From then on the king's growth history

Joelle 2022-04-20 09:01:10

The growth from duke to king, from fear of father to complete speech is a growth. From the initial despair of stuttering, after meeting Rogge, he was forced to condescend. He also chose to give up many times, but the facts forced him to look up and face the difficulties, and it was also through the constant experience of giving up and yielding that he grew up. Between this, his wife's loyal love and Rogge's determination to save him are tied. When the king gave a pre-war speech, Rogge's constant encouragement showed the bondage between friends. The whole film is mainly run through the piano music with sad and rapid melody, which makes the tone seem to be shrouded in gray and white anxiety. When depicting stuttering in the film, close-up shots are often used, and by focusing on depicting the king's labor, it can better reflect Luo Geren's utmost righteousness.

The King's Speech (2010)
8.4
2010 / United Kingdom Australia United States / Biography History / Tom Hooper / Colin Firth Geoffrey Rush

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Extended Reading
  • Madyson 2021-10-20 18:58:58

    This is not the king’s speech, it’s the king’s acting

  • Evangeline 2021-10-20 18:58:55

    The film, from the photographic soundtrack to the performance, is integrated and impeccable. The overall quality of the film will never show weakness if it confronts "Social Network", and it also shows the grandeur of the king. Colin's performance is the best of the year in my mind, not one of them. He exquisitely and wonderfully interprets this violent and arrogant but lonely and fragile and helpless king. And this fight against self is also a battle that everyone should win in their lives.

The King's Speech quotes

  • King George VI: Is the nation ready for two... minutes of radio silence?

  • King George VI: Every monarch in history has succeeded someone who is dead, or just about to be. My predecessor's not only alive, but very much so. Bloody mess. Can't even give them a Christmas speech.

    Lionel Logue: Like your dad used to do.

    King George VI: Precisely.

    Lionel Logue: He's not here anymore.

    King George VI: Yes he is: he's on that shilling I gave you.

    Lionel Logue: Easy enough to give away. You don't have to carry him around in your pocket. Or your brother. You don't need to be afraid of the things you were afraid of when you were five.