《居家男人》的英文介绍及评论
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解决时间 2021-02-12 19:11
- 提问者网友:伴风望海
- 2021-02-12 06:15
电影介绍及各位对它的看法,最好是英文的。
最佳答案
- 五星知识达人网友:醉吻情书
- 2021-02-12 06:27
Brief Introduction:
Jack Campbell (Academy Award® winner Nicolas Cage) is a single, wealthy Wall Street trader living the high life in New York City. All that magically changes one morning when he wakes up in a suburban New Jersey bedroom with a wife (Tea Leoni) he never married and two kids he never had - the life he would have led if he had made different choices as a younger man. Find out what it takes for a single-minded businessman to become The Family Man in this wonderful comedy about second thoughts and second chances.
Nicholas Cage is one of the busiest and most versatile "A List" Hollywood actors, turning his hand to action, drama and comedy.
Family Man is a romantic comedy starring Cage alongside Tea Leoni. Cage chooses his career over his girlfriend Leoni and walks away from her at the airport despite her pleas for him not to leave. Thirteen years later, he is a hugely successful businessman, about to close a multi-billion dollar merger with a rival company. After an encounter with a mysterious character, he wakes up next to Leoni, finding that he has been married to her for thirteen years, with two children and a large slobbering dog...
Review:
The Family Man is a generally decent winter romance that features Nicolas Cage as a corporate, Wall Street hot-shot with "everything" he could possibly want, until his world is turned upside-down when he wakes to the a glimpse of the life he would have lived, had he married long-time college girlfriend Téa Leoni.
The family, the children, the pets, the "job." In other words, it is another variation and combination of A Christmas Carol, and Run, Lola, Run or Sliding Doors or Twice Upon Yesterday or Me Myself I. Cage's initial reaction to the surreal situation seems irrational. Since he has retained all the information of his real life over, who hasn't had some sort of dream like this? Is this the way you act in your dreams? Hardly, I would think; I would imagine that it would prompt the person to do a bit of exploring, especially considering that it seemed so unreal. But luckily enough, the story builds enough to it to leave some room for margin error. The Family Man is well acted; I usually like Cage, and when he merits and demerits his perceptions in the movie, it is all justified. Leoni amazingly is natural and affecting. She comes across very equanimic and real. With its nice cast, it showers you in the romantic shards that are desirable around this time of the season. On the downside, too often, many of the characters receive an introduction and are shown functioning in a regular fashion, and then they're completely forgotten and abandoned. And the dialogue was too austere to be believable. Unfortunately, we don't speak that direct and straightforward; it's rarely the case, and director Brett Ratner (Money Talks and Rush Hour) doesn't have the strength or maturity to handle the dictum like David Mamet or Whit Stillman. Only the last quarter of an hour, when Cage realizes that the glimpse must come to an end, does The Family Man noticeable decline. Still, it's a good romantic fantasy. (One fetid diaper-changing scene provides surprising reaction, disgust and cause to look away from the screen. That's scary considering how we can tolerate heads exploding, guts being ate, and carnal, pornographic sex, and yet we get a little messy poop and it's head turning.)
Jack Campbell (Academy Award® winner Nicolas Cage) is a single, wealthy Wall Street trader living the high life in New York City. All that magically changes one morning when he wakes up in a suburban New Jersey bedroom with a wife (Tea Leoni) he never married and two kids he never had - the life he would have led if he had made different choices as a younger man. Find out what it takes for a single-minded businessman to become The Family Man in this wonderful comedy about second thoughts and second chances.
Nicholas Cage is one of the busiest and most versatile "A List" Hollywood actors, turning his hand to action, drama and comedy.
Family Man is a romantic comedy starring Cage alongside Tea Leoni. Cage chooses his career over his girlfriend Leoni and walks away from her at the airport despite her pleas for him not to leave. Thirteen years later, he is a hugely successful businessman, about to close a multi-billion dollar merger with a rival company. After an encounter with a mysterious character, he wakes up next to Leoni, finding that he has been married to her for thirteen years, with two children and a large slobbering dog...
Review:
The Family Man is a generally decent winter romance that features Nicolas Cage as a corporate, Wall Street hot-shot with "everything" he could possibly want, until his world is turned upside-down when he wakes to the a glimpse of the life he would have lived, had he married long-time college girlfriend Téa Leoni.
The family, the children, the pets, the "job." In other words, it is another variation and combination of A Christmas Carol, and Run, Lola, Run or Sliding Doors or Twice Upon Yesterday or Me Myself I. Cage's initial reaction to the surreal situation seems irrational. Since he has retained all the information of his real life over, who hasn't had some sort of dream like this? Is this the way you act in your dreams? Hardly, I would think; I would imagine that it would prompt the person to do a bit of exploring, especially considering that it seemed so unreal. But luckily enough, the story builds enough to it to leave some room for margin error. The Family Man is well acted; I usually like Cage, and when he merits and demerits his perceptions in the movie, it is all justified. Leoni amazingly is natural and affecting. She comes across very equanimic and real. With its nice cast, it showers you in the romantic shards that are desirable around this time of the season. On the downside, too often, many of the characters receive an introduction and are shown functioning in a regular fashion, and then they're completely forgotten and abandoned. And the dialogue was too austere to be believable. Unfortunately, we don't speak that direct and straightforward; it's rarely the case, and director Brett Ratner (Money Talks and Rush Hour) doesn't have the strength or maturity to handle the dictum like David Mamet or Whit Stillman. Only the last quarter of an hour, when Cage realizes that the glimpse must come to an end, does The Family Man noticeable decline. Still, it's a good romantic fantasy. (One fetid diaper-changing scene provides surprising reaction, disgust and cause to look away from the screen. That's scary considering how we can tolerate heads exploding, guts being ate, and carnal, pornographic sex, and yet we get a little messy poop and it's head turning.)
全部回答
- 1楼网友:撞了怀
- 2021-02-12 07:29
首先是人应该怎样活着。主人公是一个可以上得了厅堂,下得了厨房的男人。有点佩服。单是“上得了厅堂”这一点对自己来说,还不知要奋斗多少年。其实吃苦倒没什么,不经历风雨那能见彩虹?就怕忙忙碌碌一阵子,而结果却是碌碌无为一辈子。不是没有这种可能,而是很有这种可能。但是主人公却看到了彩虹,睿智后面是魄力,过人的胆识使得他真正成为了人上人。 但是人大了,再小就难了,也就是难以下厨房了。剧中主人公(杰克)尽管以一种梦幻、体验的方式从一个叱咤的老板变为了卖轮胎的职员,但还是演绎得惟妙惟肖。(当然,如果说这是演戏,是人为的假定,以此叫真,那就没有讨论的必要了)人就应该能大能小。但是说时容易做时难,处在一定高度了,也就开始处处显出一种姿态来——自命的,吹捧得。自绝与群的人所谓的同舟共济都是空话。也难免,人的眼一般是往上看得。进步的光往往会泛化前进的路,尤其是对于自己再低头去做那些…… 然而,高处不胜寒。享受了他人羡慕所带来的“温暖”,也就难免要经历名利的孤单。这就是本文所要探讨的第二个问题——人在活着,但是究竟是为了什么在活?为钱、为名、为利……或许这仅仅是人生的一个阶段所要求的。在剧中。杰克以自己的实际行动向我们告白——人活着是为了人,为了自己的家人;或有余力,兼及他人。这不是什么利己主义,这就是人之为人的所在。 在嘈杂的社会中,在险恶的江湖后,回到家——妻子的一杯浓茶,女儿的一生——dad,甚至是家犬的拥抱……一切都是温暖的,一切都是自然的。尤其是看到小boy在成长,多么可爱;扑闪的大眼睛分明有自己的影子。 看到自己的后代在嗷嗷哺育中成长,看到大女儿在成长中懂事,那份撒野的心忽然又收了回来——这是我生命的延续,而正是在延续中我看到了自己生命的全部,自己生命的重生。 难道还有什么比生命永恒更让人期待的吗?
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