Fahrenheit 451 Comments

  • Hope 2022-03-14 14:12:26

    Pretending to be a mediocre work with few...

  • Meagan 2022-01-14 08:01:08

    1. Save heaven and destroy human desires. "The Torn Doom" and "The Handmaid's Tale." 2. It was discovered that the male protagonist is his cousin of Panthers, and the heroine is the blade woman in the ace agent. Both of them can play the Hunger Games with their skills. 3. Shannon is really a professional villain, and Water Shape Story is not bad...

  • Hortense 2022-01-14 08:01:08

    What's the difference between being adapted into a second-rate action suspense film and burning the original?...

  • Merritt 2022-01-14 08:01:08

    Go back to your...

Extended Reading
  • Dane 2022-01-14 08:01:08

    I give five points, come and burn me

    I simply read a few film reviews, the score is not high, I give five points. After reading it, it is still very shocking. It is a reflection on the prosperous modern technology. Good things always have their opposites. When we accept new technology, will there be negative things? We are sinking...

  • Morgan 2022-01-14 08:01:08

    The future is the era of "burning books and pitting Confucianism"

    Reminders, warnings, worries and reflections on the future era of artificial intelligence and big data, human beings machined and robotized.

    When the old woman and the book set themselves on fire, can people who do not read remain indifferent?

    Times are changing, and books and culture should...

Fahrenheit 451 quotes

  • Clarisse McClellan: Why do I always make you nervous?

    Guy Montag: You don't.

    Clarisse McClellan: When I see you burning up Eel's lives, you don't look nervous.

    Guy Montag: That's because I'm very good at my job.

    Clarisse McClellan: Hmm. Have you ever thought, even for one second, why you do what you do? You should try reading before burning.

  • Captain Beatty: Do you want to know what's inside all these books? Insanity. The Eels want to measure their place in the universe, so they turn to these novels about non-existent people. Or worse, philosophers. Look, here's Spinoza. One expert screaming down another expert's throat. "We have free will. No, all of our actions are predetermined." Each one says the opposite, and a man comes away lost, feeling more bestial and lonely than before. Now, if you don't want a person unhappy, you don't give them two sides of a question to worry about.

    Guy Montag: Just give 'em one.

    Captain Beatty: Better yet, none.