车管所上班要求条件:阿甘正传英文剧本 一 真正做到简单但经典 大家好好体会

来源:百度文库 编辑:偶看新闻 时间:2024/04/30 01:27:41

阿甘这部电影有很大的学习价值,语言简单但却经典。大家学习时感受如何用最简单的话道出最深刻的人生。所有红色部分是重点句型及词组。大家好好学习然后把他们用到极致。这部电影最大的看点是用一个智商只有75的美国白痴阿甘的不凡人生,串起了美国30多年的文化历史。至少值的看5遍,自己看过200遍以上,当然因为教过很多遍。越看越对人生有了更多感悟。大家努力从文化点去分析这部电影吧,美国口语中级班的同学,在快速讲解后应该有了更深认识。那么就加油吧知识点也学会吧。

Forrest: Hello. My name’s Forrest. Forrest Gump. You wanna (want a ) chocolate. I could eat about a million and a half of these. My mama always said “Life was like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re going to get.” Those must be comfortable shoes. I bet you could walk all day in shoes like that and not feel a thing. I wish I had shoes like that.

Woman: My feet hurt.

Forrest: Mama always said “There’s an awful lot you can tell about a person by their shoes.” Where they’re going. Where they’ve been. I’ve worn lots of shoes. I bet if I think about it real hard I could remember my first pair of shoes. Mama said they would take me anywhere. She said they were my magic shoes.

Doctor: Allright, Forrest. Open your eyes now. Let’s take a little walk around. How do they feel? His legs are strong, Mrs. Gump. As strong as I’ve ever seen. But his back is as crooked as a politician. But we’re going to straighten him right up now, aren’t we, Forrest?

Mrs.Gump: Forrest!

Forrest: Now when I was a baby, Mama named me after the great Civil War hero, General Nathan Bedford Forrest. She said we was related to him in some way and what he did was., he started up this club called the Ku Klux Klan. They’d all dress up in their robes and their bed sheets and act like a bunch of ghosts or spooks or something. They’d even put bed sheets on their horses and ride around. Anyway, that’s how I got my name, Forrest Gump. Mama said the Forrest part was to remind me that sometimes we all do things that, well, just don’t make no sense.

Mrs.Gump: What are y’all starin’ at? Haven’t you ever seen a little boy with braces on his legs before? Don’t ever let anybody tell you that they’re better than you, Forrest. If God intended everybody to be the same, he’d have given us all braces on our legs.

Forrest: Mama always had a way of explaining things so I could understand them. We lived about a quarter mile off Route 17. About a half mile form the town of Greenbow, Alabama. That’s in the country of Greenbow. Our house had been in mama’s family since her grandpa’s grandpa’s grandpa came across the ocean about a thousand years ago. Something like that. Since it was just me and mama and we had all these empty rooms, mama decided to let those rooms out. Mostly to people passin’ through like, oh, from Mobile, Montgomery, places like that. That’s how me and mama got money. Mama was a real smart lady.

Mrs.Gump: Remember what I told you Forrest. You’re no different than anybody else is. Did you hear what I said, Forrest? You are the same as everybody else. You are no different.

Mr.Hillcock: Your boy’s different, Mrs.Gump. His IQ’s 75.

Mrs.Gump: Well, we’re all different, Mr.Hillcock.

Forrest: She wanted me to have the finest education so she took me to the Greenbow County Central School. I met the principal and all.

Mr.Hillcock: I’m going to show you something, Mrs.Gump. Now here is normal. Forrest is right here. The State requires a minimum IQ of 80 to attend public schools, Mrs.Gump. He’s going to have to go to a special school. He’ll be just fine.

Mrs.Gump: What does normal mean, anyway? He might be a bit on the slow side, but my boy, Forrest, is going to get the same opportunities as everyone else. He’s not going to some special school to learn how to retread tires. We’re talking about 5 little points here. There must be something can be done.

Mr.Hillcock: We’re a progressive school system. We don’t want to see anybody left behind. Is there a ...... Mr.Gump, Mrs. Gump?

Mrs.Gump: He’s on vacation.

Mr.Hillcock: Your mama sure does care about your schooling, son. You don’t say much do you?

Mrs.Gump: (reading to Forrest) Finally, he had to try. It looked easy but... oh, what happened.

Gump: Mama, what’s “vacation” mean?

Mrs.Gump: Vacation?

Gump: Where daddy went?

Mrs.Gump: Vacation is when you go somewhere and you don’t ever come back.

Forrest: Anyway. I guess you could say me and mama was on our own, but we didn’t mind. Our house was never empty. There was always folks coming and going. Sometimes we had so many people staying with us that every room was filled with travelers. You know, folks livin’ out of their suit cases and hat cases, and sample cases. One time a young man was staying with us and he had him a guitar case.

(Forrest dances as the traveler sings “Hound Dog”)

Mrs.Gump: Forrest, I told you not to bother this nice young man.

Elvis Presley: No, that’s allright ma’am. I was just showing him a thing or two on the guitar here.

Mrs.Gump: Allright. Supper’s ready if y’all want to eat.

Elvis: Yeah,  that sounds good. Thank you, ma’am. Say, man, show me that crazy little walk you just did there. Slow it down some. “You ain’t nothin’   but a hound dog...”

Forrest: I liked that guitar. It sounded good. I started moving around to the music, swingin’ my hips. This night, me and mama was out shoppin’ and we walked right by Pitsey’s Furnature and Appliance store, Guess what... (Elvis was on TV dancing the way that Forrest taught him)

Mrs.Gump: This is not for children’s eyes.

Forrest: Some years later, that handsome young man who they called “The King”, well he sung too many songs. He had himself a heart attack or something. Must be hard being the king... You know it’s funny how you remember something, but something you can’t.

Mrs.Gump: You do your very best now, Forrest.

Gump: I sure will, mama.

Forrest: I remember the bus ride on the first day of school very well.

Dorothy: Are you coming along?

Gump: Mama said not to be taken rides from strangers.

Dorothy: This is the bus to school.

Gump: I’m Forrest, Forrest Gump.

Dorothy: I’m Dorothy Harris.

Gump: Well, now we aint’ stranger’s anymore.

Kid: This seat’s taken.

Other Kids: Taken.

Different Kid: You can’t sit here.

Forrest: You know it’s funny what a young man recollects. ‘Cause  I don’t  remember being born. I don’t recall what I got for my first Christmas. I don’t know when I went on my first outdoor picnic, but I do remember the first time I heard the sweetest voice in the wide world.

Little Jenny: You can sit here if you want.

Forrest: I had never seen anything so beautiful in my entire life. She was like an angel.

Little Jenny: Well, are you going to sit down or aren’t you? What’s wrong with your legs?

Gump: Nothing at all, thank you. My legs are just fine and dandy.

Forrest: I just sat next to her on that bus and had a conversation all the way to school.

Gump: The doctor says my back’s crooked like a question mark. These are going to make me as strait as an arrow.

Forrest: Next to mama, no one ever talked to me or asked me questions.

Little Jenny: Are you stupid or something?

Gump: Mama says “Stupid is as stupid does.”

Little Jenny: I’m Jenny.

Gump: I’m Forrest. Forrest Gump.

Forrest: From that day on, we was always together. Jenny and me was like peas and carrots. She taught me how to climb. I showed her how to dangle. She helped me learn how to read, and I showed her how to swing. Sometimes we’d just sit out and wait for the stars.

Gump: Mama’s going to worry about me.

Little Jenny: Just stay a little longer.

Forrest: For some reason, Jenny didn’t ever want to go home.

Gump: OK, Jenny. I’ll stay.

Forrest: She was my most special friend... My only friend. Now, my mama always told me that miracles happen everyday. Some people don’t think so but they do.

Bully1: Hey, dummy! Are you just plain stupid?

Billy2: Look, I’m Forrest Gump.

Little Jenny: Just run army, Forrest, Run, Forrest. Run away, Hurry!

Bully2: Get the bikes. Hurry up.

Bully1: Look out, dummy, here we come, Gunna get you!

Little Jenny: Run, Forrest. Run, Forrest.

Bully1: Come back here, you!

Little Jenny: Run, Forrest, Run!

Forrest: Now, You wouldn’t believe it if I told you. But I can run like the wind blows. From that day on, if I was going somewhere, I was runny!

Man in store: That boy sure is a running fool.

Forrest: Now, how I told you that Jenny never seemed to want to go home? Well she lived in a house that was as old as Alabama. Her mama had gone up to heaven when she five and her daddy was some kind of a farmer.

Gump: ( knock on the door) Jenny?

Forrest: He was a very loving man. He was a very loving man. He was always Kissin’ and touchin’ her and her sisters. And then this one time. Jenny wasn’t on the bus to go to school.

Gump: Jenny, why didn’t you come to school today?

Little Jenny: Shh! Daddy’s taking a nap.

Father: Jenny!

Little Jenny: C’mon!

Father: Jenny! Where’d you run to? You’d better get back here, girl. Jenny?

Little Jenny: Pray with me, Forrest. Pray with me. Dear God, make me a bird, so I can fly far, far far away from here. Dear God, make me a bird...

Forrest: Mama always said that God is mysterious. He didn’t turn Jenny into a bird that day. Instead, he had the police say that Jenny didn’t have to stay in that house no more. She went to live with her grandma, just over on Greek more Ave.  which made me happy ‘cause she was so close. Some nights, Jenny would sneak out and come on over to my house, just ‘cause she said she was scared of what? I don’t know, but I think it was her grandma’s dog. He was a mean dog. Anyway, Jenny and me was best friends all the way up through high school.

Bully1: Hey, Stupid.

Jenny: Quit it! Run, Forrest! Run!

Bully1: Hey did you hear me, stupid?

Bully2: Get in the truck. Move it. C’mon, he’s getting away.

Jenny: Run, Forrest! Run!

Forrest: Now, it used to be, I ran to get where I was going. I never thought it would take me anywhere.

Football Coach: Who in the hell is that?

Assistant Coach: That there is Forrest Gump. Just the local idiot.

Forrest: Can you believe it? I got to go to college too.

Football Player: Run!

Forrest: OK!

Coach: He must be the stupidest son-of-a-bitch alive, but he sure is fast.

Forrest: Now, maybe it’s just me, but college was a very confusing time.

News man: Federal troops enforcing a court order integrated the University of Alabama today. Two negroes were admitted but only after governor George Wallace had carried out his symbolic threat to stand in the school house door.

Gump: What’s going on?

Student: Coons are trying to get into school.

Gump: Coons? Well racoons try to get on our back porch, mama just chases ‘em off with a broom.

Student: Not racoons, you idiot, niggers. And they want to go to school with us.

Gump: With us? They do?

News man: Shortly after governor Wallace had carried out his promise to block the door way, president Kennedy ordered the Secretary of Defense then to use military force. Here, by videotape is the encounter by General Gram, Commander of the national guard and governor Wallace... And so it is that the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa had been desegregated and students Jimmy Hood and Vivion Malone had been signed up for summer classes.

Gump: Ma’am, you dropped your book.

News man: Governor Wallace did what he promised to do by being on the Toscaloosa campus...

: Hey, wasn’t that Gump?

: Now, that couldn’t be.

: Sure as hell was.

Forrest: A few years later that angry little man at the schoolhouse door had a good idea and ran for President. But somebody thought that it wasn’t. But he didn’t die.

Lady: My bus is here.

Gump: Is that the number 9?

Lady: No, it’s the number 4.

Forrest: It was nice talking to you.

Lady: I remember when that happened, when Wallace got shot. I was in college.

Forrest: Did you go to a girls college or a girls and boys together college?

Lady: It was co-ed.

Forrest: ‘cause Jenny went to a college I couldn’t go to. It was a college just for girls. .But, I’d go and visit her every chance I got.

Jenny: Forrest! Forrest. Stop it! What are you doing?!

Boy friend: what the hell is going on here? Who is that?

Jenny: Billy, I’m sorry.

Billy: Get away from me.

Jenny: Don’t go. Billy, wait a second. He doesn’t know any better. Forrest! Why’d you do that?

Forrest: I brought you some chocolate. I’m sorry. I’ll go back to my college now.

Jenny: Forrest, look at you. Come on.. Do you ever dream, Forrest, of who you’re going to be?

Forrest: Who I’m going to be?

Jenny: Yeah.

Forrest: Aren’t I going to be me?

Jenny: You’ll always be you, just another kink of you. I want to be famous. I want to be a singer like Joan Baez. I just want to be on an empty stage with my guitar and my voice. Just me. And I want to reach people on a personal level. I want to be able to say things, just one to one... Have you ever been with a girl, Forrest?

Forrest: I sit next to them in my Home Economics class all the time... Oh, I’m sorry.

Jenny: It’s OK.

Forrest: Oh, I’m dizzy.

Jenny: I bet that never happened in Home Ec.

Forrest: No. I think I ruined your roommate’s bathrobe.