Please don't miss this movie easily

Robbie 2022-01-27 08:21:09

Because the nature of science and engineering is in my bones, after watching it for the first time, I can't give up explaining myself with one, two, three, and four.

1. Before watching this movie, I have had the privilege of watching Twelve Angry Men, The Rainmaker, which are all about law, justice, and their own beliefs. A civil action, the plot does not have so many ups and downs, and the ending is not very pleasant, just like the depressing atmosphere around us. Go to see this lengthy movie, but also face the pain and darkness in front of you

2. Many people play mahjong. The lawsuit in the film makes me think about it. Lawyers play games with each other in the pain and trouble surrounding their clients. They have skills, courage, bluff, and they are pressing step by step. Winning more compensation and reducing the effort to the least is a victory for both parties. At this time, the court is like a chess and card room. It does not represent fairness and justice, but only the dealer who provides games and negotiation.

3. There are many scenes throughout the play. One party proposes a number, several zeros, and one party shakes or nods. A personal position can be disintegrated anytime, anywhere, not to mention the moment when people are betrayed and separated from each other. In the last negotiation, the protagonist has an acceptable reconciliation compensation that the other party can never give. I don't think he woke up when he saw the river water was polluted, nor did he remember that the family lost their child on the way to the clinic When he woke up, he was accused by his partner after he went to negotiate, and then hung up his license and packed his business card. He knew that the compensation he could accept could not be paid by the other party because he had confirmed in his heart that pain could not be comforted by money. So in the end, with only $14, still calm

4. Children are precious, this is the most precious property of a family, and the wanton destruction of the environment is the loss of all human beings. Looking at the gray cloud outside the window and the quiet green river at the intersection of the community, compared to a job, personal property, refreshment of performance, and prosperity of the country, which is more important? I would like to ask our lovely ruling team not to throw such a weighty issue to me, to a group of people, to any institution, let alone to ignore it for the sake of safeguarding their own poor interests. Do something, make something. The blue sky and green water in twenty years will not be erected to praise you, but it will be enough to wash away all the humiliation before this

5. It's an educational video, the next generation should watch it, nothing can be changed, but when they grow up, they may do something special, and they will never despair of reality.

At the end, the viewability of the film is not so high. In this era, the full score is not high.

View more about A Civil Action reviews

Extended Reading
  • Yolanda 2022-03-21 09:03:17

    In class, why do I use this to write my thesis...

  • Sterling 2022-03-25 09:01:22

    In the context of China's cancer villages, smog, masked land pollution and water pollution, etc., it may have real practical significance to rewatch this film. I heard that it was based on a novel. Which publisher with conscience would dare to introduce this book?

A Civil Action quotes

  • Jan Schlichtmann: [Narrating] Lawsuits are war, it's as simple as that ad they begin the same way the declaration: the compliant, when you're a small firm and their a big one steep in history and wealth as they always are, with their Persian carpets on the floor and their Harvard diplomas hanging on the wall, it's easy to be intimidated, don't be, that's what they want, that's what they expect, like all bullies that's how they win, I don't run away from bullies.

  • Jerome Facher: [after clerk interrupts his lunch to deliver a brief] You know, if I were you, I'd make it a point of taking that hour or so away from all the noise and insanity of this place.

    Law Clerk: I should do that.

    Jerome Facher: I'd find a place for myself where I could go that was relatively quiet and peaceful. Have a sandwich, read a magazine, maybe listen to a game out at Fenway if one was on. And I'd make sure everyone knew I didn't want to be disturbed during that hour of sole solitude. Because that would be my time - my own private time. Which no one if they had any sense of any self-preservation at all... would dare interrupt. If I were you.

    Law Clerk: [terrified] I'm sorry.