Darkest Hour Comments

  • Duane 2022-03-22 09:01:33

    A model of Rembrandt...

  • Bell 2022-03-22 09:01:33

    The passage between Downing Street and the Map Room was so long that his footsteps seemed like a lifetime; the distance between Dunkirk and Great Britain was so short that his markings were like death's scythes. When the cabinet supports peace talks, he will go to the tiger's mouth to drag the lost sheep back; when the king questions his ability, he will go to the corner to create life. He looks forward to miracles more than anyone, and understands sacrifice better than anyone, but he must hide...

  • Austin 2022-03-22 09:01:33

    Still like watching Joe Wright's play. This film needs to be changed to a director, so I can't watch it at all. After I found out that such a terrible script was written by the Oscar-nominated screenwriter of "The Theory of Everything", I suddenly understood. Plus a little drool over Ben Mendelsohn's...

  • Leopoldo 2022-03-22 09:01:33

    Exactly as imagined, there is not even the slightest mistake or problem, nor the slightest surprise and side escape. Correct to boring. Everyone is talking about acting, yes, acting is good, and the movie is nothing but acting. Personal preference is really uninteresting in this kind of...

  • Tiana 2022-03-22 09:01:33

    Commemorating Wright's many years of filming, if he doesn't advance or retreat, his aesthetic has fallen to the same level as Hooper, and he is addicted to abusing the...

  • Edmond 2022-03-22 09:01:33

    In fact, it is the British version of "The Founding of a Nation", more refined and more human. Churchill demonstrated the political art based on rhetoric. If words have power, it is only because these words express what other people want to say and...

  • Malachi 2022-03-21 09:01:39

    A new subgenre is proposed: contemporary British speech World War II films. The Russians rely on Stalin's hammer to win the war, the Chinese rely on time and human life, the Americans rely on oil, what about the British? Of course it's by...

  • Dora 2022-03-21 09:01:39

    2017302. Four and a half stars, the prequel to "Dunkirk", also known as "Three Fires for New Officials". The whole film is mostly indoor play, and the cramped space makes the atmosphere more depressing and tense, and also makes the situation of the parties in the play more aggressive and tense. Churchill came to power at a time of internal and external troubles and self-governance, and in a series of intrigues, he showed a vivid and interesting image of a tough old man.

  • Dee 2022-03-21 09:01:39

    Recent theatrical films are of high quality. Prime Minister's speech, before Dunkirk. I can recognize Gary Oldman sometimes, but most of the time I can't see him at all. KST's scenes are few and not necessarily important, and every appearance is glamorous. History, even knowing the ending, still sweats for it. Never give up, stand up. This integrity and strength is given to us...

  • Elroy 2022-03-21 09:01:39

    The king stopped stammering in "Churchill's Speech"... A prequel to "Dunkirk"? It's so boring that I can only watch the main theme of photography. It is nothing more than a little bit cleverer than some main themes, but they are all supported by the skills of routines to grandma's house. In contrast, "The King's Speech" is much better in terms of topic selection and techniques. Can populism solve the problem if it says "Britain is at its worst...

Extended Reading
  • Dax 2022-04-21 09:01:43

    “Never!!Never Give Up!!”

    "If we talk to the Germans, what will you think?" "Never!! Never!!" I can't help seeing this, tears are rolling in my eyes. This is the most thorough understanding of human dictatorship as people who like peace. the cry

    How strong a heart does a person need to be able to withstand the fate of a...

  • Ignatius 2022-04-23 07:01:39

    Excerpts from "Darkest Time"

    [The Prime Minister's conversation with the public on the subway]

Darkest Hour quotes

  • Viscount Halifax: I will not stand by and watch another generation of young men die at the bloody altar of your hubris!

    Winston Churchill: No, you would have us die as lambs!

    Viscount Halifax: Was Gallipoli not enough for you?

    Winston Churchill: HOW DARE YOU! Our troops were chewing barbed wire in Flanders and I saw it! Opening a second front, outflanking the Turks was a serious military idea and it could have damn well worked if the Admirals and the First Sea Lord hadn't dithered away the element of surprise!

  • King George VI: [to Churchill] I confess I had some reservations about you at first. But while some in this country dreaded your appointment, none dreaded it like Adolf Hitler. Whoever can strike fear into that brute's heart is worthy of all our trust.