The Beat That My Heart Skipped Comments

  • Cletus 2022-03-30 09:01:11

    A little too dramatic, but fortunately...

  • Linnea 2022-03-30 09:01:11

    This moving piece. Piano and art, business and ugliness. Imperfect life, unhappy family. In the struggle, only the unforgettable melody in my heart saves the...

  • Raleigh 2022-03-30 09:01:11

    Movies related to the piano are all my collection objects. Dirty sin on one side and pure piano music on the other. Two contradictory opposites. Just like the poster of the film, the right hand of the male protagonist is stained with blood, but he can also play music after washing. Some things, buried in the soul, will never be forgotten. When the low melody at the end of the film played, a sadness welled up in my heart. . . Reminds me of learning piano...

  • Nick 2022-03-30 09:01:11

    Bach, Bach, Bach. This movie really sucks-- alas. Sadness... Perhaps the most attractive thing about this film is the translation of the title. Attacking a man's lower body is too powerful...

  • Alexa 2022-03-29 09:01:09

    Music saves the soul, do you want to be so romantic in your heart? Try to dilute the narrative as much as possible (the trivial and chaotic crime line, the rapidity and shortness of the death of the father can be reflected, and this is also the expression of the protagonist's state of mind when faced with these events), and more emphasis is placed on intuitive contrast and emotional rendering (the arrangement of music, the male protagonist's fingers practiced) ) to make the piece more...

  • Josie 2022-03-29 09:01:09

    3.5. The restless and shaky footage may be a request for realism, or it may be a symbol of the male protagonist's irritable mood. As a drama, the first half is quite boring, showing the character's daily life trivially in the picture, even makes me a little unable to understand why I have to "learn the piano". Later, the background of the characters and the story gradually became clearer and clearer, but the little reversal at the end was not well understood. Maybe Jacques's interest is in...

  • Emmanuel 2022-03-29 09:01:09

    I can't stand it anymore, I'm still talking nonsense for 5 minutes. It should be the love of young men and women of literature and...

  • Brooke 2022-03-29 09:01:09

    As always, the Odia style, but I don't like the story this...

  • Holden 2022-03-29 09:01:09

    How did the director, who is so sensitive to the details of life, think of finding a Vietnamese girl to play the Chinese role, and it's still so dirty. ....

  • Jason 2022-03-29 09:01:09

    The growth of a man with a tiger in his heart sniffing the roses, the theme echoes the "Rust and Bone" seven years later. Duris is as unforgettable as Matthias, and Odia's hard warmth heals like...

Extended Reading
  • Bobby 2022-03-23 08:01:02

    To the prodigal son who wanders on the edge~~

    What has life taught us?
    Learn to surrender, learn to forbear, learn to lie, choose silence, choose to escape, choose to give up
    , walk on thin ice on the edge of life, then be touched by the occasional trace of beauty,
    and then convince yourself to hypnotize yourself
    .
    Is it just such a prodigal...

  • Kole 2022-03-23 08:01:02

    The rhythm my heart forgets

    I saw this movie a few weeks ago, and honestly, it's nothing compared to the many movies I've seen recently: slow pace, unremarkable plot, chaotic shooting, and nothing at all. The protagonist of handsome and beautiful. Strangely enough, it's a film like this that I stumbled across on my TV at home...

The Beat That My Heart Skipped quotes

  • Sami: Playing piano is making you flip. Stop it now!

    Thomas Seyr: Nothing's making me flip. I'm not flipping. I'm having a ball. I feel fantastic, dont' you see? It's important, I'm serious about it.

    Sami: You gonna make dough from pianos?

    Thomas Seyr: Not pianos, the piano! It's not about making money, it's about art.

    Sami: What's in it for us? You coming to meetings all, 'Hi guys, I've been playing piano.' Shit, I'll take up the banjo.

    Thomas Seyr: It's over your head