the paper chase

Clovis 2022-08-20 22:10:11

It’s a rare movie with a positive tone in the list of law-directed homework, and when I watched it countless times I sighed that I was so good. I was really old...Although I am not a law school student, it still feels quite real, especially at the end of the semester. Wanting to escape from the dormitory building aimlessly, I get up early every day and sit in the library. While planting trees, he is in a desperate daze while watching Baitou Ruxin's history of the country. With textbooks and printed review materials on hand, I always feel that there is a protagonist aura that kills all quarters. In fact, what I take is just a passerby script. Among the countless people around, it is neither the hardest nor the most chic. Speaking of movies, few people on the real campus can win like Hart (at least I am envious). They are popular, have enthusiasm for learning and can get happiness from it, have the courage to pursue love, have the extra energy to arrange life, and have the willingness. The most important thing is to have the ability to help others. Although the protagonist has a dazzling halo, Hart wanted to leave an impression with the professor, and found out that he still didn't know who he was after leaving the seat roster. This was unexpectedly true and made people smile. There are more characters like Kevin around him. Memorability may have been enough to make him proud for so many years, but the frustration after entering the world of the boss is still extremely real. To make matters worse, the harder you work to blend in, the more you make yourself like a joke. Perhaps we also came here with the ability to take exams, but we found that all the challenges afterwards are not within the scope of our repeated practice, and a lot of skills need to be newly practiced. (But it won't be enough to drop out of school. Every morning I always open the curtains, biting my teeth and bumping my head into a new day.)

However, in the end Hart folded the transcript into a paper airplane, and I refused. It is impossible not to care about the results of the things that have been really worked hard. Don't say anything. He has enjoyed the joy of learning, and the result is not important to him.

I didn't believe this for a long time, hum.

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Extended Reading

The Paper Chase quotes

  • William Moss, Tutor: So you flunked all your practice exams, huh? Every one?

    Kevin Brooks: Yeah, every one.

    William Moss, Tutor: Aww man, don't look like that, you'll be saved. Every person in this house almost flunked out of law school in their first year. It's not hard to see why; they had broads on the brain. It's the worst thing that can happen to a first-year law student. I don't suppose that's your problem?

    Kevin Brooks: No, no. I'm married.

    William Moss, Tutor: Well, the vote's split on that, but I've saved all kinds. I moved in here and saved all these dum-dums. They'll all graduate, all from Harvard. Did you bring any samples of your work?

    Kevin Brooks: Yeah, I brought some notes...

    William Moss, Tutor: Notes don't mean a thing.

  • [first lines]

    Charles W. Kingsfield Jr.: Mr. Hart, would you recite for us the facts of Hawkins versus McGee?

    [looks up]

    Charles W. Kingsfield Jr.: I do have you name right? You are "Mr. Hart"?

    James T. Hart: [mumbles] Yes, my name's Hart.

    Charles W. Kingsfield Jr.: You're not speaking loud enough, Mr. Hart. Will you speak up?

    James T. Hart: Yes, my name's Hart.

    Charles W. Kingsfield Jr.: Mr. Hart, you're still not speaking loud enough. Will you stand? Speak louder, Mr. Hart! Fill the room with your intelligence!