Up in the Air Comments

  • Daniella 2021-10-20 19:01:55

    Do you know why children like athletes? Because they never give up their...

  • Lorena 2021-10-20 19:01:55

    I'm still that person, except for an additional...

  • Elouise 2021-10-20 19:01:55

    On "Why don't people want to live alone". This is how a good movie is. Warmth and loneliness coexist. When you embrace warmth, you also reap loneliness—the same is true in life. It is not love that illuminates loneliness, but loneliness illuminates...

  • Doug 2021-10-20 19:01:54

    I want to take this piece to warm it up in winter, but it seems that this cup of "tea" is a bit cold, and the more I look at it, the more it feels...

  • Iva 2021-10-20 19:01:54

    Your precious time passed in the void. Accumulates meaningless, cold and lonely miles. The days in the clouds seem free and graceful, without any restraints. But flying alone, even after flying over 10 million miles, is still the "unbearable lightness of life", and one day, both feet will fall back to a solid ground. The rucksack of life should not always be empty. Put a little love, a little responsibility, and a load to ensure that we will not be...

  • Vivianne 2021-10-20 19:01:54

    The joys and sorrows of life come unexpectedly, and the jokes of fate always catch you by surprise. The movie uses a very small pattern to uncover the deepest scars in human reality. "Money can buy warmth, pay for heating, buy a blanket, but never feel as warm in the arms of a lover", "Your most precious moment, the most unforgettable memory in your life, do you want to be alone? Life needs Accompanying, everyone needs a...

  • Earnest 2021-10-20 19:01:54

    Catering to current events, the large unemployment caused by the financial crisis, the ending is vulgar, just like a propaganda film. I really liked his speech on the knapsack theory. Although the film wanted to refute this view, the turning point was far from the intensity of the knapsack theory. From this point of view, the film is like two screenwriters who have not agreed, one should be optimistic and social, and the other should be dark and negative, and then use very vulgar logic to...

  • Leif 2021-10-20 19:01:54

    "Thank you for smoking" not only did not solve the problem of disorganized overall structure, but it was greatly enlarged. The acting skills of old men and little girls are indeed very good, but this film is only a film suitable for the financial crisis, and it is far from the "classic" or even "exciting" I expected. Rewatched on January 14, George Clooney's performance in answering her phone at her door and on the subway deserves an Oscar, but that's why I don't like this...

  • Wendy 2021-10-20 19:01:54

    The tragedy is that in the end the protagonist still becomes a victim of traditional...

  • Kadin 2021-10-20 19:01:54

    Save 10 million miles to see an inspirational movie of Santa Claus in...

Extended Reading
  • Ruthe 2022-03-20 09:01:19

    Because you are you, so I am me.

    1. If you play for real, you will lose.

        What you play means don’t play for real, and what you talk about means don’t talk about feelings. In the world of emotions, those who are injured are always serious, and persistently want some so-called results, so-called eternal people. Feeling is an...

  • Octavia 2022-04-20 09:01:14

    The smell of loneliness is in the air

    I watched "up in the air" yesterday. It's a simple theme, a simple story, and a very good movie. Helping people to fire people is a very strange and tough profession. It conveys respect and comfort to the individual - a certain kind of sincerity seems to be useless, but spiritually it is not just...

Up in the Air quotes

  • [Ryan and Natalie arrived at the Hilton hotel where Ryan jumps to the counter to check with his Hilton Honors card; A woman becomes insulted by this]

    Business Woman: He just waltzes in and cuts in line?

    Hilton Clerk: We reserve priority assistance for our Hilton Honors members.

    Ryan Bingham: [hands the business woman the packet] The promotions are great. You should check it out.

    [the woman snatches the packet from Ryan in anger; Ryan laughs]

  • Ryan Bingham: [Natalie, on her first outing, walks into the Omaha Airport terminal dragging her slow-moving luggage; Ryan, irritated by this, looks at her in frustration]

    Natalie Keener: What?

    Ryan Bingham: Follow me.

    [later at a store in the terminal, Ryan grabs a new, updated rolling luggage]

    Natalie Keener: I really like my luggage.

    Ryan Bingham: That's exactly what it is, it's luggage. You know how much time you lose by checking in?

    Natalie Keener: I don't know. Five, ten minutes?

    Ryan Bingham: 35 minutes a flight. I travel 270 days a year. That's 157 hours. That makes seven days. You're willing to throw away an entire week on that?

    [Natalie sighs]