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光荣之路英文台词

时间:2018-08-05 05:24

求篮球电影《光荣之路》里面的一句台词 要英文原版的

因为短暂才会想到不朽, 因为卑微才会想到权力, 因为软弱才会整天叫嚷着;“我们要掌握自己的命运,我们要改变自己的命运

” 命运是什么

你说能够改变的和不能改变的,你所能选择的和你不能选择的都是命运。

那些两腿站的生物们认为:对抗命运征服命运才是强大的表现

结果到头来无非是自寻烦恼。

急求篮球电影《光荣之路》里的经典台词,要英文的哦。

多谢啊

喔 对了 我现在学的ABC天卞英语中心的导师说过 其实想征服英语很简单的..必然需要个好的学习环境跟闇练口语对象 外教水平很重要,最好欧美母语,口语纯正非常重要 保持逐日口语练习,1v1针对性教学才能有更.好.的学习成果~上完课同样要重复复习课堂录音档,好巩固知识点~不过实在没有人可以指导的状况下 只能到旺旺或BBC获取课外学习资料练习,多说、多练、多问、多听、多读 短时间口语会提高起来,学习成效应该可以最佳的..1. People Get Ready - Alicia KeysLyfe Jennings . Ain't That Peculiar - Marvin Gaye . Uptight (Everytng's Alright) - Stevie Wonder . Dancing in the Street - Martha Reeves The Vandellas . I'm on My Way to Canaan - Mahalia Jackson . Can You Do It - The Contours . Shake It up Baby (A.K.A. Twist Shout) - The Isley Brothers . Down in the Boondocks - Billy Joe Royal . I've Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now) - Otis Redding 10. Ain't That Good News - Meditation Singers 11. I Will Make the Darkness Light - Alicia Keys 1. Glory Road - Trevor RabinAlicia Keys

光荣之路英文翻译

光荣之路常坎坷The road to glory is always rough光荣之路常坎坷The road to glory is always rough光荣之路常坎坷The road to glory is always rough

光荣之路电影经典台词

If any soldiers in the world can take it we'll take the Anthill.如果世界有人可以拿下Ant Hill,我们就能拿下。

I'm not afraid of dying tomorrow,only of getting killed.明天,我不害怕死亡,我只是害怕被杀。

If you're really afraid of dying,you'd be living in a funk all the rest of your life because you know you've got to go someday,any day.And besides,if it's death that you're really afraid of why should you care about what it is that kills you

如果你真的害怕死亡,你下半辈子将一直活在恐惧之中,因为你知道你迟早有一天会死,任何一天都可能,如果死亡是你真正害怕的东西,那你为什么在乎是什么杀了你

You see that cockroah

Tomorrow morning.We'll be dead and it'll be alive.It'll have more contact with my wife and child that I will.I'll be nothign,and it'll be alive.看见那只蟑螂了吗

明天早上,我们会死掉,而它还活着,它会比我更亲近我的孩子和妻子,我什么都不是了,而它还活着。

Now you got the edge on 'im.现在你比它强了。

(拍死了蟑螂)Why do I have to die,Father?神父,我到底为何而死

光荣之路 英文影评

Glory Road tells the true story, with much dramatic license along the way, of one of sport's greatest moments. A moment that changed the face and color of college basketball and rippled across all sports. It's the story of a little known college basketball coach, Don Haskins, and how he came to be the coach of little known Texas Western College in El Paso, Texas. It's also the story of the black players who would be recruited from all around the USA to eventually wind up playing in one of the greatest moments in college basketball: David Daddy D Lattin, Nevil Shed, Willie Cager, Orsten Artis, Wee Willie Worsley, Harry Flournoy, and of course the late floor general, Bobby Joe Hill. And the other team members played their vital roles also: Jerry Armstrong, Louis Baudoin, Dick Meyers, Togo Railey and David Palacio. Producer Jerry Bruckheimer does a wonderful job of bringing back the singular moment of the all-white Kentucky team under Adolph Rupp (Jon Voigt is a hoot in this role) and Haskin's all-black starting five meeting in the NCAA basketball national championship final game spotlight during some tough racial times for the USA. In fact, Haskins had played this combination of players many times before during the season to little local fanfare, so it was no big deal to him. He just wanted to win. Josh Lucas is great as Don The Bear Haskins in this excellent James Gartner-directed movie. It's said that Lucas, in preparing for this role, was driven out into the desert by Haskins in his truck and they just sat and talked (and drank) for many hours discussing how Haskins did it and the way he did it. (This has turned into quite a good friendship since then.) The movie pre-screenings, with all of the living original players on hand, in El Paso are greatly appreciated by all of us who lived through those incredible times and are still here. Glory Road tells the story of the Texas Western Miners, a college basketball team who won the NCAA Championship in 1966. But this wasn't just an ordinary championship, no, for the starting line-up in the championship game was all Black players, a thing that was unheard of in '66. Or better yet, even a black player being recruited by a college team was out of the ordinary. However, the 36 year old coach Don Haskins recruited seven Black players for his Texas Western team (when the season begins, he starts three of those players). The team was barely even thought of in the college world before then, then with the help of the seven black players, they went on to win the championship. The movie opens with a girls basketball game, and you see that Don Haskins coaches girl's basketball. Later on, he is asked to coach Division 1 basketball, for the Texas Western team (with one drawback; he would have to live in the dorm room with his wife and kids). Then, he sets out to recruit players that would help the team win. When he recruits all Black players, it's obvious that most people (even the Black players themselves) thought Haskins was crazy. Among the players he recruited were Bobby Jo Hill (played exceptionally by Derek Luke), Willie Cager, David Lattin, and Harry Flournoy. His practices for the team were intense and his rules were strict. This would all pay off in the end though, with the Miners winning the championship over Adolf Rupp's Kentucky Wildcats (with Pat Riley, who is a character in the movie, it's weird to hear his name called while he's playing, knowing he's a game-winning coach with plenty of rings). The movie does depict the racism at the time as well. It wasn't an easy ride for the coach or the Black players on the team. In the first game, the fans clapped for the two starting white players, but the whole arena was quiet when the Black players were announced. The team had racial slurs written in their hotel room during their game. One player was even beat up in a bathroom. Haskins was harassed as well. The racism almost tore the team apart, but with the coach's help they stayed together and changed the course of basketball. All around, the acting was great. Josh Lucas did a great job as Coach Haskins, completely becoming his character. Derek Luke did great as Bobby Jo Hill. Jon Voight played Kentucky coach Adolf Rupp, but you wouldn't really know unless you read the credits. Nonetheless he did a great job. Mehcad Brooks, Sam Jones III, Schin A.S. Kerr and Damaine Radcliff (who played Flournoy, Worsley, Lattin, and Cager, respectively) all did excellent in their roles. The actors practically become the players. The cast couldn't have been better. Overall, Disney has released another superb movie about sports underdogs winning it all (I enjoyed Remember The Titans as well). If you like that movie, there's no way you'll dislike this. It is a well-cast, well-directed movie that will satisfy any basketball fan, and will keep everyone watching. It's been said that it follows the cliches of all other similar movies, but don't we always watch them anyway? The film triumphantly shows how one coach changed the game (and face) of basketball completely. One quote from the film is You're acting like negroes are gonna be the future of basketball! and I couldn't help but laugh when that line was said. The importance and significance of that season and the tribulations of the team is wonderfully shown. Don't pass this up.

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