The Color Purple Comments

  • Holden 2022-03-25 09:01:09

    The overall quality of the 8.5-point film is very good, but perhaps the biggest tragedy at the Oscars is that there is no particularly prominent point. Although the plot is a little old-fashioned, there is still something moving and...

  • Gerald 2022-03-25 09:01:09

    Feminist purple petals with a momentary...

  • Kelsie 2022-03-25 09:01:09

    A good film is a good film, but why does it always remind me of "Animal...

  • Amiya 2022-03-25 09:01:09

    Notre Dame movies are the ultimate example, the embarrassment from beginning to end makes me feel...

  • Houston 2022-03-25 09:01:09

    The big biographies of the little people, the irrepressible humanity will eventually...

  • Barrett 2022-03-24 09:01:53

    In Spielberg's first two decades of work, purple appears in a completely different way, with amateur actors, whites shooting blacks without overcorrect ideology (12 Years a Slave) and without cynicism (Spike Lee). The film revolves around a family/a black woman. With a linear narrative rich in plot, it depicts the life of black people in American society in the first half of the twentieth century and nearly forty years. The complex meaning that penetrates people's minds is thought-provoking and...

  • Kiarra 2022-03-24 09:01:53

    In Spielberg's first two decades of work, purple appears in a completely different way, with amateur actors, whites shooting blacks without overcorrect ideology (12 Years a Slave) and without cynicism (Spike Lee). The film revolves around a family/a black woman. With a linear narrative rich in plot, it depicts the life of black people in American society in the first half of the twentieth century and nearly forty years. The complex meaning that penetrates people's minds is thought-provoking and...

  • Kamryn 2022-03-20 09:01:45

    make #lemonade# out of lemon, the plot cuts slightly...

  • Tamara 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    The strong discomfort at the beginning—rape, child trafficking, child marriage, and domestic violence—all were disasters and pains imposed on women by men and men’s society. Celie grew from a frightened and helpless girl to a strong and powerful woman, and the lives of Sofia and Shug were intertwined and witnessed with her. Women have...

  • Kamryn 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    Spikeberg was an early feminist film and was the first black film in the history of American cinema. Although the word-of-mouth among all of Laos's works is relatively low, and all the ten Oscar nominations that year were missed, I personally like it very much and I almost shed tears several times. Purple refers to the beautiful sea of ​​flowers at the beginning and the end of the movie; purple also represents courage and courage! It is not only about race, but also about the tolerance and...

Extended Reading
  • Jocelyn 2022-04-20 09:01:41

    just the audience

    I finally finished watching this movie.

    Because he has been living in the central part of the country, and because China's own racial issues are not prominent, it is difficult to empathize with and resonate with the situation of black people described in the film. Just patiently watching other...

  • Theron 2022-04-23 07:02:06

    Song of Red and Blue

    In many places, such as public signs and the like, it is often customary to use red for women and blue for men. Red, passionate, sensual, charming like fire; blue, calm, powerful, calm like the sea. When the two colors are mixed together, a new color is born - purple. Purple has always been...

The Color Purple quotes

  • Squeak: Harpo! Who dis woman?

    Harpo: Now come now, you know who this is.

    Squeak: She best'a leave you alone.

    Sophia: Fine with me.

    Harpo: [to Sophia] You ain't got to go nowhere. Dis here my juke-joint.

    Squeak: [to Harpo] You said dis here our juke-joint!

    Harpo: Listen woman, can't a man dance with his wife if he wants to?

    Squeak: Not if she a heifer!

    [to Sophia]

    Squeak: And not if he my man! You just a big ol heifer. Ha Ha Ha.

    Sophia: [to Squeak] Like I said, fine with me!

  • Old Mr.: [referring to Shug] She black as tar, nappy-headed, got legs like baseball bats, and I hear she got that nasty women's disease.