The first half of the story was watched on the plane. The light comedy with laughs, the scenery of New York, the maturity of Robert De Niro, and Anne Hathaway's costume were the points that attracted me to watch it. I saw half of the plane landed, and I planned to go home and watch it again, but I didn't expect to finish it after two months.
The story is very simple. A former vice president of the telephone company who was doing nothing with his pension plans to find something for himself, and ended up working as an intern at an online shopping company for women's clothing. Between ancient and modern, pens and computers, phonebooks and facebooks, handkerchiefs and tissues, traditional marketing and e-commerce, there is certainly enough drama conflict to support a two-hour comedy.
It was originally an ordinary comedy, but after seeing it, something in it still moved me. The first thing that struck me was how well Anne Hathaway's pain was portrayed. This is the question every professional woman has to face: When your career is successful and your relationship is in trouble, do you blame others or yourself?
I used to blame myself. I took it for granted at the time, but now it's weird that people around me are looking for problems from me. Now it seems ridiculous to blame yourself for someone else's mistakes. And now I know it's too late. The result may still be the same, but if I could do it all over again, I wouldn't have dealt with it that way. Watching this movie feels like my life has started all over again.
"At this time, you need a reliable person." Jules is lucky, she has found an intern with forty years of work experience and seventy years of life experience, the life experience of the elderly -- or mature people is the most precious wealth. Not just work, not just dealing with family problems, but a sigh of a life polished by time.
But Ben isn't just a mentor in life, and the movie isn't just a dualistic master-apprentice tune. What impresses me even more is that the feelings of the two of them are exchanged for a few minutes. In the hotel where the fire "remains after the disaster", for a few minutes, one old and one young lie on the bed of the hotel, a husband thinking about cheating, and a wife thinking about death. There were old Hollywood movies on the TV, and both of them had tears in their eyes. Ben didn't pass on any life experience, and Jules didn't worship as a little fan girl. At this time, they had the same feeling, the feeling of life and the feeling of regret in life. In those few minutes, the film can even be said to be a bit out of the commercial film, and the rhythm of the rising art film.
I don't like Jules and her husband reconciling at the end of the movie. This plot pulls the movie back to the way of a commercial film. Besides, why have I never seen a woman cheating in a movie, and there is still a happy ending?
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