Daddy Judge

Savannah 2022-01-27 08:03:22

Robert Downey Jr. took off his steel equipment, suits and leather shoes, and became a lawyer who defended the innocence of the villains who could invite him. Oh, forgive the villain to say that, because at the beginning of the story, he really He is a lawyer who knows that his client is a villain, but will still defend his innocence. At first glance, the judge's father and the lawyer's son thought it was about justice and morality and family affection. But after reading it, I discovered that it was really about moral justice and family affection. Still view 12345 1. The judge said in the court that he thought of Hank when he saw Breivik, so he treated the teenagers most leniently, hoping that his son would encounter the same difficulties. Someone was able to help him in this way. The real entanglement is the relationship between father and son, and the son is rebellious. The father made many decisions that his son thought was excessive to prevent his son from taking a biased path. In Hank’s eyes, the father in the movie edited by his brother is always amiable, but growing up , The community service was transformed into a transformation, and he neither attended his high school graduation ceremony nor the university graduation ceremony. His father accused Hank of not going home for many years and leaving his mother to wait for many years. Hank always felt that his father had not given him that love. "I not only graduated from law school, but also graduated first in the class, first place." When Hank said this to his father, he was puzzled, angry, and unwilling. 2. The father and son have been awkward, from the mother’s funeral to the sudden accident, accusation, mutual accusation, dislike, and dislike each other, but among the three sons, Hank is the only one who stays with his father no matter what, night The father’s nightmare, the sudden fall in the bathroom, and the quarrel in the typhoon weather room, conflicts broke out every time, but Hank followed his father every time. 3. Daughters can always find a favorite candy in Hank's pocket, and Hanke can always find such a candy in his father's pocket when he was a child. 4. Hank has not returned to his hometown for many years. Hank has always regretted that his brother could not become a professional baseball player because of his carelessness when he was young. At the funeral, the first scene that fell into the memory was the car after the accident. Fortunately, at the end of the film, the brother's hug made all the grudges go away. 5. This stage is very bloody: the girl who met in a bar is almost her own daughter, but even if it is not her own daughter, she is also her own niece, right, Hank, what do you think? 6. The judge has always been called Hank Henry. Hank once asked the judge "Then who is your most respected lawyer?" "Shaw, Henry

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Extended Reading
  • Zane 2022-03-26 09:01:03

    So is it the man who was killed by the father?

  • Helmer 2022-03-26 09:01:03

    There are some things that we can never change and escape: parents, origin, hometown... Instead of escaping, covering up, complaining, it is better to accept, understand, and cherish (that is, there is less court drama = =)

The Judge quotes

  • Hank Palmer: Tell me what happened.

    Judge Joseph Palmer: I don't remember.

    Hank Palmer: Because you were drunk?

    Judge Joseph Palmer: No, because I *can't* remember. Don't you think I *want* to remember? I *can't*! For all I know, I never hit any thing or any body!

    Hank Palmer: So, I was in the liquor cabinet. What kind of recovering alcoholic keeps his dark, liquor cabinet?

    Judge Joseph Palmer: No, no, no, no, *recovered*. It's a reminder that I'm stronger, it holds no power over me.

    Hank Palmer: Right now, that cop Hanson is on his way to the mini-mart, to ask some scared shitless high school clerk with half a joint in his front pocket... if you had the odour of an alcoholic beverage on your breath! Did you?

    Judge Joseph Palmer: No.

    Hank Palmer: Bloodshot eyes.

    Judge Joseph Palmer: No!

    Hank Palmer: Slurred speech?

    Judge Joseph Palmer: *No!*

    Dale Palmer: [Hank slams the breaks on his car and backs into the driveway. Glenn and Dale look on, fully aware of the tension rising between the two despite not being in the car with them] They shouldn't drive together.

  • Hank Palmer: Why'd you pull me out of Boy Scouts?

    Judge Joseph Palmer: As punishment for blowing up the McCraw's mailbox with M80s.

    Hank Palmer: I was 13. *That* you remember. *That*!

    Judge Joseph Palmer: Oh, old enough to know better.

    Hank Palmer: You didn't come to my high school graduation or college. Why?

    Judge Joseph Palmer: [Overlapping] Oh, boo-fucking-hoo. "Why?" Jail time, truancy, I don't get to reward anything! None of your shit!

    Hank Palmer: I graduated from *law school*, for Christ's sake.

    Judge Joseph Palmer: As opposed to what? Dropping out?

    Hank Palmer: Fuck you!

    Judge Joseph Palmer: Let me tell you something, okay? I put a roof over your head, money in your pocket, clothes on your back... *food* in your *mouth*! Who paid for that college education? I never showed up to kiss your ass, but your mother? She's a house wife! Why couldn't you swallow your God damned pride and just come home to her? You tell me why!

    Hank Palmer: [On the verge of tears] You know, you'd invite people at the end of their parole back to court... You'd *recognize* those who did their time, turned their lives around, made something of themselves. Everyone in the court applauded, and you made sure they did! Tell them how *proud* you were... Proud of *fucking* strangers!

    Judge Joseph Palmer: Is that all you wanted, Henry, was a kind word? An 'atta boy? Then to use your words, you should have *come* the *fuck* home! We all waited, *quietly*, but you never came. Okay? And I was the one she'd blame, because you wouldn't come home. Me. Now, was I tough on you? Yes. How'd you turn out, Henry? Waiting tables? A bum?

    Hank Palmer: You put me in Juvenile Detention... you sent me to fucking Vanderburgh!

    Judge Joseph Palmer: [Interrupting] No, no, no, no, no, you put yourself there.

    Hank Palmer: Did I?

    Judge Joseph Palmer: Yes.

    Hank Palmer: The prosecutor recommended community service. That was *your* call!

    Judge Joseph Palmer: No, no, no, it wouldn't have *helped* you!

    Hank Palmer: I didn't need *help*, I needed *you*!

    Judge Joseph Palmer: You were high, you rolled a car with your brother in it! He had a major league career ahead of him, a 90 mile-an-hour fast ball, and he runs a turnip shop! You crippled him, you stole his future, and you call *me* an ass hole?

    Hank Palmer: What do you want from me? I was 17 when that happened. I was *17*.

    Judge Joseph Palmer: Oooh, "I was 13, I was 17." You were headed down the wrong path! I did what I thought was right.

    Hank Palmer: [Holding back tears] You know, I didn't just graduate from law school, I graduated first in my class... I was *first* in my class... I did *really* well, dad.

    Judge Joseph Palmer: You're welcome.

    [Walks out of the room]

    Hank Palmer: [Grits his teeth and clenches his fist; he sits at the kitchen table, speaking in a barely audible voice] Fuck... Damn this house... God damn this *fucking* house...