
fly away home 的台词
只找到了全部对话~Fly Away Home ScriptAmy.It's Dad.Dad?Why are you here?I came down from Canada. come to take you home.What do you mean?- Well, I mean...- Where's Mum?Tell me.Mum died, she?There was a foot of snow herewhen I left.I apologise for the mess.I haven't had a...I haven't had a chance to clean up. been really busy with, you know,this, that, the other thing.I haven't done any work to speak ofon the house in nine years.It'll be really niceonce it's all finished.Trunk. I'll get the trunk.Well, the bed looks nice.I ran out of storage spacein the workshop.I'll clear the junk outin the morning.- Make it just like you remember it.- I don't.You don't what?Remember it.I'm really tired.Yeah.Good night.You think I could fly, did you?What did you think?I wouldn't go and brag about it.Oh, well, that's actuallya pretty good landing for me.He's headed to a museum in Montreal.I was thinking:A goatee or clean-shaven?Give him a beard.Then he'll look like you.I'm gonna be real busy.I'm behind.I gotta deliver him and...I'm gonna be in the shop a lot.Okay?I'm not a baby.You don't have to hold my hand.- What's that?- I won an award for that.From the Canadian Societyof Inventors. Not bad, eh?- What is it?- It's a refrigerator.Very original.Moo goo gai in a pan.It's real easy to make.It says so right here.You like peanut butter? Remember,it had a real peanutty taste?- I'm not eating that.- The peanut butter makes it good.The peanuts, there'san oil thing that happens.Why is a spaceship in the barn?That's the Lunar Lander.Remember when I built that?It was the winter......you and your mom...You and your mom left.Remember, she thoughtI was crazy for doing it.I was too.I had no money and a busted ankle.Colder than hell.But I just couldn't get overthat whole moon trip.Why did you build it?The Lunar Lander, think about it.It's up there right now.The original one.They left it there. It's parked.So we needed another one.So I made an exact replica.Yeah. Every home should have one. been offered a lot for that.Hi.You must be Amy.I've heard a lot about you.Hey, how you doing?This is Susan, a friend of mine.This is for you.It's a welcome......gift. Welcome.Do you live here too?Well...Yes, I do.Sometimes I do.Excuse me.So, what's cooking?So! That went well....clearing the corner,fixing the bed, the flowers......and everything.I mean, it's just great.- No problem.- We were really beat when we got back. differentthan I thought she'd be.More complicated.She used to travel all overand tour with her mother.Singing in a club in Tokyo.A week later, recording in London.They were on the move a lot.Get out of here!What do you think you're doing?Hey! What do you think you're doing?We haven't had the meeting yet!We haven't voted!You're totally illegal!I'm gonna get a lawyerand sue your ass!Amy.Amy, look.I'm sorry about thatbut these people...They want to build this development.We've been fighting them becauseit's going to ruin the community.I don't care.Yeah, well, okay. I just wantedto explain it you. That's all.I don't care about any of it.I'm not going back to school anymore.- I'd rather die than go back there.- Amy.Why did all this have to happen?Who are you?They were coming at methrough the frozen food section.It was just truly awful.Their lips were so blue.- Oh, wow! You gotta be Amy.- Yeah.I gave you Silly Puttyfor Christmas once. You ate it.因字数太多,请查看下面链接。
求 “Home Sweet Home”这个经典台词的出处
“Home Sweet Home”原本是十九世纪的一首著名的英国歌曲,译名为《可爱的家》,以后广为流传,成了名句。
谁有the war at home的台词
World War I World War I, 1914–18, also known as the Great War, conflict, chiefly in Europe, among most of the great Western powers. It was the largest war the world had yet seen. Causes World War I was immediately precipitated by the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary by a Serbian nationalist in 1914. There were, however, many factors that had led toward war. Prominent causes were the imperialistic, territorial, and economic rivalries that had been intensifying from the late 19th cent., particularly among Germany, France, Great Britain, Russia, and Austria-Hungary. Of equal importance was the rampant spirit of nationalism, especially unsettling in the empire of Austria-Hungary and perhaps also in France. Nationalism had brought the unification of Germany by “blood and iron,” and France, deprived of Alsace and Lorraine by the War of 1870–71, had been left with its own nationalistic cult seeking revenge against Germany. While French nationalists were hostile to Germany, which sought to maintain its gains by militarism and alliances, nationalism was creating violent tensions in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy; there the large Slavic national groups had grown increasingly restive, and Serbia as well as Russia fanned Slavic hopes for freedom and Pan-Slavism. Imperialist rivalry had grown more intense with the “new imperialism” of the late 19th and early 20th cent. The great powers had come into conflict over spheres of influence in China and over territories in Africa, and the Eastern Question, created by the decline of the Ottoman Empire, had produced several disturbing controversies. Particularly unsettling was the policy of Germany. It embarked late but aggressively on colonial expansion under Emperor William II, came into conflict with France over Morocco, and seemed to threaten Great Britain by its rapid naval expansion. These issues, imperialist and nationalist, resulted in a hardening of alliance systems in the Triple Alliance and Triple Entente and in a general armaments race. Nonetheless, a false optimism regarding peace prevailed almost until the onset of the war, an optimism stimulated by the long period during which major wars had been avoided, by the close dynastic ties and cultural intercourse in Europe, and by the advance of industrialization and economic prosperity. Many Europeans counted on the deterrent of war's destructiveness to preserve the peace. War's Outbreak The Austrian annexation (1908) of Bosnia and Herzegovina created an international crisis, but war was avoided. The Balkan Wars (1912–13) remained localized but increased Austria's concern for its territorial integrity, while the solidification of the Triple Alliance made Germany more yielding to the demands of Austria, now its one close ally. The assassination (June 28, 1914) of Archduke Francis Ferdinand at Sarajevo set in motion the diplomatic maneuvers that ended in war. The Austrian military party, headed by Count Berchtold, won over the government to a punitive policy toward Serbia. On July 23, Serbia was given a nearly unacceptable ultimatum. With Russian support assured by Sergei Sazonov, Serbia accepted some of the terms but hedged on others and rejected those infringing upon its sovereignty. Austria-Hungary, supported by Germany, rejected the British proposal of Sir Edward Grey (later Lord Grey of Fallodon) and declared war (July 28) on Serbia. Russian mobilization precipitated a German ultimatum (July 31) that, when unanswered, was followed by a German declaration of war on Russia (Aug. 1). Convinced that France was about to attack its western frontier, Germany declared war (Aug. 3) on France and sent troops against France through Belgium and Luxembourg. Germany had hoped for British neutrality, but German violation of Belgian neutrality gave the British government the pretext and popular support necessary for entry into the war. In the following weeks Montenegro and Japan joined the Allies (Great Britain, France, Russia, Serbia, and Belgium) and the Ottoman Empire joined the Central Powers (Germany and Austria-Hungary). The war had become general. Whether it might have been avoided or localized and which persons and nations were most responsible for its outbreak are questions still debated by historians. From the Marne to Verdun The German strategy, planned by Alfred von Schlieffen, called for an attack on the weak left flank of the French army by a massive German force approaching through Belgium, while maintaining a defensive stance toward Russia, whose army, Schlieffen assumed, would require six weeks to mobilize. By that time, Germany would have captured France and would be ready to meet the forces on the Eastern Front. The Schlieffen plan was weakened from the start when the German commander Helmuth von Moltke detached forces from the all-important German right wing, which was supposed to smash through Belgium, in order to reinforce the left wing in Alsace-Lorraine. Nevertheless, the Germans quickly occupied most of Belgium and advanced on Paris. In Sept., 1914, the first battle of the Marne (see Marne, battle of the) took place. For reasons still disputed, a general German retreat was ordered after the battle, and the Germans entrenched themselves behind the Aisne River. The Germans then advanced toward the Channel ports but were stopped in the first battle of Ypres (see Ypres, battles of); grueling trench warfare ensued along the entire Western Front. Over the next three years the battle line remained virtually stationary. It ran, approximately, from Ostend past Armentières, Douai, Saint-Quentin, Reims, Verdun, and Saint-Mihiel to Lunéville. Meanwhile, on the Eastern Front, the Russians invaded East Prussia but were decisively defeated (Aug.–Sept., 1914) by the Germans under generals Hindenburg, Ludendorff, and Mackensen at Tannenberg and the Masurian Lakes (see under Masuria). The Germans advanced on Warsaw, but farther south a Russian offensive drove back the Austrians. However, by the autumn of 1915 combined Austro-German efforts had driven the Russians out of most of Poland and were holding a line extending from Riga to Chernovtsy (Chernivtsi). The Russians counterattacked in 1916 in a powerful drive directed by General Brusilov, but by the year's end the offensive had collapsed, after costing Russia many thousands of lives. Soon afterward the Russian Revolution eliminated Russia as an effective participant in the war. Although the Austro-Hungarians were unsuccessful in their attacks on Serbia and Montenegro in the first year of the war, these two countries were overrun in 1915 by the Bulgarians (who had joined the Central Powers in Oct., 1915) and by Austro-German forces. Another blow to the Allied cause was the failure in 1915 of the Gallipoli campaign, an attempt to force Turkey out of the war and to open a supply route to S Russia. The Allies, however, won a diplomatic battle when Italy, after renouncing its partnership in the Triple Alliance and after being promised vast territorial gains, entered the war on the Allied side in May, 1915. Fighting between Austria and Italy along the Isonzo River was inconclusive until late 1917, when the rout of the Italians at Caporetto made Italy a liability rather than an asset to the Allies. Except for the conquest of most of Germany's overseas colonies by the British and Japanese, the year 1916 opened with a dark outlook for the Allies. The stalemate on the Western Front had not been affected in 1915 by the second battle of Ypres, in which the Germans used poison gas for the first time on the Western Front, nor by the French offensive in Artois—in which a slight advance of the French under Henri Pétain was paid for with heavy losses—nor by the offensive of Marshal Joffre in Champagne, nor by the British advance toward Lens and Loos. In Feb., 1916, the Germans tried to break the deadlock by mounting a massive assault on Verdun (see Verdun, battle of). The French, rallying with the cry, “They shall not pass!” held fast despite enormous losses, and in July the British and French took the offensive along the Somme River where tanks were used for the first time by the British. By November they had gained a few thousand yards and lost thousands of men. By December, a French counteroffensive at Verdun had restored the approximate positions of Jan., 1916. Despite signs of exhaustion on both sides, the war went on, drawing ever more nations into the maelstrom. Portugal and Romania joined the Allies in 1916; Greece, involved in the war by the Allied Salonica campaigns on its soil, declared war on the Central Powers in 1917. From America's Entry to Allied Victory The neutrality of the United States had been seriously imperiled after the sinking of the Lusitania (1915). At the end of 1916, Germany, whose surface fleet had been bottled up since the indecisive battle of Jutland (see Jutland, battle of), announced that it would begin unrestricted submarine warfare in an effort to break British control of the seas. In protest the United States broke off relations with Germany (Feb., 1917), and on Apr. 6 it entered the war. American participation meant that the Allies now had at their command almost unlimited industrial and manpower resources, which were to be decisive in winning the war. It also served from the start to lift Allied morale, and the insistence of President Woodrow Wilson on a “war to make the world safe for democracy” was to weaken the Central Powers by encouraging revolutionary groups at home. The war on the Western Front continued to be bloody and stalemated. But in the Middle East the British, who had stopped a Turkish drive on the Suez Canal, proceeded to destroy the Ottoman Empire; T. E. Lawrence stirred the Arabs to revolt, Baghdad fell (Mar., 1917), and Field Marshal Allenby took Jerusalem (Dec., 1917). The first troops of the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF), commanded by General Pershing, landed in France in June, 1917, and were rushed to the Château-Thierry area to help stem a new German offensive. A unified Allied command in the West was created in Apr., 1918. It was headed by Marshal Foch, but under him the national commanders (Sir Douglas Haig for Britain, King Albert I for Belgium, and General Pershing for the United States) retained considerable authority. The Central Powers, however, had gained new strength through the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (Mar., 1918) with Russia. The resources of Ukraine seemed at their disposal, enabling them to balance to some extent the effects of the Allied blockade; most important, their forces could now be concentrated on the Western Front. The critical German counteroffensive, known as the second battle of the Marne, was stopped just short of Paris (July–Aug., 1918). At this point Foch ordered a general counterattack that soon pushed the Germans back to their initial line (the so-called Hindenburg Line). The Allied push continued, with the British advancing in the north and the Americans attacking through the Argonne region of France. While the Germans were thus losing their forces on the Western Front, Bulgaria, invaded by the Allies under General Franchet d'Esperey, capitulated on Sept. 30, and Turkey concluded an armistice on Oct. 30. Austria-Hungary, in the process of disintegration, surrendered on Nov. 4 after the Italian victory at Vittorio Veneto. German resources were exhausted and German morale had collapsed. President Wilson's Fourteen Points were accepted by the new German chancellor, Maximilian, prince of Baden, as the basis of peace negotiations, but it was only after revolution had broken out in Germany that the armistice was at last signed (Nov. 11) at Compiègne. Germany was to evacuate its troops immediately from all territory W of the Rhine, and the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was declared void. The war ended without a single truly decisive battle having been fought, and Germany lost the war while its troops were still occupying territory from France to Crimea. This paradox became important in subsequent German history, when nationalists and militarists sought to blame the defeat on traitors on the home front rather than on the utter exhaustion of the German war machine and war economy.
帮忙翻译一下sweet home alabama里的一段台词如题 谢谢了
我在纽约很愉快,但我来到了这里,同样让我感到快乐。
任何时候,无论你身在何方,你都可以找到理想的归宿和梦想的天空。
电影台词“She's my home,your mother is home”是哪部电影的台词
2004年美国电影,《恋恋笔记本》,非常好。
20世纪40年代初期,艾丽·哈米顿(瑞秋·麦克亚当斯 饰)跟着她的家人,来到了北卡罗莱那州的海边小城水溪镇 (Seabrook),他们计划在这里能够度过一个凉爽的暑假。
那时艾丽还是个十几岁的青春少女,正值豆蔻年华,漂亮活泼,对周围的一切充满了好奇。
在一次狂欢派对上,她结识了当地男孩诺奇·卡豪(赖恩·格斯林 饰)。
虽然艾丽是个富有人家的千金,而诺奇只是个当地工厂的穷工人,夜幕降临,华灯初上,艾莉和好友来到当地的游乐场,忘情地玩起了摩天轮。
年轻的诺亚(莱安·高斯利饰)被她爽朗的笑声吸引,在晚会上见面之后,他们立刻被对方深深吸引住了,不顾一切地爱上了这个女孩。
一段美丽的初恋悄悄的在海边小镇发生了。
尽管艾莉出身上流社会,诺亚只是一个穷小子,但他们还是跨越了阶层与观念,执着而热烈地相爱着。
在一起度过了这个充满激情和快乐的夏天后,两个人已经走进深深的爱河了。
艾丽的父母看着这对情侣如此的深爱,但是他们对诺奇的家庭出身十分看不起,于是他们以让艾丽到纽约上大学为由,想拆散这对鸳鸯,第二天他们一家就离开了这个小镇。
艾丽离开后的一年365天,诺奇每天都要给艾丽写信,但是这些信都被艾丽的母亲自私地藏了起来。
一年没有收到艾丽回音的诺奇决定离家家乡出外谋生。
突然爆发的第二次世界大战,诺奇也成为了一名军人,艾丽也志愿成为了照顾伤员的护士。
但是,这段经历却让他们的爱情出现了重大转折,因为从最初他们分开到这时的七年里面,艾丽都没有等到诺奇的消息,正是在这个时候,一位名叫隆·哈蒙德的军官深深地爱上了她,家世不错的隆·哈蒙德也博得了好感,当隆向艾丽求婚的时刻,艾丽欣然同意了,但是她的眼前出现的却是诺奇的面孔… 诺奇从战场上回来后,才得知父亲已经把自家原来的房子卖了,只是为了买下了当初诺奇和艾丽幽会的地方,在这里,诺奇曾经向艾丽承诺要把这座房子改造成艾丽的“温莎种植园”。
他心里想着,只要“温莎种植园”建好后,艾丽一定会回到他的身边。
一天,诺奇在市里意外看到艾丽和另外一个男人在一起,他的一切精神支柱似乎都已经崩溃了…这一切艾丽浑然不知,直到当她穿上婚纱时才意外的在报纸上看到关于诺奇的新闻,这时的艾丽也十分痛苦,经过激烈的心理斗争,她还是决定来到小镇见上诺奇一面。
两个人终于再次相遇,又重新开始了一段激情时光…但是,他们多舛的爱情还会有幸福的未来吗
几十年之后,有个老头(詹姆斯·加纳 饰)向一个老女人(珍娜·罗兰丝 饰)读着一本褪色的笔记本,他一直住在她疗养院的家里。
虽然她的记忆已经模糊,但她的心里依然记得两人之间曾经的恋恋激情。
其实,这个垂垂老去的女人就是当年艾丽,每当女人听到日记中的字句,脸上就会迸发出异样的神采,仿佛再次回到那段激情燃烧的岁月,而向他讲述那本笔记本里的故事的老头,正是为她守候了一生的诺奇。
而电影的最后,他们安详地去了另外一个世界,他们相信他们会在另一个世界重逢…… 编辑本段影评幕后 电影根据美国著名的言情畅销书作家尼古拉斯?史帕克(Nicholas Sparks)创作的同名小说改编,由他的小说改编的电影还有《一樽浓情》(Message in a Bottle)和《初恋的回忆》(A Walk to Remember)等,讲述的都是美丽动人的爱情故事。
饰演年轻的男女主角的两位男女演员,都是好莱坞年青的偶像新星,饰演诺奇的赖恩·格斯林可以说是目前好莱坞美男新生代的代表;饰演艾丽的瑞秋·麦克亚当斯凭借《Disney's The Hot Chic》成为了全美国的青春偶像明星,并热门青春喜剧片《贱女孩》中饰演校花。
电影用回忆式闪回的镜头,从一个老头对一个躺在床上老妇人的娓娓道来的叙述里,开始了这段美丽的爱情故事。
这种离别的几十年仍然在思念的爱情,故事本事多少有点虚假,如果先把它的真与假抛开,观众可以看到另一种不同于世俗的爱情。
你可以说它是肤浅的爱情故事——如同现在的网络小说,你可以客观的说它的爱情太假,你更可以说它是骗小女生的
让我来告诉你它的出色
它是那一年的票房奇迹,它把有些人弄哭了,它赢得的MTV年度最佳接吻,它造就了一对情侣(虽经历分手,但在08年又复合),它让那个女主角被看好为下一个朱丽娅罗伯茨,它是来自好莱坞的经典产品——当你对爱情电影腻烦,厌倦时,它就这么横空出世了,它为影评人所不屑——却赢得的大部分影迷的心:IMDB打分为8.0
它的书让读者觉得比《廊桥遗梦》更优秀
第一次看它只是喜欢,现在再看觉得它哪里做作了
哪里假了
它叙述了一段青春的初恋,毫无顾忌,勇往直前
- I want to - Say it again. - I want to go out with you 就算重逢,爱丝毫不曾泯灭
(我不知道世上是否真的有这种爱),但我愿意相信
选择这段台词是因为他们俩这种态度贯穿全剧,是的,对彼此的激情永不消退
出色的原著,动人的表演,还有完美的背景音乐
没错,《The Notebook》的音乐很出色,当Allie选择驱车离开未婚夫,选择那栋房子的主人,那荡气回肠的音乐加上之前一直铺垫的音乐气氛和背景,人一瞬间就感动了~
有部电影台词go out my home
是的,佛罗多这一段是在他写的书里说的,距他写下他们到家的日期已经过去了一年多,所以是用“were”,——魔戒远征队的任务结束了,虽然大家友谊长存,但终究要各奔东西,距甘道夫送我们回到夏尔,已经过去了一年多,我们,终于到家了。



