翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ You Can Leave, but It's Going to Cost You
・ You Can Let Go
・ You Can Make History (Young Again)
・ You Can Make Me Dance, Sing or Anything (Even Take the Dog for a Walk, Mend a Fuse, Fold Away the Ironing Board, or Any Other Domestic Shortcomings)
・ You Can Make Sound
・ You Can Negotiate Anything
・ You Can Play
・ You Can Play These Songs with Chords
・ You Can Run But You Cannot Hide International
・ You can run, but you can't hide
・ You Can Say That Again
・ You Can Say You Knew Me When
・ You can shed tears that she is gone
・ You Can Sleep While I Drive
・ You Can Tell 'Em I Said It
You Can Thank Me Later
・ You Can Trust in My Love
・ You Can Tune a Piano, but You Can't Tuna Fish
・ You Can Win If You Want
・ You Can with Beakman and Jax
・ You Can't Always Get What You Want
・ You Can't Always Tell
・ You Can't Argue with a Sick Mind
・ You Can't Be a Beacon If Your Light Don't Shine
・ You Can't Be Neutral On a Moving Train
・ You Can't Be President
・ You Can't Be True, Dear
・ You Can't Beat Love
・ You Can't Beat the Law
・ You Can't Beat Tomorrow


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You Can Thank Me Later : ウィキペディア英語版
You Can Thank Me Later

You Can Thank Me Later is a 1998 Canadian comedy drama film directed by Shimon Dotan. The film is based on a play titled ''Hyper-Allergenic'' written and adapted for the screen by Oren Safdie.
==Overview==
Conduct under pressure is the source of caustic humor and poignancy in "You Can Thank Me Later." Set primarily in a hospital room where a family awaits the results of the father's operation, the emotional battlefield is a series of zingers that touch sensitive nerves and tickle the funnybone.
Shirley Cooperberg (Ellen Burstyn) is the strong-willed matriarch of a well-heeled Montreal Jewish family. While her husband is under the surgeon's scalpel, her children arrive at the hospital. Eli (Ted Levine) is an oft-divorced, failed writer; Susan (Amanda Plummer) has been pouring her myriad neuroses onto canvas but has yet to find an appreciative audience; and Edward (Mark Blum) is a successful producer of touring Broadway plays. They are the picture-perfect embodiment of a dysfunctional family.
Expanding on Safdie's play, director Shimon Dotan wades into Neil Simon territory. The recriminations, failures and barely contained bile hurled amongst principals are familiar in their wickedly funny, combative bent. It's a dry humor laden with modern-day angst and given a slightly novel spin when transplanted from New York to bilingual Quebec. Otherwise, the uptown group share the affluence and anxieties of Simon's Manhattanites.
Also in the stew are a mistress (Geneviève Bujold) posing as a nun, Eli's ex-wife (Mary McDonnell) and son (Jacob Tierney), a feisty nurse (Genevieve Brouillette), Edward's wife (Macha Grenon) and an ever-present TV repairman (Roch Lafortune) who's a virtually mute witness to the bad behavior.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「You Can Thank Me Later」の詳細全文を読む



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