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What Did Jack on Tge Family Man Always Say to His Wife

The Family Human being,www.EFLsuccess.com

Story : Jack is a rich, successfulstock broker. I Christmas Eve, he gets aglimpseof what his life would have been like if he had made different choices. What did he give up past not marrying his higher girlfriend and raising a family? This movie will give you a lot to think about, particularly if y'all are a higher student who thinks that a proficient salary is the merely matter to await for in a job. (2000; Nicholas Muzzle, Tea Leoni; Universal Pictures; romance, comedy; PG-13; 2 hr)

Setting : New York City and a nearby New Jerseysuburb

People and proper nouns:

  • Jack Campbell (Nicholas Cage): an unmarried, successful businessman who runs a large NY fiscal house
  • Kate Reynolds (Tea Leoni): in the opening scene: a immature police force student and Jack'due south girlfriend (afterward we see that Kate is an unmarried, successful lawyer, and during the "glimpse" she is Jack's wife, a nonprofit lawyer, and the mother of Annie and Josh)
  • Peter Lassiter: he owns Jack'southward fiscal firm
  • Alan Mintz: works for Jack (and later on, he has taken Jack'southward leadership job)
  • "Big Ed": Kate'due south father; owns a tire retail store (in the glimpse, Jack started to run this store when Kate's father had a eye attack)
  • Arnie: Jack's best friend (during the middle of the movie)
  • Blackness Angel (a blackness man who has no proper name): this homo has supernatural powers and acts sort of like an angel (or the Monkey Rex?)
  • Wall Street: a synonym for the financial industry of the USA; abode of the Wall Street Stock Exchange
  • Ferrari, Caddy/Cadillac, minivan: types of cars (the first 2 are expensive; a minivan is a family car)

Vocabulary:

(underlined words are vocabulary terms; *key terms) [click here for common English language abbreviations]
  • acid trip: an overdose of drugs that make you lot "see things" that are not real
  • cocky: acting overly proud
  • *diapers: (AmE) a babe'due south undergarment; soft cloth or paper fastened similar underwear for a baby to agree liquid and solid waste matter [BrE: nappy]
  • eggnog: a drink oftentimes associated with Christmas (like Moon Cakes are associated with Mid Autumn Festival)
  • *to erase: to remove sth, so that no one can see it anymore
  • *fidelity: faithful to ane'due south obligations (responsibilities), especially "sexually faithful" to one's spouse. (A "high allegiance" recording faithfully/accurately gives you the true way music originally sounded.)
  • to flush: to quickly make clean or launder abroad, like the contents of a toilet
  • *glimpse: a brusque feel of or look at sth that helps y'all to begin to understand it
  • gonna (oral English language): "going to" (you should never write the discussion "gonna" because it is not really a word)
  • *heart attack: a sudden, serious medical status where someone's heart stops (many people can survive these attacks if treated rapidly)
  • *internship: the concluding stride of professional training after you terminate higher; a company (like Barclay's Bank in London) agrees to train you for a year, while paying you less than y'all would earn later. The right internship can make a big departure in 1'south career.
  • *lotto or lottery: a gambling game (often state-run) where you purchase a ticket in hope of winning money (you lot get greenbacks for a winning ticket at a place that sells tickets, and the shop owner gets money, too)
  • *merger: (e.g., Med Tech & Global); when ii companies combine to become ane bigger company; some mergers are "hostile," i.e. 1 of the companies does not want to become part of the other
  • *naïve (negative connotation): innocent but immature; overly optimistic because of a lack of experience
  • *nonprofit (e.k. nonprofit police force firm): a visitor created to help needy people (instead of trying to brand lots of money for themselves)
  • *perk: something you get legally from your chore in addition to wages/salary
  • a prick (offensive term): a stupid, unpleasant male who "isn't fun to be around"
  • *precocious: mature for one'due south age (esp referring to a little kid, often in a negative way)
  • *prejudiced=bigoted: having potent negative feelings toward everyone of a different race, organized religion, political viewpoint, etc., esp. when such prejudice keeps you from listening to anyone with these differences
  • *to redeem: to get something proficient because someone promised that affair under certain circumstances (e.chiliad., the government promises to give money in substitution for a winning lotto ticket; yous get $v disbelieve on new shoes if you "redeem" a coupon from the paper). The substantive class is "redemption."
  • *retail (the retail business organization): stores that sell to individuals, as opposed to selling to stores or companies ("I'm working in my begetter-in-law'southward retail tire business.")
  • *sacrifice (牺牲,献身): [northward(c&u) & vti] to give up sth valuable for the sake of sth more valuable; to give up your desires, safety, or even your own life for the sake of something considered more valuable (such as another person's safety, obedience to God, or the possibility of future reward). "In many cultures, people sacrifice their animals to 'pay' for the forgiveness of their sin, and thus prove God that they sympathise how valuable forgiveness is."
  • *stock (orsharesof stock): an investment that lets your "own" function of a company ("Do you lot ain whatsoever stock?" "Yes, I purchase shares worth $200 every month, equally part of my retirement savings plan.")
  • stock banker: someone who buys and sells stock for others, earning a pct of the cost as his fee (EF Hutton is a famous example)
  • stock trader: a person or company that makes money by buying and selling stock, and sometimes by disarming corporations to merge
  • *suburb: the expanse around the exterior of a city (many suburbs are really small cities) where people live, oft driving to work in a nearby metropolis
  • wanna (oral English): "desire to" (you should neverwritethe word "wanna" because information technology is not really a word)
  • *wrinkled: a synonym for "elderly", referring to the lines or folds that show age on an older person'due south face

Phrases/sayings:

  • tunnel vision: the tendency to consider only one part of sth. instead of all parts
  • *you blew it: yous missed the gamble for something expert
  • *talk turkey: to talk seriously about details, esp. in business
  • *in a nutshell: in summary
  • an old flame: a sometime girlfriend or boyfriend; a past dearest
  • a souvenir with ten zeros: $10,000,000,000
  • *to deal with (dealt with): to handle or solve sth, like a trouble or need
  • *to screw upwards: to make a mistake
  • news at xi:00: used as if one is giving a headline for the evening news plan, as if to say "they should talk well-nigh this on the TV news"

More data:

(to help you understand what yous volition see)

Synopsis : Jack Campbell, a successful and aggressiveWall Street stock broker, lives a happy, single life. On Christmas Eve, he meets an "affections" who asks, "What do yous need, Jack?" Jack replies: "Zippo; I have everything I want." Well, the side by side morning, the "angel" puts Jack in a "glimpse" of what his life would have been like if he had married his college girlfriend, 13 years before. In this "glimpse," he and Kate alive in New Jersey (about an hr away from New York City), and they have two children (Annie is most v years old; Josh is still in diapers). Instead of beingness president of P.Thou. Lassiter Investment Visitor, he at present helps his father-in-police force run a retail tire store (he quit his Wall Street chore after "Big Ed" had a middle attack, thereby saving the family's company). Jack's Ferrari and expensive suits are gone; he now has a broken minivan and "mall-bought" inferior clothing (he calls them "sub-par"). Subsequently he realizes that there is zilch he can do to get his "real" life back, he settles into this "glimpse" life, and finds the value of deep friendships, family relationships, and true love. Although he misses the comfort and power of his job in "The Metropolis," he realizes that he never stopped loving Kate (and grows to love his "glimpse" children). He is no longer "confident and sure of everything," simply somewhen he decides that "there'south no place I'd rather be" than with his family.

Note i : Like many American movies, this picture show contains quite a flake of what some people consider to be "profanity." Longman's splendid lexicon says profanity is "offensive words or religious words used in a way that shows you do not respect God or holy things." In the moving-picture show, Jack flippantly says things like "God," "Christ," and "Holy Mary Mother of God"; but those dialogs do non testify any "respect for God or holy things." If you are around Americans, there's a good chance that you will hear profanity and cuss words. Merely as an English language learner, it is best to avoid this kind of talk. Many Americans find this language deeply offensive, and if you get into the habit of talking similar this, you may offend your professor, potential boss, or someone who might become a close friend or relative!

Note ii : This picture show was fabricated in 2000, i year before the tragic events of "9/11" (Sept 11, 2001), when terrorists crashed three The states airplanes, killing thousands of people. One of the ways that twenty-four hour period changed the world is seen in the motion picture. Both "airdrome scenes" show Jack and Kate with each other, right at the gate every bit the other boards the plane; Jack even runs down the airport hallways without going through whatever "security area". This was common until 9/11; since then, but ticketed passengers are immune past a security checkpoint.


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Sentences/dialogs from the flick:

(some are from http://world wide web.imdb.com/title/tt0218967/quotes;blue indicates a key dialog or sentence)

Say these dialogs out loud with your friends; it will help you prepare to watch the movie. The underlined words are defined in the vocabulary section in a higher place.

  • 1.   Jack [subsequently Kate says she has a "bad feeling" about Jack going to London for a year]: Look, we're at the airport. Nobody ever thinks clearly at the airport. Then we should only trust the decision we already made. You've been accepted into one of the all-time police force schools in the country. I've got thisinternship at Barclay's Depository financial institution. We have a great program, Honey.
  •       Kate: You wanna do something great, Jack? Let'southwardflush the plan! Let's kickoff our lives right now, today. I take no thought what this life is going to look similar, only I know that it has the both of us in it, and I choose "us." What we take together, that's what makes the states great.
  •       Jack: I dearest y'all. And one yr in London is not going to change that. A hundred years couldn't modify that.
  • ii.   [The Black Angel has been pointing a gun at theprejudiced store clerk who won't redeem his lottery ticket. Then Jack steps in to endeavor to solve the dangerous situation.]
  •       Jack: Permit me see the ticket.
  •       Black Angel: Was I talking to yous?
  •       Jack: Possibly I'll buy it from you. Yous know, brand a little business organisation deal.
  •       Black Angel: "Stupid ass white boy in $2000 suit gets capped [murdered] trying to be a hero,"news at 11:00. That's what you lotwannasee? DO You WANNA Die?
  •       Jack: No. Await, I'chiliad talking about a business deal. I purchase the ticket from you for $200. I have it to a store where the guy backside the counter doesn't take a death wish [doesn't want to die]. I simply made myself a quick $38. It's just a business deal.
  •       Black Affections: All right. [talking to the clerk]You blew information technology, B. This ticket was real. Come on, Jack, let'southward get out of here.
  • [Note: In America, the government gives money to the store if they redeem winning lottery tickets.]
  • 3.   Kate [waking up, the commencement forenoon of Jack's "glimpse"]: Jack. Potent coffee. [i.east., "go make strong coffee"]
  • iv.   [Jack is very frustrated subsequently no 1 in NY recognizes him, and he learns that Mr. Mintz is now the president of "his" company]
  •       Black Angel: You brought this on yourself. "I've got everything I demand." Does that sound familiar?
  •       Jack: You hateful, 'cause you idea I wascocky, I'one thousand now on a permanentacid trip?
  •       Black Angel: The manner yous intervened in that store final night… You lot did a skilful thing there, Jack.
  •       Jack: Please simply tell me what'southward happening to me in patently English language, without the mumbo-colossal ["hard to understand" language].
  •       Black Angel: This is aglimpse, Jack.
  •       Jack: A glimpse of what?
  •       Black Angel: Yous'regonna have to figure that out for yourself…
  •       Jack: I just want my life back. Now, what'southward it gonna take? You wanna talk turkey? Let's talk turkey. How much money?
  •       Blackness Angel: Information technology doesn't work like that. You've got to effigy this out for yourself.
  •       Jack: I don't have time for this right now. I'g in the middle of a deal!
  •       Blackness Angel: Well, you're working on a new bargain now, infant.
  • 5.   Arnie [quoting something Jack told him in the past]: Do you remember what you said? "Don't screw upwards the best matter in your life just because you're a footling unsure nigh who y'all are."
  • 6.   [Still confused near the "glimpse" he has found himself in, Jack returns to Kate's firm.]
  •       Kate [angry]: What kind of a human leaves his family unit Christmas morn, without a word about where he is going?
  •       Jack: Could yous please stop yelling at me? [Kate can't understand his caption, and and so Jack starts ringing a small bell that Black Angel gave him, hoping that the affections will rescue him. Annie hears information technology, and takes it to put on her new bike.]
  •       Jack: That'due south mine. I need that back! She took my bong.
  •       Kate: You lot missed the whole thing: the pancakes and the presents. Y'all spent six hours putting the bike together for Annie, and then you didn't even go to come across the look on her confront when she opened it. You missed Christmas, Jack. Simply we don't have time for this. Get get dressed for the party.
  •       Jack: I'm not going to a party.
  •       Kate: Fine. I'll tell my mother she doesn't accept to watch the kids because you'll be here.
  •       Jack: I'll exist ready to go in ten minutes.
  • 7.   [After a Christmas party, Jack is walking the canis familiaris in the snowfall.]
  •       Jack (to the canis familiaris): If you could take a dump [大便] onetime in this century, then we could go home where it's warm. If I can think how to become home. You call back, don't you girl?
  • 8.   Annie [who is trying to effigy out why Jack is interim so strange]: You're not really my dad, are y'all?
  •       Jack: No, I'm not. I piece of work onWall Street, y'all know, with the big buildings. I alive in an flat with a doorman. And I can buy almost annihilation I want. This isn't my life. It'south merely a glimpse.
  •       [Annie at present thinks that Jack was created by aliens, to take her father's place for a while.]
  •       Annie: They did a pretty good job.
  •       Jack: Who did?
  •       Annie: The aliens, in the mothership. You lot await only similar him.
  •       Jack: Cheers. Slightly better-looking, though, right? [Annie starts to cry.] Oh, you're not going to beginning crying, are you lot? I don't call back I could really deal with that right now.
  •       Annie: Do you similar kids?
  •       Jack: On a case-by-case footing.
  •       Annie: Do y'all know how to make chocolate milk?
  •       Jack: I think I could figure information technology out.
  •       Annie: Hope you won't kidnap me and my brother and plant stuff in our brains?
  •       Jack: Sure.
  •       Annie: Welcome to earth.

Discussion (role i):

  1. Talk about the things that people wish they could "do over" or "exercise differently." (Brand a list.)
  2. Use examples from the film to illustrate how Jack treats people (neighbors, in-laws, people at his company, friends, customers, children, others).
  3. What did yous call up about how Annie "explains" why her Daddy is different? Name some of the people, activities, etc., that impact the style that children call back.
  4. Piece of work with your partner to recall of differences betwixt Jack's life in the "glimpse" and before/after it. Hither are some topics: task, lifestyle, article of clothing, marital status, friends, work relationships, memory, focus….(See how many things y'all can come upwards with earlier yous look at my partial answer at the lesser of this post.)

Sentences/dialogs from the picture show:

  • 9.   Jack: You lot were always a very pretty girl in college. There's no question nearly that. Only this–You've really grown into a beautiful woman.
  •       Kate: How can you practise that?
  •       Jack: What?
  •       Kate: Expect at me similar y'all haven't seen me every day for the last 13 years.
  • x. Jack [aroused, later wasting a lot of time at the shopping mall]: I'chiliad sad I was such a saint before, and I'm such aprick now!
  • 11.  [After getting mad at the mall, Jack and Kate are talking about their past xiii years of marriage; apparently, getting pregnant with Annie was not exactly "planned".]
  •       Jack: Yeah, that was a very unexpected moment. But what are you lot gonna do?
  •       Kate: I call back it turned out all correct, don't you?
  •       Jack: Yeah. I really like Annie.
  •       Kate [sarcastically]: Well, good, Jack. Maybe nosotros'll proceed her.
  • 12. Arnie [trying to talk Jack out of having a sexual affair with a friend]: A footling amour is harmless but you're dealing with fire hither. The "AllegianceBank and Trust" is a tough creditor. Yous make a deposit somewhere else, they close your account – FOREVER.
  •        [Note: Some banks have the give-and-take "Allegiance" and "Trust" in their title, and "fidelity" and "trust" are keys to a expert marriage, then this is a remarkable play on words.]
  • 13.  [They are jubilant their anniversary at an expensive eating house in New York.]
  •       Jack: I feel similar I'g living someone else's life. I recollect I used to walk to work, and I had a warm bialy in my hand, and a hot cup of coffee from Dean & Deluca, the crisp feeling ofThe Wall Street Periodical, the smell of leather from my briefcase. I used to be so sure about everything; confident. I knew exactly who I was and what I wanted. And then one morning I woke up and suddenly it was all different.
  •       Kate: Worse, practice you mean?
  •       Jack: No. Well, maybe a few things, but by and large only dissimilar. And that'due south okay. Only I never used to be like this, Kate. I was the guy who had it all figured out. I had no doubts. I had no regrets.
  •       Kate: And now?
  •       Jack: Now I don't. I don't have it all figured out.
  •       Kate: Me neither.
  •       Jack: But you always seem so certain.
  •       Kate: Practice yous think there aren't mornings when I wake up and wonder, "What the hell am I doing in New Jersey?" My office is a dump. I respond my own phone, and you've seen my [disgraceful] paycheck. Tin you imagine a life where everything was just easy? Y'all know, where you ask for things, and people merely bring them to you lot?
  •       Jack: It's wonderful!
  •       Kate: I think about it too. I wonder about what kind of life I would have had if I hadn't married you. Then I realize I've merelyerased all the things in my life that I'one thousand sure about. Y'all and the kids.
  •       Jack: Proficient things.
  •       Kate: Yeah. [after a intermission] What are you sure about?
  •       Jack: I'm sure that right at present, there'south nowhere else I'd rather be than here with you.

End "Part ii" right later on Jack meets Peter Lassiter. ("…You look taller in real life.")

Discussion (role 2):

  1. In Part two, you saw a birthday celebration, and saw what happened when Jack "forgot" their anniversary. Talk about a birthday or anniversary celebration in your life (or a party you lot gave for someone's special day).
  2. In Role ii, when Jack realized that he had given upwardly "Wall Street" to save his father-in-law'south business organization, he seems disappointed about the decisions his married self had made. Kate, instead, saw their life equally "a great success." What exercise you call up? From what nosotros've seen so far, which "life" was better, and why?
  3. When people achieve the end of their lives, what are some of the things they say (especially virtually things they regret)? Talk near what Jack and Kate "value" the most, and how that affected their lives. What "values" help you to make good decisions, and where did these "values" come up from? Tin y'all call back of whatever idioms/proverbs (in your language or English language) about "values"?

Sentences/dialogs from the movie:

  • 14. Kate: When you got on that plane, I was sure information technology was over. I left the airport agape I'd never see you lot again. And so you showed up the very side by side day. That was a proficient surprise. You know, I recall well-nigh the determination you made… Perhaps I was beingnaïve, only I believed that we would grow one-time together in this house. That nosotros'd spend holidays hither and have our grandchildren come visit us hither. I had this image of us, all grayness andwrinkled, and me working in the garden and you re-painting the deck. But things alter. If you need this [job], Jack–if you really need this–I volition take these kids from a life they love and I'll have myself from the just home nosotros've ever shared together and I'll move wherever you demand to become. I'll do that because I dear you. I dearest you, and that'southward more important to me than our address. I choose "u.s.".
  • 15.  [Jack goes to a store and sees Black Angel again later a few months in the "glimpse."]
  •       Jack: Yous're non sending me dorsum…. You can't keep coming in and out of people's lives, messing things up. Information technology'due south non right.
  •       Black Affections: Aglimpse, past definition, is an impermanent thing.
  •       Jack: I've got kids. I'grand going dwelling.
  • 16. [Jack is back in his "real life," trying to solve a panic on Christmas Day. He says he volition fly to Colorado to be with a client. Jack is somewhat depressed later on waking up from the "glimpse."]
  •       Jack: Then I'm going to spend iv hours skiing alone. Completely and utterly lonely. I'chiliad going to do that because that is my life; that's what'south real… and there's nothing I can practise to change that.
  • 17.  Jack: Nosotros have a house in Jersey. We accept two kids, Annie and Josh. Annie's not much of a violin actor, but she tries existent hard. She's a footlingprecocious, simply that'south just because she says what's on her listen. And when she smiles…wow! And Josh, he has your eyes. He doesn't say much, but we know he'southward smart. He's e'er got his eyes open, he's e'er watching us. Sometimes you lot can await at him and you just know he'south learning something new. It's like witnessing a miracle. The house is a mess, just information technology'due south ours–afterward 122 more payments, it'south going to be ours. And you, you're a nonprofit lawyer. That's right, you're completely nonprofit, just that doesn't seem to bother you. And we're in love. After 13 years of marriage nosotros're still unbelievably in dear. You lot won't even allow me touch y'all until I've said it. I sing to you. Not all the time, just definitely on special occasions. We've dealt with our share of surprises and made a lot of sacrifices but nosotros've stayed together. You come across, y'all're a meliorate person than I am. And it fabricated me a improve person to be around you lot. I don't know, maybe it was all just a dream. Maybe I went to bed one lonely night in December and I imagined it all. But I swear, nothing has ever felt more than real. And if you go on that airplane right at present, information technology'll disappear forever. I know nosotros could both go on with our lives and we'd both be fine, but I've seen what nosotros could be like together. And I choose "us".

Word (part 3):

  1. What did Jack hateful when he kissed his sleeping daughter and said, "I'm going dorsum to the female parent ship"? [What did his daughter mean when, playing in the snow, she said, "I knew you'd come up dorsum"?]
  2. At one point, Kate and Jack are talking about "the perfect life." Kate describes it as a long life in the same house, total of love. Jack describes it equally a life with a big income, kids in the best schools, and "a life that others envy." How would You describe "the perfect life"?
  3. As y'all consider your first task after college (or next promotion, if you're already working), what factors will exist virtually important to you? Explicate.
  4. With a partner, come up with five ethical principles you could see in the motion-picture show: for example, "It is not good to make your child the concluding one to be picked up, otherwise information technology volition hurt his feelings." (Annie tells Jack to pick her up at school earlier and non permit her be the last one left.)
  5. With a partner, come with five business concern or economic science principles you could run across in the flick: for instance, "Offering consequent customers some discount may bring a good return to your business." (As a tire retailer, Jack offers an old client a certain percentage disbelieve).
  6. The last scene in the movie shows Jack and Kate talking in the New York airport. Nosotros are left to imagine for ourselves what the last outcome volition exist. What do yous recollect will happen next? What will happen in the next two months? With your partner, create an outline for the movie "Family Human being 2"!

(You can come across some of my students' answers to #4 and 5 at the bottom of the "Rudy" Study Guide.)

Comparisons between Jack's "real" and "glimpse" lives:

The picture starts and ends showing usa Jack (and Kate) in "real life," but the centre of the movie shows us a glimpse of what their lives would have been similar if they had gotten married 13 years before.

  1. In existent life, Jack is single and tells the "affections" he doesn't need annihilation to make his life complete. In Jack's glimpse, he wakes upwards and finds that he is married and has two children and a dog!
  2. In existent life, Jack is the president of a large financial corporation and works on Wall Street in New York Urban center. In Jack'due south glimpse, Jack helps his father-in-law run a retail tire and motorcar-repair store.
  3. In real life, Jack lives in a large, expensive flat and drives a nice sports car. In Jack's glimpse, he lives in a New Jersey suburb (about an hour from New York) and drives a minivan.
  4. Though the successful Jack felt like his life was complete, after being in the glimpse for a while, Jack begins to think that he would be much happier if he had a family.
  5. In Jack's glimpse, Kate is a nonprofit lawyer (like she planned to be while in college; poorly paid, giving legal help to people who cannot afford to pay much). In real life, Kate is a successful, well-paid lawyer, soon to move to Paris with a large law firm.

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