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Arvilla 2022-01-05 08:01:54
Is this movie worthy of North American evaluation?
After watching this movie, thinking of my own eighth grade, I really have a lot of feelings. The troubles Kayla encountered in the eighth grade are the troubles many teenagers have, such as the desire to grow up, the desire to be famous, the desire to be a social queen, and the desire to be popular...
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Gerson 2022-01-05 08:01:54
2018.8.2
The real life in the third grade of junior high school, but it did not resonate well. My junior high school life was quite happy, especially the relationship with my classmates, which was not excluded. In addition, he has not yet begun to rebellious, and his relationship with his parents is also...
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Rubye 2022-03-26 09:01:09
Is it good to be realistic?
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Elyssa 2022-01-05 08:01:54
Scott Rudin financing + issuance agreement negotiated with A24. The lowest cost of union-crew shot in New York. Because filming in New York City must be a union film, unless the cost is only one million, so this film is a textbook for the production and financing of independent films in New York City. I laughed a lot of times, and on several occasions, the audience clapped and laughed. It was really funny. The fresh, simple and delicate second-year students' perspective is too impressive. The most powerful part of this film is its simplicity. Of course, this story can be said to have no freshness, but it is the relative simplicity of the story. Seeing the director’s scheduling and control of the rhythm, the performance of the young actors burst into such as Wonder. A kind of commercial film. The monologue with my father was really touching. The male director's debut, the emotions are very delicate. It is Scott Rudin who is awesome, dare to make a blockbuster film of tens of millions, and he can also make a small film of two million based on the director's script. The montage passages with chessy music inside look like chessy, but they are actually deliberate.
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[Kayla puts her sixth grade time capsule on the fire]
Mark Day: What was in there?
Kayla: Nothing really. Just, sorta, my hopes and dreams.
Mark Day: Right... And you're burning them?
Kayla: Yeah.
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Mark Day: Kayla, when your mom left, I was really scared. Like really, really scared. Because now I was all alone with this little girl that I loved so much and wanted everything for and I wasn't sure if I could give you what you needed so I was really scared. I was scared that you weren't going to be okay. I was scared just like you are right now. More scared. Way more... But then you got older. And you took your first steps, and you said your first words, and you wrote your first letter to Nana and you made your first friend; and everything that I thought I was going to have to teach you - how to be nice, how to share, how to care about other people's feelings - you just started doing on your own. Your teachers would say, "you've got such a lovely daughter, you've done such a great job with her." But I didn't do anything. I really didn't. I just watched. And the more I watched you, the less scared I got. I stopped being scared a long time ago, Kayla. You know why? Because of you. You made me brave, Kayla. And if you could just see yourself like I see you... the way you really are, the way you always have been... I promise you wouldn't be scared either.