
Watching a movie It is an experience different from watching a movie just to make you feel connected and to notice characters and stories. And if the movie is good, that connection makes it better. In the case of such a movie Brooklyn .
It began in the early 1950s, then Ireland, a poor country at the time. In that country I do not have the opportunity for young people, I am seeking it mainly in America. Eilis Lacey is one of the young people and wants to escape from the limited life of Ireland as well as limited living. Ellis encourages her something better for her sister's something, but Ellis promises a lonely journey across the sea, with her mother who is the only family member She is a reducing agent for leaving her sister She is an unknown mysterious place that no one knows. However, as she travels, this is the point the movie grabbed me.
Ireland of poverty in 1950 was not so different from Ireland of 1928 left by my father. He is 18 years old and has the same age as her and made the same trip. He left the only house he met with his father and older sister in Cork. The similarity does not end there. In most cases, many Irish people left the same port to travel the same way across the Atlantic from the same port of Cobb, a southern Ireland town. Looking at her at a long intersection, like evil, lonely and frightening her, I woke up to project my father's image on the same situation. His experience was the same as her? Did he throw far far behind the rough sea? Was he full of the same solitude and doubts as her? The performance of the young Irish actress, Saoirse Ronan, who inhabits the character of Alis in all parts of her existence and comparison of her existed, made me feel more aware of the film.
Her situation that I arrived at Brooklyn is different from my father, but that's enough. The American Irish priest, Flood Father, sponsors her for entering the New World and secures her in the room for the woman the old woman is running. He ordered the work for her in the department store, and he will provide her with her advice and spiritual comfort. For my father, he spent the same trip from Ireland and his brother in nine years and sponsored him. My father lived with him after arrival and worked as a worker who was the first step to learning trade with the help of his brothers.
As Ellis's story goes forward, her mother and sister get lost hard and constantly lose their wrists, but her outlook improves. By paying attention to department store sales staff and building a career, she is accustomed to receiving night classes by accounting. She danced with some young women in the dormitory and met politely and decent Italian-American Tony (Tony) rarely seen in today's young men. He will soon fall as long as affection for him grows more slowly for him. At first they keep a company with arms length. He will take her to go out to Coney Island and a fun day at the beach. She and her family meet dinner at home. He tells her of the American dream of starting a business and still building a house on a part of Long Island covered with dunes and beach grass. He asks her to marry. By then she fell in love with him and began seeing his dream could be hers.
Then she learns the tragedy of the Irish family from the father's father, and Eislis is forced to return. A short visit is her promise to Tony. But, after being there, she is back in her old life, although in better circumstances. Her mother will convince her that she will stay longer than planned, so I can attend my best friend's wedding. Aris has taken a temporary job as an accountant at the factory and is approaching a decent wage. Through a friend, she encounters a young man and starts to see him without hesitation, unwillingly, but gradually warms up. As she stays, new work and deep relationships are your doubts: she forgot about Tony, stayed in Ireland, and lost herself in the familiar life of home, but immersed in better prospects Do you? After that, the incident with a polite female Eislis who worked at a small grocery store in her village bore her situation. "I forgot," she says to the lady, referring to the severe, moral attitude of the Irish life, one of the reasons she left for the first time.
Brooklyn Saoirse Ronan, Jim Broadbant naturally, wisely as a flood of the world's father for the story depicting the heart, and Elysse, Julie using wit and sharp tongue as watching her girl I am a friendly Irish woman of Elise's dormitory. With some count Brooklyn It is a movie worthy of Oscar.
