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Alex Wolff recommended Ordinary People (1980) in Movies (curated)

 
Ordinary People (1980)
Ordinary People (1980)
1980 | Drama

"Those performances. Timothy Hutton’s performance in that is probably the most directly inspiring to me, and that’s a young guy at the top of his game, emotionally raw, and brings everything that a young actor could want in a performance. I feel that that film is the most heart-wrenching and true portrait of a family maybe I’ve ever seen. To describe it well would reveal too much. That’s what’s brilliant about it. Everyone should watch it and watch Mary Tyler Moore with Timothy Hutton and Judd Hirsch. I can’t believe it. I just can’t believe that movie. It seems like such a simple concept, and yet Robert Redford kills it. The scene that always gets me, hits me so hard, is a small scene that not many people would say they love. Most say the big breakdown scene with Judd Hirsh. For me, it’s the scene where Timothy Hutton has been going to Judd Hirsch for a little bit, and he’s opening up. It’s such a journey of what it means to be vulnerable and the importance of vulnerability in your own family, especially after trauma. My character in The Cat and the Moon is very much inspired by Timothy Hutton’s character in Ordinary People. His journey of being so closed off and edgy to cracking open into this well of unmined emotion. Particularly the scene where he and Donald Sutherland, who’s amazing as well, are decorating the tree — ugh, the Christmas tree. It’s such a sweet scene. Mary Tyler Moore comes home, and she’s got this cold, dark look on her face. I’ll never get over her facial expressions in that movie. What she’s thinking versus what she’s putting on the surface is the most genius magic trick. It’s the most exhilarating thing ever. That movie is the best."

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Kel (0 KP) rated It in Books

Sep 30, 2017  
It
It
Stephen King | 1986 | Fiction & Poetry, Horror
10
8.8 (94 Ratings)
Book Rating
Loved it then love it now
Contains spoilers, click to show
This is the first book I ever read and fell in love with; I was 8 and having trouble in school reading because "The Oxford Reading Tree" was boring me to years. My father was at his wits end because he know once I had a book I loved I would become an avid reader and, he was right. I love the detail and the way King grips you from the first page. He creates an image of a small town that could very well be your own and poisons the very blood running through it's veins. King chooses an easy target, children, and turns them into the warrior hero that saves not only themselves but the town itself. Utterly terrifying but a book that you have to continue reading until the very end. A classic.
  
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tanuki (2 KP) rated Duolingo in Apps

Feb 24, 2019  
Duolingo
Duolingo
Education, Social Networking
8
8.4 (60 Ratings)
App Rating
I preferred the old way
Duolingo's core system is still one of the best out there. It gets users conjugating and constructing sentences, often quite silly ones, to ensure they're truly understand how the language works rather than just parroting stock phrases. You won't escape your grammar lessons here. However last year they altered the progression from simple 'levels' to a kind of open-ended system of simply ranking up in the same skill over and over again. I had already completed the Spanish tree (and had honestly moved on from Duolingo, attending conversation classes and meetups), so perhaps I was just unable to readjust backwards to the new system. New users may enjoy it.

It is still by far the best, simplest and cheapest (ie: free) way to try a new language and start getting to grips with the basics.