I know how you feel. French is mandatory here for nine years, and during that time they never once tried to teach us grammar haha. I learned more in my first 3 months doing German at University level than I did in nearly a decade of French during grade school.
When I took Irish it was similar to how we were taught French, where they kind of assumed we would organically learn how to form sentences without being taught the explicit rules. But to make it worse, the first Irish class was graded on 10% participation, 90% final exam, and before the final we had no other tests and hadn't done much reading or writing. Part of the exam was of course reading comprehension and a mini written essay.
Back on topic for the HoF, I did just finish watching Crossfire. Definitely won't be writing anything tonight though, as it's getting quite late.
When I took Irish it was similar to how we were taught French, where they kind of assumed we would organically learn how to form sentences without being taught the explicit rules. But to make it worse, the first Irish class was graded on 10% participation, 90% final exam, and before the final we had no other tests and hadn't done much reading or writing. Part of the exam was of course reading comprehension and a mini written essay.

Back on topic for the HoF, I did just finish watching Crossfire. Definitely won't be writing anything tonight though, as it's getting quite late.
YIKES
My parents are from the coastline of New Brunswick and I have a majority of family throughout that area, as well as Quebec, so there's a WHOLE lot of French going on.
I tried learning it in High School, but when you learn French you learn Parisian French and the few words I did know of French-Canadian, I kept telling the teacher, "That's not how you pronounce that. Or that. Nope, that's wrong too." So, I didn't bother since I knew my relatives would just laugh at me and shake their heads, "Why you talk like dat, Eddie. DIs is Canada, eh. Not, you know, Paris."
Through the years I DID try to learn with different Lessons with no avail. That whole learning one word and all the variations of it when using: I, you (familiar/casual), you (formal), he/she, they, and we; didn't stick. It was a couple of years back that my roommate found the app I'm using now that started with basics of just "I and familiar/casual you" and built from there that actually seems to work for me and now it's finding how there are different words for the same thing depending on how you use it. Like "I know" can be Je sais, or Je connais; and so forth.
They do explain things rather nicely and there's a community that talks you through it, but it's tricky getting the grammar down. Which is kinda where I'm at, as the simple sentences are starting to get longer as well as multiple sentences.
It was nice to talk with my mom before she passed last year, en francais since she was on her second minor stroke and she was reverting to her native language, French, which was another reason for diving into it, besides always wanting to learn it.
Annnd, back to the HoF, in a slight segue, Le Corbeau is on my list for next watch, BUT I need to knock out Best Pictures HoF FIRST.
Now I do have two write-ups to do here, Asphalt Jungle, which I rewatched since I watched it when deciding on a nomination and trying to remember it after watching a similar film, Rififi was hard to do; and Angle Heart, which I absolutely love and was initially what I was going to nominate and didn't. But VERY HAPPY@ pahaK joined in with it.
__________________
What I actually said to win MovieGal's heart:
- I might not be a real King of Kinkiness, but I make good pancakes
What I actually said to win MovieGal's heart:
- I might not be a real King of Kinkiness, but I make good pancakes
~Mr Minio