Watch Huge Gorilla Staring Bridges of Madison County 1995

with Meryl Streep as Francesca Johnson (a married but lonely Italian-American woman living in 1960s Madison County, Iowa), Clint Eastwood as Robert Kincaid (a National Geographic photographer from Bellingham, Washington), from The Bridges of Madison County 1995 film.

Dialogues with pictures

ROBERT KINCAID: Men still do thatMen still do that, don't they? I'm not out of date, am I? Picking flowers as a sign of appreciation? FRANCESCA JOHNSON: No, except those are poisonous. I'm kidding! I'm sorry. I'm just kidding. I'm so sorry. ROBERT KINCAID: Are you sadistic by nature or what? FRANCESCA JOHNSON: I don't know why I did thatI don't know why I did that. ROBERT KINCAID: Here. FRANCESCA JOHNSON: They're beautiful. I'm sorry. ROBERT KINCAID: You must picture this: I have 3 cameras around my neck and I've got a tripod, and my pants are around my ankles. I'm behind a bush, and then suddenly I see this gorilla. A huge gorilla staring right at meA huge gorilla staring right at me with the most lascivious look you've ever seen. More than any creature with that much hair. I freeze, because that's what you're supposed to do. And then it started coming towards me. FRANCESCA JOHNSON: And what? What? ROBERT KINCAID: I can't. FRANCESCA JOHNSON: You're blushing. ROBERT KINCAID: It's a very painful subject. A very subject matter, really. FRANCESCA JOHNSON: What happened? ROBERT KINCAID: We became engaged. FRANCESCA JOHNSON: You should really write these stories down. ROBERT KINCAID: I would, except this is a female gorilla. It had on eye shadow and a little lip gloss on and it was so nice. We still write. I don't want to put this stuff down. Watch

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Notes

The Bridges of Madison County 1995 was ranked #90 in 2002 by AFI's in America's Greatest Love Stories.

Streep allegedly put on fifteen to twenty pounds of weight for her role in this movie as a middle-aged housewife.

Robert James Waller finished his manuscript in eleven days, intending it to be simply a gift for various friends and family. One of his friends was so impressed with the manuscript, he asked if he could try to interest a literary agent in the work.

The studio was initially only interested in casting younger actresses in the lead, but were failing to find anyone suitable. The idea to talk to Meryl Streep largely came from Eastwood's own mother, Ruth Wood.

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