Lie to sb., better than the novel's sub-title, when I saw the barrage asking why everyone knew that they were in love except themselves, so I remembered the sentence "I finally plan to fall in love with sincerity. Where are they going to take me?" Rare Movies Above...

Extended Reading
  • Clarabelle 2022-04-22 07:01:41

    [Film Review] A Room with a View (1985) 8.6/10

    A revisit of this resplendent Merchant-Ivroy-Jhabvalacostume porn, A ROOM WITH A VIEW, has wondrously retained its entrancing lusciousness in the wake of the impeccable restoration.

    Spending a belle-époque vacation in Florence, young English lady Lucy Honeychurch (Bonham Carter), hailed from an...

  • German 2022-04-22 07:01:41

    A kiss is enough

    The first time I knew A room with a view was from EM Forster's text. The teacher said that she had a male classmate in college and wanted to marry a girl like Lucy. After reading the Chinese translation of "A Room with a View" in a daze, maybe it was Forster's style, or maybe it was an incompetent...

A Room with a View quotes

  • [last lines]

    George Emerson: Kiss me, dear. Again.

    Lucy Honeychurch: I'm reading.

    George Emerson: What are you reading?

    Lucy Honeychurch: It's from Freddy.

    George Emerson: What does he say?

    Lucy Honeychurch: Silly boy. He thinks he's being dignified. I mean, everybody knew we were going away in the spring.

  • [Cecil reads off Eleanor Lavish's Novel]

    Cecil Vyse: A far off the towers of Florence and she wandered as though in a dream through the wavering golden sea of barley touched with crimson stains of poppies. All unobserved he came to her. Isn't it immortal? There came from his lips no wordy protestations such as formal lovers use, no eloquence was his, nor did he suffer from the lack of it. He simply unfolded her in his manly arms