文章吧-经典好文章在线阅读:《亲情无价》影评精选10篇

当前的位置:文章吧 > 经典文章 > 观后感 >

《亲情无价》影评精选10篇

2017-12-08 20:13:01 来源:文章吧 阅读:载入中…

《亲情无价》影评精选10篇

  《亲情无价》是一部由卡尔·弗兰克林执导,梅丽尔·斯特里普 / 蕾妮·齐薇格 / 威廉·赫特主演的一部剧情 / 家庭类型的电影,文章吧小编精心整理的一些观众的影评,希望对大家能有帮助。

  《亲情无价》影评(一):谁是家里最坚强的那一个

  看完电影很感动

  这个家里最坚强的,是艾伦的母亲凯特。她父亲乔治早年看起来事业有成风流成性,后来(不只是凯特生病以后,因为凯特甚至知道在哪儿能找到他)他又看似成天忙碌,常常忙到深夜才回家,其实是为了逃避现实,逃避凯特生病且日益衰弱的现实,他内心恐惧,可以躲在与他写的书一个名字的酒馆里。——是不是说他早年的所谓写作也只是一种逃避?

  虚弱至极的凯特对艾伦说,我什么都明白,比你还明白。这时候我感到好心疼。一个女子可以为了一个家而安心而快乐地做家庭主妇,默默地付出,甚至能容忍丈夫自己的不忠,而且这种容忍从未被发现与感知。风平浪静温暖的家庭氛围,竟然是这个女人的忍让的成就,而非乔治自以为的那样,我的稿费早已经怎样怎样给你们花了。

  从酒馆回来的乔治走到床前,凯特掀开被子,乔治合着衣服一头倒下,凯特把被子轻轻盖上,一切都那么自然,仿佛生病的不是凯特,乔治才是需要安慰的那个人……

  看着电影,流泪的有两处。一处是平安夜的合唱,红色的毛衣,憔悴却倔强的凯特在女儿的搀扶下微笑而平静地唱着颂曲,她心知肚明没有来年的歌唱了。

  一处是艾伦碾着吗啡药片的场景,坚定地碾了那么多药片,却又放弃了,那种内心的挣扎,让我想起了我父亲去世前我的心情

  其实整个片子都在让我回忆

  艾伦好在听从了父亲的要求回到了母亲身边照顾她,不然会后悔一辈子。

  凯特是怎么死的?她最后跟艾伦说,我爱你。从这一点可知,她是自杀的。我开始还以为最后是不是有儿子帮忙的结局呢,因为那药瓶凯特是无法自己放进垃圾篓的。后来一想,垃圾篓里的药瓶呢,应该是乔治以为是女儿用来帮凯特的,才帮着放进了垃圾篓。

  凯特走了,艾伦坚强了。只希望她背负的是自己能够承受的重量,而不要像凯特,忍气吞声的结果不仅仅是一个家庭的完整,还有疾病。

  人生,不能仅仅只有忍受,更应该有快乐,发自心底的快乐。

  《亲情无价》影评(二):家庭主妇

  这片子告诉我们,或沉默内敛或唠叨不停的家庭主妇们,往往比那些衣冠楚楚博古通今的男子们,有着更强大的内心。

  有两段台词印象深刻。

  一是梅娘娘告诉女儿自己早就知道真相后的独白:You make concessions when you're married a long time...that you don't believe you'll make when you're beginning.When you're young, you say, "Oh, I'll never tolerate...this or that or the other thing."But time goes by, darling.And when you've slept together a thousand nights...and you've smelled like spit-up from the babies when they're sick...and you've seen your body droop and get soft...and some nights you just think, "Oh, God, I'm not gonna put up with it another minute."But you wake up in the next morning...and the kitchen smells like coffee...and the kids have their hair brushed all by themselves...and you look at your husband, and no...he's not the person you thought he was.But he's your life.And the kids and the house and everything that you do is built around him.And that's your life. That's your history too.And if you take him out, that's like cutting his face out of all the pictures.It just makes a big hole and it ruins everything.实在是一位充满智慧妻子和母亲,就算揭穿他又如何呢,只会毁了一切。

  二是在车上从要采访的政客话里女儿无意间悟到的:They're the ones who love you. That's what counts.你的亲人世界上最爱你的人,他们对你来说才是最重要的。

  最后,要说梅娘娘塑造角色的能力太强了,从活蹦乱跳到随着病情逐渐恶化的精神状态,层次分明,但始终是一个连贯性的整体:那就是,她是一位伟大的妻子和母亲。

  《亲情无价》影评(三):美国贤妻良母

  女儿一直嫌弃妈妈,最怕像她那样乏味地活,朝着万能的父亲手指的方向往前冲,却发现迷失了自己,现在只想好好弥补。女儿问:你怎么能忍受做了那么多,却一直被忽视?妈说:眼前所拥有的一切更值得珍惜,不要总想着那些没得到的。美国也有这么传统贤惠的女人,甘愿为爱的人做炮灰。

  电影里妈妈说:“在某些夜晚你会想:我绝不能再忍受多一分钟。但在早晨醒来,厨房飘着咖啡香,孩子们梳好了头发,你会看着你丈夫,不错,他并非你想象中那样好,但他是你的生命,你的孩子、你的家,全是以他为轴心。那是你的生命,也是你的历史。若是你将他去除,就会像把他的脸从照片上剪去般,那只会跑出个大洞,并破坏一切。你可以严厉,你也可以批判,只有这两项就足以让你的生命永无宁日。”

  这个妈妈是个家庭装饰的行家里手,她擅长把破碎物拼凑贴成美丽实用物。一面看,多么的美好宽容;一面看,维持“美满”代价之深重,那些深埋的悲伤,悄悄地把她腐蚀透,所以,她会走得那么早。

  《亲情无价》影评(四):「Quotes」

  「You got a Harvard education, but where is your heart?」

  「Thank you for the world so sweet.Thank you for the food we eat.Thank you for the birds that sing.Thank you, God, for everything.」

  「You can be hard. And you can be very judgmental. And with those two things alone you're going to make such a mess out of your life.」

  「It's so much easier to be happy, my love. It's so much easier to choose to love the things that you have, and you have so much, instead of always yearning for what you're missing, or what it is you're imagining you're missing. It's so much more peaceful.」

  《亲情无价》影评(五):The movie goes not for big melodramatic revelations but for the accumulation of emotional investment

  o matter how well we eventually come to understand our parents, our deepest feelings about them are formed at a time when we are young and have incomplete information. “One True Thing” is about a daughter who grows up admiring her father and harboring doubts about her mother, and finds out she doesn't know as much about either one as she thinks she does.

  The movie is based on the 1995 novel by Anna Quindlen about a New York magazine writer whose father is “Mr. American Literature” and whose mother seems to have been shaped by the same forces that generated Martha Stewart's hallucinations. Ellen (Renee Zellweger) is bright and pretty but with a subtle wounded look: She has that way of signaling that she's been hurt and expects to be hurt again.

  he comes home to upstate New York for a surprise birthday party for her father, a professor named George (William Hurt), and is not surprised to see her mother, Kate (Meryl Streep), prancing around the house dressed like Dorothy in “The Wizard of Oz.” Yes, it's a costume party, but Kate is the kind of woman who can find costumes like that right in her own closet. Eventually Ellen gets a chance to ask her dad about her latest magazine article, which he has read and, “writer to writer,” thinks should be “more muscular.” Later he muses, “When I was 20 and working at the New Yorker, I would spend a whole day working on a single sentence.” That's the kind of statement that deserves pity rather than respect; if it is true, then to meet his deadlines he must have had to dash off his other sentences in heedless haste. Ellen should be able to feel a certain contempt for her father for even using such a ploy, but she is blinded by his tweeds, his National Book Award, his seminars, his whole edifice of importance. He thinks he's a big shot, and she buys it.

  Ellen's hurt, we see, comes because her father, whom she admires, does not sufficiently show his love for her--while her mother, of whom she disapproves, has a love that is therefore unwelcome. All of this begins to matter in the next months, as it develops that Kate has cancer, and George wants his daughter to move back home and take care of her.

  ut ... I have a career, Ellen argues. “You can work as a free-lancer from home,” the professor says, clearly not convinced that whatever his daughter has can be described as a career. He, of course, is too busy with midterms to take care of Kate. The family's younger brother, Brian (Tom Everett Scott), must stay in school. Yes, a nurse could be hired, but the professor doesn't want a nurse poking around the house and disturbing his routine. Kate herself doesn't want Ellen to stay, but wasn't consulted (by her husband or her daughter) about the decision.

  As autumn winds down into winter, Ellen coexists in the house with a mother who is clearly demented in the area of domestic activities. She belongs to a local group named the Minnies, who decorate Christmas trees with the fury of beavers rebuilding a dam. The luncheon meetings of the Minnies could be photographed for layouts in food magazines, and of course the Minnies cook everything themselves. When Ellen breaks a piece of Kate's china, Kate asks her to save the pieces because she can use them in her mosaic table. Ellen finally tells Kate she thinks the Minnies are like a cult group.

  George, on the other hand, throws his daughter a bone; he asks her to write an introduction to his collected essays. She is flattered, although a little wounded that he then immediately asks her, in more or less the same spirit, to launder some shirts.

  As winter unfolds and Kate's illness grows more severe, Ellen begins to suspect things about her father, and her mother observes this and finally tells her: “There's nothing that you know about your father that I don't know--and better.” And we see that the buried story of the movie is the hurt Kate has borne all these years over the way her daughter's love was quietly directed away from her.

  It is the craftsmanship that elevates “One True Thing” above the level of a soaper. The director, Carl Franklin (“One False Move”), goes not for big melodramatic revelations but for the accumulation of emotional investments. Hurt and Streep are so well cast they're able to overcome the generic natures of their roles and make them particular people. And Renee Zellweger, as Streep observed at the Telluride Film Festival, is able to create a place for herself and work inside it, not acting so much as fiercely possessing her character. The movie's lesson is that we go through life telling ourselves a story about our childhood and our parents, but we are the authors of that story, and it is less fact than fiction.

  《亲情无价》影评(六):One True Thing script - Dialogue Transcript

  One True Thing script - Dialogue Transcript

  top it. Stop it. Stop it.

  Let go! Let go! Stop!

  Damn. Richard Ellespeare died.

  - He was a professor of mine at Harvard. - No!

  - He was a novelist, humanitarian. - Hey, hey, back there.

  - Published eight novels, including the best seller... - Stop it! Quit it!

  Hope's Way, for which he won the Pulitzer Prize.

  - What kind of man was this? - A man who pursues excellence and nothing less.

  - Dad? - Yes?

  I have to go to the bathroom.

  Can't you hold it till we get there?

  Mmm, yes. I guess...

  I can practice mind over matter.

  Atta girl.

  Oh, look at the baby cows, Ellie!

  Oh, my God! Look at them.

  I'm reading, Mom. And baby cows are calves.

  I was never close to my mother growing up.

  ls that something Mr. Best is going to use against me?

  Ellen, the D.A.'s not going to use anything against you.

  Mrs. Best, his wife, was a friend of my mother's.

  Do I need an attorney?

  obody in this office is accusing you of anything.

  We're well aware that this kind of thing happens...

  all the time with terminal patients.

  It's... It's a small town. People talk.

  The D.A. wants to be able to say that he looked into it...

  and he can put it to bed.

  What can I say? It's an election year.

  Anyway, were you aware that an autopsy was being performed on your mother's body?

  Yes, uh-huh, at her request.

  Uh, actually to find out the source of the disease.

  rimarily for my benefit.

  Mm-hmm. Where are you living now?

  In New York. I've been there since I finished Harvard.

  This living in the suburbs is going to kill me.

  Hey, Tweedy, the Bearstone Ladies predict a stock market crash next month.

  - Finish the captions on the junk shot, Casey. - They're antiques.

  - I've got a pulse. I've got to check this again. - Tweedy.

  This story is too good.

  enator Sullivan, youngest guy ever to be elected to the Senate.

  His father was a drug dealer, he overcomes that... excuse me...

  is on his way to big things, possibly the presidency...

  - until he crashes his car into a tree, kills everyone inside... - That was actually final draft?

  while he's on cocaine.

  I mean, this is not just good. This is great.

  hakespearean. Sins of the father revisited on the son...

  - etcetera, etcetera. - We've got no interview. He's not talking.

  - I can get him to talk. I promise you. - He's checking into rehab.

  ome people in town are describing you as...

  cold and insensitive.

  Um...

  Ambition is Ellen Gulden's religion.

  - She's condescending. She's remote, whatever. - I can get him to talk.

  Well, I was ambitious.

  I stilI am.

  My father taught me to work very hard at everything I do, and I always have.

  I'm not tired.

  - So you were living a pretty normal life in New York? - Uh-huh.

  - Apartment? - Uh-huh.

  - Roommate? - No. No roommate.

  - Boyfriend? - Boyfriend.

  - Honey, please let me explain. - Jordan, just get out of here.

  - I don't want to see you anymore. - Come on. I got...

  I'm standing out here. I got wine, candles. I got the whole kit.

  Just go away, Jordan.

  El, can I just talk to you for five minutes, please? I'll explain everything.

  - Go away! - We were together...

  ince senior year in college.

  This one was the last time, okay?

  Well, not together. We, uh... We took breaks.

  You know, a lot of breaks.

  That's mean. That's not funny.

  - He just needed some space. - Space named Linda.

  I'm sorry. Was that her name? Lori? I don't remember.

  - Oh, you're so mean. - ls that not her name?

  - That... You're so mean. - Don't get me wrong.

  I like him.

  Of course, it was, um, Jules, my best girlfriend...

  who, uh, came home with me to celebrate my father's birthday.

  Jordan, um, as usual, had something he had to do.

  Oh, this ought to be good.

  quot;Come as your favorite literary character". I don't know why...

  my mom can't just throw a normal birthday party.

  Ellie, it's going to be perfectly fine.

  Thank you. Thanks.

  - Hey! - Whoo-hoo!

  - Hi. - Hi.

  - Oh, good hat. Uh-huh. - Really good hat. Really good everything.

  Thanks. What'd you guys come dressed as?

  The Sylvia Plath twins?

  - Brian, you know I can't do costumes. - Why?

  - It's just so... Mom. - Human?

  - So what have you guys been up to? - God!

  - Ooh. Mm-hmm. - It's writing and deadlines.

  Take me away.

  - Okay. - Oh, wait!

  omebody just finished summer school, didn't he? Congratulations!

  - Actually, I didn't finish. - That's great!

  What?

  I, Brian Gulden...

  on of Mr. American Literature and the romantics, failed American Literature.

  You're serious?

  - Yeah. - Well, way to go.

  - How did you do that? - I blew the test, Ellen.

  rian.

  Did you tell Dad?

  o.

  Just 'cause I'm failing doesn't make me a moron.

  Yoo-hoo! Hi!

  - There she is. - Hi, Mom.

  Your dad's not here. The coast is clear. Gimme! Gimme!

  Gimme! Hi, Jules.

  Hi.

  - Hi. You too. - Good to see you.

  - Let me get your... - Oh, no, no, no. I got it.

  - Are you sure? Okay. - Yeah, yeah. Thanks. Oh, thank you.

  - Wow. - Thank you.

  You got a cab? I would have sent Brian to come and pick you up.

  - You should have told me. - Oh, that's okay.

  Come in. Come in, come in, come in.

  - God, this must have taken you days. - Oh, well, yes.

  - Jules, you look wonderful. - Oh, thanks.

  - I just cut my hair. - Oh. lt looks gorgeous.

  - And your hair looks great too. - Oh, thank you.

  Oh, this... It's yarn. Look. Guess who I am.

  Hmm? Oh!

  Oh, wait! Clue.

  - Oh... If I only had a brain - A heart

  A brain and whatever else

  Oh, well. You're right, as usual.

  - So, let me see. Who are you? - Uh...

  - Don't tell me. Let me guess. - Actually, you know what? We-We kind of forgot.

  ut is was only because we were trying to hurry...

  'cause, of course, we wanted to be here on time, so...

  - God, that cake looks so good. So, we're just us. - Oh.

  That's okay. That's okay, Ellie. That's...

  Ooh! But I have an idea.

  I do have a Thanksgiving costume upstairs.

  - That's okay. - I could whip something up for you. It's a turkey!

  - No, really. It's okay. It's all right. - It's really...

  - Can I help you with anything? - Oh, yes, thanks.

  - You could take those dishes, put them in the buffet. Umm... - Sure.

  And Ellie... Ellie?

  You can... keep-keep, uh, slicing the bread...

  - with this knife, okay? - Thank you.

  I read your piece on Geraldine Ferraro.

  My brilliant daughter.

  I was so... proud of you.

  It's no big deal. It's just a little follow-up piece.

  ack and forth. Saw on it.

  - Do you think that Dad read it? - Oh, I'm sure he did.

  You know your dad. But he doesn't talk shop with me.

  Fuck.

  ope. It's okay. It's okay. It's not even bleeding.

  - It's fine. It's really fine. - Wrap it up.

  - Okay. Thank you. - Brown paper. There's something in it that stops the bleeding.

  - Did you know that? - Really? - Okay, thanks.

  - Oh! Oh, dear. - Sorry.

  - No, I'll get it. - That's all right. Don't throw the pieces out...

  - because I'm going to use it in my mosaic table I'm making. - Don't worry.

  - We got it. - Keep your finger up and wrapped in the bag.

  Hello? There's no place like home.

  - Thank God. - Are we the first ones here?

  - Ellen! Oh, it's good to see you. - Oh, yeah.

  - You're lookin' tired. - Ellen.

  - Now, who are you supposed to be? Who? - Oh, I'm Lizzie Borden.

  You know, Lizzie Borden: "Took an axe...

  gave her mother whacks.,,

  - Help! Ellen, I just saw Dad. He just turned the corner. - Oh! Hey!

  Jules! Jules! Come help. Come help.

  Okay.

  - So, um, Snow White, explain. What was that? - Oh.

  Mrs. Best, the D.A.'s wife, she's in my mom's cult.

  The Minnies, yeah.

  They're named after some local do-gooder...

  who used to decorate Christmas trees in the town square.

  - And, um, they're a cult? - Woman's group.

  - Right. Right. - You know, bake sales, tag sales, all of that.

  - Come on. You be nice. - Do-good stuff.

  - No. Hi. - You must be Ellen. I'm Harold Simpkey.

  - I teach music over... - Harold, could you, um...

  He's here! Hurry up! Hurry up!

  Hurry up! Here he is.

  Everybody, get-get-get down!

  hh! Ralph, move your... Shh!

  Quiet!

  Kate?

  Kate?

  - Kate? - Surprise!

  Happy birthday!

  o. Look at all of you.

  Kate.

  How did you pull this off? Bravo!

  Come on, Dad, speech.

  eech! Speech!

  I'm quite out of breath with walking home. It's only in going uphill...

  that you realize you're headed downhill.

  Thank you. Thank you. Thank you all for coming.

  I'm really... I'm really very touched.

  I'm very touched.

  o, I guess this is the...

  last class of the semester.

  Thank you for taking this journey with me. It's been a lot of fun.

  And have a great summer.

  There it is.

  The National Book Award.

  Oh, wow. He knows Oliver Most.

  Yeah, they went to Harvard together.

  Come see this. Come here.

  It's his novel, Comeback lnn.

  He's been working on it for years.

  Took Milton ten to finish my favorite poem.

  Oh, here's his collected essays.

  I read this first chapter.

  - Yeah? - Uh-huh.

  And?

  - It's great. - Uh-huh.

  o, uh, what-what'd he say about your article?

  Oh, I don't believe it.

  You didn't ask him, did you?

  Ellie. Tsk.

  - That's what they called me. - Did they now?

  You know, having the dubious distinction...

  of having been called "Big Al" when you were this diminutive...

  ackage is a challenge to confidence...

  ut you have obviously survived it, have you not?

  - Yes. - So here you have in front of you a living example...

  of-of everything you're trying to achieve.

  I would just say get an ice breaker and break out of it.

  - I'm havin' a lot of trouble. - Listen...

  a writer calls his friend, he says, "I've just finished writing a story.

  quot;It's not very good. In fact, it's terrible.

  The worst part of it is it's the best I can do.,,

  The writer is John Steinbeck. The book is Grapes of Wrath!

  - Hi! Hi. - Hey! Hi.

  - Happy birthday. - Thank you.

  I'm afraid with staring at me in the face...

  I'm developing inflammation of the sentence structure...

  and a definite hardening of the paragraphs, but...

  - How are you? - Oh, no. How are you?

  You knew all about this little thing, didn't you?

  - Huh? - No, actually, I didn't.

  Hmm.

  Well, did you get a chance to look at my latest piece?

  Yes. Yes, of course.

  The Minnies seem to get their literature from Disney.

  I know.

  - Hey! - Oh, my God, they're everywhere.

  Enemy forces at : . Danger, Will Robertson. Danger.

  - It's Robinson. Robinson. - Oh, Robinson.

  afe.

  afe for the moment.

  That was better. That was better. Now I'll show you...

  About your article...

  - Hmm. - I don't want to interfere, you know.

  - You are doing just fine. - Oh, no. Come on.

  Come on. You know your criticism, it helps me so much.

  I really appreciate it.

  All right.

  Writer to writer.

  - Less is more. - Hmm.

  Your approach is a little overemotional at times.

  lt needs to be more succinct. The word choice needs to be more muscular.

  Ellen, you've got a great talent, but it's not enough.

  You have to reach, goddamn it.

  When I was years old working at the New Yorker...

  I would spend a whole day working on one sentence.

  I mean, Lord knows I could...

  Wait a minute. It's your best work to date. It's...

  It's not your fault. It's like the problem is that editor, damn it.

  - What is his name? Uh, Tw... Twimpy? - Tweedy.

  Yeah.

  - George? Well, see ya. - He's a fool as far as...

  - Hey. - Yeah? We're hiding.

  I know. Come inside. It's time to blow out the candles and make a wish!

  Oh, I wish we were... alone.

  Well, we're not yet. So hurry up. Come on. Everybody's waiting.

  Man, that's solid.

  rian, how's Harvard treating ya?

  Can't complain. We beat Oxford in the Prentice Cup.

  I was referring to your courses.

  ummer school was all right?

  Uh, fine.

  Yeah? You didn't have any more problems, did ya?

  ope. Everything's fine, Dad.

  I'd be glad to help by talking to your professors.

  - I'd be glad to look at your... - I said everything's fine.

  Well, good.

  Good.

  - He's had a few, huh? - It's his birthday.

  Good night! Good night, Mary!

  - Good night, guys. - Good night... What's his name?

  Hewitt.

  Hewitt. That's...

  Don't do anything. I'll do it in the morning, honey.

  Well, thank you, thank you one and all for a...

  a beautiful birthday.

  - Happy birthday. - Happy birthday, Dad.

  Happy birthday, darling.

  - Good night. Uh-huh. - Good night?

  You're not going to bed. You're not going to sleep, anyway.

  - Oh, God. - I have to get up early, you know.

  I have Dr. Cohn in the morning.

  hh!

  Oh, do you like Bette Midler?

  Oh! You.

  Come on. Come on.

  Just one.

  I don't care about that.

  I knew my mother was going to the doctor, but, uh...

  I didn't really know what for.

  o you didn't ask.

  o.

  What poem begins, "'Twas the night before Christmas"?

  Uh, it's not called, "'Twas the night before Christmas".

  It's called, uh... I can recite the whole thing. Does that count?

  Anybody need any coffee?

  - We just need the title. No, thank you. - No? Okay.

  - I'm gonna go through the whole thing. - Don't let him cheat!

  lease!

  Oh, my God. "A Visit from St. Nick".

  Oh, man! Don't I get the point?

  Hey!

  - Where's Mom? - They're going to keep her overnight.

  he's going to have to have surgery.

  urgery?

  Yes, they're... They're going to try to take it out.

  It's cancer?

  - Are they sure? - I'm going back out there to spend the night.

  ls she going to die?

  o, she's not going to die.

  After the operation, she may need radiation or chemotherapy.

  The doctor said that that can be very debilitating...

  in which case she would need somebody to take care of her during the day.

  Actually, I...

  I want you to-to move home...

  to take care of her.

  Move home?

  - Brian is at school. - Dad, what about my job?

  Well, you can freelance from here.

  he's going to need help during the day.

  Well...

  Maybe you could take sabbatical. I mean, it's been four years since...

  - you took one for the novel. - A sabbatical is out of the question.

  I have a department to run, and I have to make a living.

  As you well know, the advance on my novel was spent years ago...

  on yours and Brian's education.

  Dad, I have to do my interviews and my research in New York.

  I may never catch up again. lt could ruin my career.

  - We can get a nurse and I will come home every weekend. - A nurse?

  We're not getting a nurse. Your mother didn't get a nurse when you had chicken pox.

  A nurse. You know she won't tolerate having strangers in this house.

  - But, Dad... - Your mother needs you, Ellen. Jesus Christ!

  You've got a Harvard education, but where is your heart?

  Excuse me.

  - Honey? Hi. - Hey.

  -So sorry I'm late. Sorry. Hey, Jules. -Hi. Bye.

  - Okay. Hi. Mmm, kiss. - Hi.

  You okay?

  Here, give me your bag.

  - What's the matter? She's what? - My mom is sick.

  Ellen, a sick mother means three weeks off...

  and a very nice arrangement of flowers sent by the staff.

  Yeah, still holding. You're doing great here.

  If you leave there's no guarantee. All I could offer you is some freelance work.

  Okay, but I'm still going to finish the Sullivan piece from home.

  How are you going to do that?

  - Actually, Casey said that he has a way into Sullivan too. - No.

  This is my piece. I can do it.

  Okay. I know what this is about.

  You want an upgrade.

  Well, you got it. I don't know what it is yet...

  ut it's yours.

  You really think that someone would come in here...

  and say that their mother has cancer for a promotion?

  Ellen, this is New York.

  Ellen Gulden.

  Hello, sweetheart. It's Dad.

  Hi, Dad.

  - You okay? - Yeah, I'm fine.

  - Listen, I'm really sorry. - I'm sorry too.

  Don't forget to make an extra set of keys...

  - in case you need to get in. - I know. I know. You know what I need to do?

  - I've got to disconnect the phone. - Yes, by Wednesday.

  - By Wednesday. - Okay. I'll call then.

  - When is she moving in? Saturday? - Thursday.

  - Okay. What are you gonna do? - Call you when I get there.

  - You always forget, then I worry. - I won't forget. I promise.

  Thanks. Okay.

  weetie, I'm all nervous.

  I've never asked anybody to live with me.

  - I'm gonna miss you. - I'm gonna miss you too.

  Ellie?

  - You're home! - Mm-hmm.

  I was just... I was remembering when I moved these plates from Princeton.

  - Oh, yeah. - Remember? And Brian was practicing juggling.

  - So, how are you? - I'm fine. I'm fine.

  - Good. - I just have to take it easy.

  My oncologist, who is... you'll love this...

  a woman, says no upholstering...

  o furniture refinishing.

  Oh, no. What are you gonna do?

  Can you stay the whole weekend?

  Uh, didn't Dad... Oh, he didn't...

  Well, um, I'm home for a while.

  I took some time off from work.

  Home where? Here? Well, what about your job...

  and your little apartment and everything?

  Well, I'm gonna work from here, so...

  - Oh, don't worry about it. - Oh, no.

  - Tweedy said that it's fine. - Oh, no, no, no.

  ot to play nursemaid to me.

  - Oh, no. That's not... - Oh, I don't need...

  Man, you'll hate me. I'll just make you some dinner.

  o, I want to stay.

  At least until you feel better.

  I mean, it's the right thing.

  For who?

  - Whose idea was this? - Mine.

  Dad, and... Well, it was both of ours.

  He shouldn't have asked you to do this, honey, because he knows you.

  - He knows this will never work. - No. Now, I told Dad...

  that I want to do this and I'm going to.

  o, that's final. Okay?

  Okay. Okay.

  Okay. Oh, my girl.

  I'm gonna make you some cinnamon toast.

  And I'll get you a cup of tea too.

  Okay.

  I'm glad you're home. Thanks.

  he didn't know I was coming.

  Well, you know how your mother is.

  If she'd known...

  he probably would've redecorated your entire bedroom.

  What's that smell?

  Um, that is an old writer's trick.

  chiller believed that his body sabotaged...

  the attention of his mind while he was writing.

  o, he engaged his body...

  with a simple stimulant, apples...

  to free his mind.

  o far, all it's done for me is make me hungry for apple pie à la mode.

  o, what have you been working on recently?

  My interview with James Sullivan.

  - Senator Sullivan? - Mm-hmm.

  That's impressive. That's a big story.

  You know, I've been meaning to ask you.

  Random House has been asking me who I'd like to write...

  the introduction to Volume Two of my Collected Essays.

  It's coming out in the spring.

  Feel free to say no, but if you had the time...

  how would you feel about writing the introduction?

  - Are you serious? - Mm-hmm.

  - I would love to. - Great. Great.

  They envision some biographical sketch or interview perhaps.

  - I'll help you write the questions, if you want. - Okay.

  Here's some literary criticism...

  in case you haven't seen any of that recently.

  And two, three examples of my work in case you don't carry that...

  around in your bags with you wherever you go.

  And, wait.

  Wow.

  Could you wash these for me? No starch.

  And this pocket needs to be stitched.

  Thanks for taking care of this.

  Ellie! Tell Dad dinner's on the table.

  weetie, later on tonight, I'm gonna run you a vanilla bath.

  That'll help you go to sleep. Okay?

  - Morning. - Good morning.

  Good morning Mary sunshine

  Did you wake so soon

  - Remember when we used to sing you that? - Nope.

  I see the decorating season has officially begun.

  - Our quarterback is suiting up. - Mmm.

  Oh, George. You love it when...

  the Minnies decorate the Christmas trees.

  You just pretend to be Scrooge.

  - Mm-mm-mm. Bye-bye. - Bye-bye.

  Good day. Don't forget you have a staff meeting at : .

  - Oh, yeah. I'lI see you gals tonight. - Okay.

  Mmm. I wish I had redone this kitchen years ago...

  when I had the money to do it.

  - You okay? - Yeah, I just...

  I'm a little tired.

  I have my big Minnie luncheon today.

  Just the thought of all those Minnies is tiring.

  - I can make the lunch. - You could make the lunch?

  Yeah, I'll call out for Chinese...

  - or make some tuna fish sandwiches. - No, no.

  This is the steering committee lunch where we plan the Christmas trees.

  It's very important. I'm gonna make chicken paillard...

  zucchini soup, and my heavenly chocolate cake.

  Well, that's what I'll make then.

  You can make chicken paillard and zucchini soup and chocolate cake?

  Yeah. Just show me how. lt can't be that hard.

  Crap.

  Oh, shit! Mom!

  Can you come here, quick?

  o, I saw it on Donahue.

  This woman said a UFO landed and took away her husband.

  - A UFO? - And the UFO's name was probably Jennifer or Sophia.

  Yeah, but she saw something, you know...

  and I think there are things in this world that are mysterious and unexplainable.

  Yeah, like remember when they had one calorie Tab.

  I was always wondering why the need for that one calorie at all.

  《亲情无价》影评(七):爱你所爱

  1、你得到了哈佛的教育,但是你的心去哪里了?

  2、ellen:你真认为有人会说她妈得了癌症而想升职?

  -el,这是纽约。

  3、妈妈:你别待在家里当我的护士,你会恨我的。

  4、ellen:妈妈她不知道我要回来。

  爸爸:是啊,她要是知道,她会给你来个房间装修的。

  5、ellen:我最不想做的事情就是像我妈妈那样生活,可是我回到家后,感觉正是。

  6、爸爸:你不能去porchlight,porchlight comes to you.(有独奏的烛光晚餐),晚餐之后,我租了你最爱看的电影。

  7、kate:whew!看这些小树叶,它们总好像着急着要去哪。

  8、kate:more is more.你爸爸总说less is more,但对我来说,more is more.

  9、kate:睡过一千个夜晚后,厨房里的咖啡味,小孩梳头梳的满地都是,你再看看你的丈夫,哦不,他已经不是你心中所想的那个人,but he is your life!

  10、妈妈:我已经说了我要说的,除了我很伤心,我没办法准备你的婚礼,记住千万别要拿花的女孩和捧裙子的小孩,还有不要邀请太多人。

  11、ellen:你要挖的再深一些,4英寸,这样动物不会吃掉种子,花也会长的更健康。

  爸爸:这是什么花?

  ellen:水仙花。

  《亲情无价》影评(八):Quote

  - You know what's strange?

  - One minute you're in school

  and the next minute you look up...

  - Mm-hmm.

  - Your life's all turned around

  and screwed up.

  - You try and you try to get ahead.

  -Somewhere in it all you just ..

  you lose yourself.

  - And you never know

  when it's gonna come.

  Comes out of nowhere.

  ang. lt's just..

  - Your life is a disaster.

评价:

[匿名评论]登录注册

评论加载中……