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励志电影:风雨哈佛路影评

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  • 2024-06-19 15:22
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风雨哈佛路精彩影评一

最近有很多思考,突然觉得世界的广阔,过去的大学两年生活是虚度的两年,没有认识,没有思考,是活着,没有生活 什么是生活?人在迷茫时,看看电影或许会带来启发,最近看了不少经典电影,尤其是昨天晚上看了《风雨哈佛路》,感受颇多(中国有多少个县?截至2020年9月1日中国一共有1347个县,另有117个自治县,县作为“县级行政区”,属于三级地方行政区。)。

在女主角莉斯身上,我看到了一个追求亲情的,渴望父爱母爱的孩子,这是整部影片给我最大的震撼。或许大多数人看到的是一个贫穷女孩如何克服生活的困境,通过自身的努力来改变自己命运的故事。可是,不管是在电影开头莉斯无怨无悔甚至逃学只为照顾吸毒,有精神拨那个的母亲,还是在电影的最后,莉斯说她愿意用她的纽约时报的奖学金和哈佛大学学习机会来换取她的完整的家。甚至她开始改变也就是她明白她必须做出选择的那一刻也是在母亲去世之时 其实,对我们来说,什么是最重要的?对莉斯来说,父母的爱特别是母亲的爱是她最渴望的,虽然父母是瘾君子,可是她始终还是爱着他们,她觉得父母是爱她的,虽然他们忘记了。这让我看到了一个孩子对父母无私的爱,在面试的时候,莉斯本人也意识到她母亲像她的孩子,是她一直在照顾着自己的母亲。在我看来,这份爱虽然伟大,却也是一个枷锁,束缚着莉斯,明明有能力读好书,改变命运,却因为要照顾母亲而放弃,等到母亲死了,才真正冲破束缚,改变自己的命运。爱的两面性在这里完全的表现出来,一面是人性的需要,一面却是束缚、枷锁,这就带来了人生的抉择,我们究竟该如何对待这份爱?

再说说影片的主体,女孩的命运是艰苦的,悲惨的,换成其他人,不一定有这份坚强与自信来改变命运。莉斯说道:我为什么要觉得可怜,这就是我的生活。我甚至要感谢它,它让我在任何情况下都必须往前走。我没有退路,我只能不停地努力向前走。我为什么不能做到? 正如她所说的那样,其实在很多时候,挫折并不是不幸,而是变得更好的契机。当我们遇到我们所认为,或者别人所认为的不幸时,我们是永远的沉浸于这份不幸,让自己永远的不幸?还是抓住这个不幸,竭尽自己所能来改变它,或者说是改变自己呢?其实,回顾过去,很多时候,我们会更多的感激生活中的'挫折,因为正是这些挫折让我们改变、进步、长大、成熟 没有一个成功人士没有经历过失败,可是他们都能从失败中总结经验教训,然后比一般人更快的站起来,更加坚定的追求他们想要的东西。

或许很多时候我们在羡慕别人的成功,羡慕别人的过人之处,总觉得他们之所以成功是他们比我们幸运,或者他们身上有着我们认为我们不可能有的东西,其实不然。就拿影片中的莉斯来说,她称得上比别人幸运的是她遇到了她的伯乐,戴维老师。可是,这份幸运也是她对上学的渴望,以及不放弃的那个30秒。没有这份坚持与努力,便没有她在学校读书的机会,更没有后来戴维老师对她的那份帮助。所以说,那些看似我们没有的幸运与过人之处,其实就是人的那份执着与努力的累积,他们做到了那些不容易做到的小事,更坚定的人就能成功。正如这句哈所说:人,总要追求一些东西,而这些追求真的没有你以为的那么难,最难的是怎么让自己不要以为它难、以及迈出容易弄丢,质疑为什么不发教科书

戴维老师:嗯,教科书,为什么不发教科书?谁知道

女孩A:太重了?

戴维老师:(否定的象声词 )卟兹~~,是的,但是不能给雪茄糖(雪茄糖是对好的课堂发言的奖励)

女孩B:它们太贵了,学校负担不了。

戴维老师:(否定的象声词)卟兹~~,我今天要自己留着雪茄糖了。

(指向利兹)你,新来的同学

女孩C:(打抱不平的)她叫利兹

男孩D:(补充)噢,天哪,戴维,她都来一周了,你还记不住她的名字

戴维老师:(耍赖的)利兹,到法院告我吧。

(丢给利兹一本厚厚的教科书,利兹翻开封面)教科书,教科...书,

(利兹从头开始翻)打开,里面说什么?

利兹:单词

(大家笑)

戴维老师:(开始引导)什么样的词?

利兹:(刚翻到前言)作者的话

(大家又笑)

戴维老师:不,不,这很重要,我手上拿的是什么?(指发给同学们的活页)

利兹:(开始反应过来)许多其他人的话

戴维老师:为什么我要发给你们?

利兹:(明白了)因为一种观点给你一方面的见解,(合上教科书,往前推了推)

戴维老师:(很开心,但未表现出来,给利兹丢雪茄糖,丢了一个又一个)雪茄糖,雪茄糖, 商业记号 (刚才课堂讨论的话题),卖给我泡泡糖的人,雪茄糖!为什么我们只能看他一个人的故事?(在同学边巡视,走到利兹身边,看着大家,用手指指着教科书,放慢语速强调)

男孩B:(质疑)但是那不是记载着官方历史么?

戴维老师:不,(对利兹说)孩子,告诉他什么是历史?

利兹:历史是,(停顿),我们全体,我们全体都算

戴维老师:(看着利兹,颔首)

下课铃声响。

我们都是普通人,但可以让自己的生活不普通。

很多人很喜欢励志影片,因为看到别人的故事,看到曾经的自己,只不过通常的结果没有别人那么辉煌。但是,每个人都可以有Liz那么了不起。她几乎不去学校上课,一个月去3次都不到,但就像那场戏一样,不让老师拿走试卷,仍坚持要做那份语文题,她说: 不,我要做,看起来没有那么难 。人,总要追求一些东西,而这些追求真的没有你以为的那么难,最难的是怎么让自己不要以为它难、以及迈出第一步。

很多成功人士总结自己的过去都爱说:

我并不是一个天资聪颖的人..... ,没错,我们都是普通人;

我只不过一直在 ,嗯,再小的事情坚持下来也不小;

爱因斯坦也要付出很多努力 ,嗯,没有人能随随便便成功,但我们确实可以让自己不普通。

Liz那份试卷答了满分,老师问她怎么做到的。

Liz: 我读了很多书。

老师: 你读了些什么?

Liz:百科全书。我楼上的伊瓦女士,她找到了一些书,但是没有R-S部分,如果你问R-S部分的话我肯定什么都答不上来,我只不过是比较运气罢了。

嗯,他们确实都很爱说只是运气好而已,其实也不是那么简单,很多人,其实运气好的人看过利兹说的那本书,也未必能答上正确的答案。

如果你了解那些成功的人士,和他们交谈过,或者听过看过他们交谈,你会发现,他们习惯把这些所谓的成功看的理所当然。也是,这真的只是坚持不懈地付出一些努力而已,只要目标正确,水滴石穿,只是时间问题而已,任何有着正常智力的人都可以做到。那些成功人士,只是把那些不容易达到的小事坚持做了下来,集腋成裘,就是了不起。

我记得去年有一阵子到处都在热评北师大在读本科生吴盈盈做了某跨国公司的CEO,其实她个人素质确实很强,参加过那么多比赛、去斯坦福作访问学生,口才、外语不用说,从小到大搞了那么多年竞赛,领导建模大赛,专业能力不用说。虽然这件事确实有炒作和树典型的因素,但那个公司在北京只能算作是办事处而已,两个人的公司做CEO,有这些能力也够了。关键是众人习惯诟病她的能力、资历、包括以前的证书和专利,并没有那么强。没错,她确实没有你以为的那么强,她是个普通人。就拿那个专利字典来说,我们现在看能把字典剪出条带状作标记不觉得稀奇,是因为我们现在有看到市场上都在卖这种字典,但让你自己拿起剪刀,独立剪出一本实用的速飞外网有那么容易么?条带不能太多,太多等于没有,也不能太少,太少就不能起到检索的作用,标签的写法也有说道,写太多了放不下。或者换个角度,如果想想:这个专利是十年前、一个小学生、在没人帮助和指导下、凭借兴趣、坚持、做出来的成果、还申请了专利,这就是一个非常了不起的成就!分解来看,确实哪个也不稀奇,但合起来,没有几个人做到。那些已经成功的人觉得自己的成功理所当然也是这个道理。或者说,他们最成功之处,在于一直坚持大家都不愿坚持的小事。

古人云: 万事开头难。

古人又云: 好的开始是成功的一半。

一件事情,坚持三次,到第三次,一定成功。这话很有道理。

这本书叫《Breaking night》,中文版也已经出版了,是中信出版社的,名字叫《风雨哈佛路》

风雨哈佛路精彩影评三

Murray 的故事被搬上大银幕. 感人肺腑~

刚才看完Murray April 6, 2005 在DePauw University的演讲~她的坚强 乐观 让我感慨并会一直记忆犹新

Liz Murray在DePauw University的演讲实录

April 6, 2005, Greencastle, Ind. - It s not about Harvard, it s not about a prestigious school, says Liz Murray of her incredible and uplifting life story, which she shared with an audience at DePauw University tonight. It s not about that. It s about learning, about educating yourself and gathering enough knowledge to find your way through any little crack or crevice you possibly can so you can move up and escape from that trap you were born into.

The 24-year-old Murray, who went from living on the streets of New York City to winning a scholarship to Harvard University, delivered The Timothy and Sharon Ubben Lecture, Homeless to Harvard: A Remarkable Journey, in Kresge Auditorium of DePauw s Performing Arts Center. Working without notes and addressing her audience from the edge of the stage, Murray detailed how she was born to drug-addicted parents, and how as a child, living in squalor, her parents and everyone she knew was living month-to-month on government checks.

I didn t even know that people worked when I was younger, cause you have to think about -- what does a kid seeing when they re little. I saw that people cashed welfare checks... they were happy to see the mailman, he was like Santa Claus or something or some celebrity -- and we d go to the check cashing store and there would be a line wrapped around the block for an hour-and-a-half on the days checks arrived, she remembered. Her parents would spend the bulk of the money on drugs; about $30 a month was all the family of four spent on food, and Murray s parents would go without food for several days at a time.

Despite the tumultous environment in which she was raised, Murray says she has always loved her parents. Her life, already in disarray, unraveled quickly when her mother was diagnosed with HIV. Her mother moved out, her father went to a homeless shelter, and Murray, then a young teen, was sent to a group home. Her unpleasant experiences there led her to run away and she lived on the streets of New York City, eating out of dumpsters and sleeping at friends houses or on subway trains, but in her own words, going nowhere. The year Murray turned 16, her mother died, and her view of life changed.

I got the sense that my life was in my own hands, she told her DePauw audience. And I knew that already, but it s different when a parent dies; maybe some of you know what I mean. You look around and strangers become more strange, big institutional buildings look scarier, everything looks more alien, nothing is friendly. There s no person to think about yourself through. It truly is yourself in the world, and that s it. I realized my own isolation and I realized there never would be somebody to kind of filter me in the world. And I went back with my friends, and without having her to think about anymore -- I mean I did, but not the same way -- I sat with them and I realized that I had been falsely relying on my friends. I realized that, at the end of the day, whatever I did or did not do with my life would stick to me, even if I hung out with them.

Murray, whose story is chronicled in the Lifetime Emmy-nominated movie, From Homeless to Harvard: The Liz Murray Story, enrolled in an alternative high school at age 17; when most of the people her age were graduating, she was starting. Guided by an understanding teacher/mentor and fueled by a desire to make something of her life, Murray finished high school in two years while still sleeping where she could find a place to lay her head at night. When she visited Harvard on a school trip, a seed was planted. Murray applied for a New York Times scholarship and was one of six students selected out of the thousands of applicants. A story profiling the scholarship winners was published on the cover of the Times metro section.

I really didn t understand the power of the media before that, but I found out, Murray said with a chuckle. You know [that] New Yorkers have this reputation for being really cold, right? Well, the readers of the newspaper came out of their houses around [the school] and brought me sweaters and clothing their kids weren t using anymore. Some lady came just to give me a hug! Another came just with some cookies, then she said to me, I don t have any money, Liz, but I have a stationwagon and a house. Do you have any laundry?, she asked me. I just want to do your laundry.

Murray s story was featured on ABC s 20/20 and she was a guest of Oprah Winfrey, becoming the first recipient of the talk show host s Chutzpah Award. Murray transferred from Harvard to Columbia University to be closer to her father, who is ill. She had been studying film, but after talking about her experiences in front of audiences around the nation and the world over the past few years, [Download Audio: Reaching Out - 175kb] My interests broadened because I realize that I have certain insights based on what had happened to me, and I had this opportunity to share with people and go back-and-forth and maybe draw some meaning out of it. She now has her sights set on a masters degree in sociology and psychology hoping to understand what creates motivation in a human being and how to apply that in society. Is there a way to create upward mobility? Is there a way to break class differences?, she asked. Murray s ultimate goal is to create a coaching and seminar company that will work with groups, perhaps specializing in inner-city schools. [Download Audio: The Future - 66kb] Instead of just speaking about my life, I want that to be a footnote, and I want to offer strategies to people.

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