Sullivan's Travels Comments

  • Adalberto 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    Neurocomedy. Social issue drama. Director class. Jessica...

  • Carter 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    One of the film examples mentioned in The Story. Entering the plot point almost from the beginning, a comedy director is tired of comedy and wants to experience a miserable life and make a profound film that reflects the suffering of people's livelihood. . In the end, he finally experienced a miserable life, and at the same time, gave up the so-called deep film and really found the motivation to make a comedy...

  • Haskell 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    The girl is pretty and the guy is handsome. That's what old movies are like....

  • Brett 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    Comedy and issues are semi-decoupled, unlike Lubitsch films that are willing to explore the degree of chimerism between society and comedy production, and unlike Chaplin who always stood on the side of people and eggs when facing the social machine. Here, the farce passages have no social utility here. Sullivan's travel is a bit like a Woody Allen movie in the 1940s. The director uses a distorted screen stand-in to find his place in the class and life stage in the form of an...

  • Felipe 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    The film begins with a crazy dining car chasing a child's chariot to clarify the line of comedy. The comical handling of the silent film makes Sullivan's journey of suffering seem insincere. Coupled with an equally unprofessional blonde, the suffering is almost equal to It was romantic, so the script cut off the backup, but when there was a hint of suffering, Mickey Mouse was brought back to the right track of...

  • Van 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    It's more of a romance than an inspirational movie. Veronica Lake is so beautiful, Kim Basinger's appearance in L.A. Confidential is a tribute to...

  • Daphnee 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    The script is too subtle, the lines are awesome, and the laughs are good enough. The hypocrisy that spreads throughout the film is smashed to pieces in the church movie scene, and there is a little Capra-like sincerity in addition to the irony. Are the Coen brothers who made O Brother, Where Art Thou? a comedy, paying tribute to the film? Although McCree looks like a piece of wood, it fits unexpectedly. Lake is so small! A little loose in the back【Associate Director Anthony...

  • Daniela 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    The theme of the video is...

  • Jasen 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    The heroine's first appearance was...

  • Laurine 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    9.1/10. ①The popular young comedy director pretends to be a homeless person for serious realism and wants to experience folk life in depth. After various experiences, he feels that this kind of experience is just a touch of water and only intellectual elites need realism, so it is better to do comedy and bring it to the bottom people Warmth and joy, then return to Hollywood. ②The comedy element is not very funny, and it is more suitable to be regarded as a high-level typical melodrama. Although...

Extended Reading
  • Lukas 2022-01-12 08:01:08

    "Sullivan's Travels": Happiness is the greatest wealth of poverty (AFI100 TOP 061)

    Copyright statement: When reprinting, please use a hyperlink to indicate the original source and author information of the article and this statement.
    http://qfmeng.blogbus.com/logs/168971852.html

    Sullivan's Travels (1941) is

    another Hollywood "Golden Age" Movie, I like it!

    The film tells a story...

  • Blaze 2022-01-12 08:01:08

    Irony, over and over

    7.4

    Among the 1940s genre films, this one should be the most remake at this point in time. What I envisioned is that the director of the 93rd Academy winner moved into the van and started to travel west from Nevada to explore what kind of movie the modern nomads at the bottom look forward to—it’s...

Sullivan's Travels quotes

  • Las Vegas Diner Counterman: [Giving the obviously broke Sully and girl each coffee and a donut] I'll never get rich.

    The Girl: Oh, gee.

    John L. Sullivan: You're a little richer than you were. Hundreds of miles from everything. Cut off from the world, a taste of human kindness. I'll never forget it as long as I live. What town is this?

  • John L. Sullivan: Don't keep saying 'good' all the time or I'll poke you in the nose.

    The Girl: Good

Sullivan's Travels

Director: Preston Sturges

Language: English Release date: February 6, 1942