who knows

Sylvia 2022-04-21 09:02:10

The kids giggled when they heard "Goodnight, you princes of Maine, you kings of New England", so I decided to say something to the kids before they went to sleep in a few years. Thinking that because a movie made me have an idea, and my idea will bring them some changes, I don't know if it's good or bad, but there are always some, maybe more cute or very narcissistic, or even based on the characters they like It will also be different from the original setting. Of course, they did not know that their mother suffered from insomnia back then, and then watched this movie.

Thinking of this, I seem to have made a very important decision and experienced a moment of great significance, and such moments are actually moments.

Homer has never seen prawns and never seen the ocean. He is eager for a new life and desperately wants to reach the distance. He can go anywhere and do anything. So he picks apples in the orchard to do cool work, and the reason for his stay here is that the dean is keenly aware that homer is in love with a girl. When Wolly came home paralyzed, homer knew that Candy had already warned him that she was not a girl who was good at being alone, and this warning was originally intended for Wolly. If it's just waiting and seeing, nothing will change, so we have to move forward and want to see the ocean.

The Cider House Rule is that each person specifies his own rules, and if his own rules are specified by others, it is invalid. The development of the character plot is accompanied by the breaking and re-enactment of the rules. Homer went from resisting abortion to helping girls get abortions, and he began to understand that irresponsibility was not the only interpretation of this behavior.

Although homer finally returned to the orphanage and did not travel further, he returned to his previous life, but everything was really new, he no longer resisted the identity of a doctor, and could play a little bit in his own position usefulness.

This story seems to be saying such a truth, returning home is still more secure than the world outside, and the world is so big for us is only a small place. Also like my mother told me in the tone of someone who came over, it is the same everywhere. Maybe the place is the same, and even the place to go is worse than the current environment, so should you set off? Once you set off, it means that there has been a change. Have a wider life than you know.

Movies from the last century. After that, Maguire put on the Spider-Man coat, Zsairon self-destructed his appearance to play the devil, and Kane, who was always taking care of Maguire, became Batman's butler, and it was like water. , there's a lot going on in between.

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Extended Reading
  • Annette 2022-03-27 09:01:06

    A story of a young man seeing the world. It's a complicated world. There are always rules out there. But when you see it through, it's simple. Follow your heart, do what ya gotta do. Goodnight you princes of Maine, kings of new england.

  • Neva 2022-03-27 09:01:06

    Literature and art is a good thing, it is a good thing to do it step by step, it is a good thing to talk about it, and it is too boring, you are wrong. I slept stupidly for a whole day, but I still watched this movie at night, which shows its skill! This is a story about growing up, from innocence to curiosity, from rebellion to belonging, everyone will go through a similar process, but the emotional change in the face of the father and teacher of the orphanage is even more difficult to comprehend.

The Cider House Rules quotes

  • Fuzzy: I like orange. Should I keep the teeth orange?

  • [We see Homer writing to Dr. Larch and hear the words in his voice as we are shown variously relevant scenes]

    Homer: Dear Dr. Larch. Thank you for your doctor's bag, although it seems that I will not have the occasion to use it, barring some emergency, of course. I am not a doctor. With all due respect to your profession, I'm enjoying my life here. I'm enjoying being a lobsterman and orchardman. In fact, I've never enjoyed myself as much. The truth is, I want to stay here. I believe I'm being of some use.

    [We hear the words Dr. Larch writes back to Homer in response]

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: My Dear Homer: I thought you were over you adolescence - the first time in our lives when we imagine we have something terrible to hide from those who love us. Do you think it's not obvious to us what's happened to you? You've fallen in love, haven't you? By the way, whatever you're up to can't be too good for your heart. Then again, it's the sort of condition that could be made worse by worrying about it, so don't worry about it.

    [the back and forth correspondence continues interwoven with scenes from Homer's life at the time]

    Homer: Dear Dr. Larch, What I'm learning her may not be as important as what I learned from you, but everything is new to me. Yesterday, I learned how to poison mice. Field mice girdle an apple tree; pine mice kill the roots. You use poison oats and poison corn. I know what you have to do. You have to play God. Well, killing mice is as close as I want to come to playing God.

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: Homer, here in St. Cloud's, I have been given the opportunity of playing God or leaving practically everything up to chance. Men and women of conscience should sieze those moments when it's possible to play God. There won't be many. Do I interfere when absolutely helpless women tell me they simply can't have an abortion - that they simply must go through with having another and yet another orphan? I do not. I do not even recommend. I just give them what they want. You are my work of art, Homer. Everything else has been just a job. I don't know if you have a work of art in you, but I know what your job is: you're a doctor.

    Homer: I'm not a doctor.

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: You're going to replace me, Homer. The board of trustees is looking for my replacement.

    Homer: I can't replace you. I'm sorry.

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: "Sorry"? I'm not sorry. Not for anything I've done. I'm not even sorry that I love you.

    [Cut to scene of Dr. Larch sitting on a hospital bed reading Homer's letter. He is crest-fallen and one of his nurses sits down to console him]

    Dr. Wilbur Larch: [Speaking to the nurse] I think we may have lost him to the world.