So there was a big conflict. One scene involved Hanks' character riding in the back of O. Simpson's Ford Bronco during the infamous freeway chase in Los Angeles, and another scene had Forrest ballroom dancing with Princess Diana who tragically passed away in Roth also wrote a sequence where a Native American character who Forrest befriends gets killed in the Oklahoma City bombing.
Considering how underwhelming most belated sequels to beloved classic movies turn out though, Forrest not returning for a sequel is probably for the best, especially due to the original being a bit problematic by modern standards. Hough is a senior writer at Screen Rant. He's also the founding editor at Vague Visages, and has contributed to RogerEbert.
Every time Forrest gets close and saves her, she runs off before she falters. Jenny was also afraid of corrupting him. View this post on Instagram. She delves into the hippie lifestyle, participating in the anti-Vietnam war protests, and experimenting with hallucinogenic drugs.
Following a mostly muted speech, the two run to each other through the water of the National monument resulting in applause from the crowd. The two spend the day together and converge at a Black Panther safe house. While the Black Panthers are not happy with Forrest's presence, they all leave him alone, paying more attention to one of their members making a tirade. Forrest witnesses an argument between Wesley and Jenny in which Wesley slaps her, causing Forrest to retaliate and attack him.
Forrest then gets up and makes a naive, humorous remark "Sorry to interrupt your Black Panther Party" to the Black Panthers, whose tirade was interrupted by the fight. Forrest and Jenny are forced to leave, and they spend the rest of the night together walking around Washington DC and reflecting on their individual journeys. The next morning, Jenny leaves for Berkeley with Wesley, much to Forrest's dismay.
Before Jenny leaves, Forrest gives her his Congressional Medal of Honor, crediting her for his earning it and calling her his girl.
As the bus pulls away, Jenny flashes Forrest a peace sign from the back window. Forrest and Jenny do not see each other for many years following the encounter in Washington D. Once returning to Berkeley Jenny broke up with Wesley and got another boyfriend who was a musician.
She later reveals that this boyfriend slapped her at a New Years' Eve party in Unlike Wesley, she did not give this man another chance, instead leaving him right then and there. Battered and high she hits an all time low in Hollywood, coming closest to suicide by nearly leaping off the top floor of a hotel. After a slip, she decides differently and steps down from the ledge, tearfully contemplating her life decisions.
One day, partly in an attempt to rebuild her life, Jenny arrives at Forrest's home unannounced and stays with him for a while.
Forrest explains that every morning, they'd walk often and while he did all the talking sharing war, ping pong, shrimping tales, and his own mom going to heaven where her mother was , Jenny would listen. After walking up to the house, Jenny stops and thinks for a bit, reflecting on what had happened to her as a child. Finally, she sees an opportunity to let her anger out and goes for it, feverishly throwing her shoes and rocks at the house — hitting boards and breaking windows.
In her fit, she falls to the ground, sobbing. Forrest picks flowers for Jenny daily, and the two bond over dancing and gifts. One evening, Forrest proposes to Jenny. One could get poetic and say, "the crushing expectations of being a woman in a man's world," or her past mistakes and traumas catching up with her, but none of those things are likely to be reported as the cause of death on someone's death certificate.
Fans don't want to think about it, and many of them want a definitive, concrete answer. We hear you, and so did "Forrest Gump" screenwriter Eric Roth.
0コメント