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类型:剧情片
主演:Lucas Davi de Los Santos Alves Náth
导演:埃米利亚诺·库尼亚
语言:其它
年代:未知
简介: 十二岁的阿曼达是一名游泳运动员。她非常安静而又内向,着迷于游泳,因为她在水下全然的私密空间中找到了独一无二的安全感。阿曼达没有父母关心,于是把大部分时间都泡在游泳池里,不断训练。也许游泳是她唯一一件真正喜欢做的事,她想要做好,想要成功。普莉希拉是游泳队里的明星,现在却成 为了阿曼达的对手。她们之间的较量从泳池拓展到了生活中的方方面面,一场微妙的角力就此拉开序幕。
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类型:剧情片
主演:斯蒂娜·艾克布罗德 安尼塔·布耶尔克 玛丽·理查德森 玛加丽塔·比斯特
导演:英格玛·伯格曼
语言:其它
年代:未知
简介: 戏中,萨德本人从未露面,只存在于六名登场人物的对话中。人物的性格也很分明,西缅男爵夫人代表“美德”、而圣芳伯爵夫人代表“恶行”,门托纽夫人则代表了世俗。尽管两位代表善恶的人物更富有戏剧性,然而全剧的中心仍是主人公露涅和门托纽夫人的对立。 以剧中人对萨德的态度为例:门托纽夫人认为声名狼藉、锒铛入狱的萨德根本就是家庭的耻辱,而萨德的妻子露涅则截然不同,她真诚地等待着被社会排斥的丈夫,并认为这才是表达真爱的惟一方式。但是,当革命风起云涌,社会价值观也随之改变。萨德出狱并被捧为新时代的旗手,门托纽夫人的态度来了个一百八十度大转弯,她成了萨德的捧哏,称萨德为法国的献身者。 而露涅的态度却截然相反。丈夫重新被社会承认,意味着她那孤独的爱就此丧失了根基。不仅如此,她读了萨德在狱中写的小说,里面描写了一位坚持美德的女子的悲剧,露涅在作品中看到了自己的影子。她的孤独之爱从根底瓦解了,同时也意识到之前的半生不过是徒劳,于是她投身修道院,再也不与萨德相会。剧中露涅曾说:“与其付诸行动,不如创制法则……” 这句话也可以理解为“与其委身现实,不如付诸思想”。对原剧作者三岛先生来说,“艺术”无疑是存在于现实之外的、对于异端思想之美的例证。
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类型:剧情片
主演:雷默·撒戈尔 Nora Altrov Emily Viikman Li
导演:莉娜·翠什吉娜
语言:其它
年代:未知
简介: 《要或不要》展示了铤而走险的勇气和非同寻常的选择如何从根本上改变了一个普通人的生活,又是如何使平凡的主角脱胎换骨,成为日常生活中的英雄。在一个睡意朦胧的星期六清晨,三十岁的建筑工人埃里克得知了一个惊天动地的消息:他六个月未见的前女友莫妮卡即将分娩。然而,莫妮卡还没有做好当妈妈的准备,如果埃里克也不想要这个孩子,那么初生的女婴就会被送到领养机构。埃里克是要她还是不要她呢?本片代表爱沙尼亚出征2019年第91届奥斯卡最佳外语片的角逐。
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类型:剧情片
主演:朗·穆迪 姗妮·沃利斯 奥列佛·里德 哈里·塞科姆 马克·莱斯特 杰克
导演:卡罗尔·里德
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介: 奥利弗(马克·莱斯特 Mark Lester 饰)是一名孤儿,从小在教会中长大。九岁时,奥利弗被派遣到工厂做工,之后又来到殡仪馆成为了学徒。奥利弗的聪慧和机敏让他很快就在殡仪馆里站稳了脚跟,但与此同时,他亦遭到了同伴们的妒忌,他们故意挑衅激怒奥利弗,最终奥利弗离开了殡仪馆。 无家可归的奥利弗过起了四处流浪的生活,经过漫长的旅途,他来到了伦敦。一个名叫道奇(杰克·瓦尔德 Jack Wild 饰)的扒手将奥利弗带到了匪首费金(朗·穆迪 Ron Moody 饰)的面前,就这样,奥利弗成为了他们中的一员。一次意外中,奥利弗被警察逮捕了,但随后,他被证实是无辜的,当事人布朗罗先生(Joseph O'Conor 饰)对奥利弗感到十分愧疚,于是收留了他,奥利弗的生活能够从此走上正轨吗?
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类型:恐怖片
主演:Fanny Rosen Johanna Smitz Peter Hal
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介: 在与父母争吵后,少女点开了一封神秘的电子邮件,但这封邮件所传递的信息却感染了整个家庭。
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类型:动画片
主演:Emilie Lan Dürr 弗洛朗丝·米埃勒 Maxime Gem
导演:弗洛朗丝·米埃勒
语言:法语
年代:未知
简介:一个小村庄在黑暗中被洗劫一空,一家人被迫逃离。两个最大的孩子 Kyona 和 Adriel 很快就与父母分开,独自面对流亡之路。他们踏上了一段英勇的旅程,从童年到青春期,他们都在寻找庇护所、和平以及找到避难所和家人的希望。穿越因战争和移民迫害而四分五裂的大陆,这些勇敢的兄弟姐妹克服了难以置信的挑战,最终到达了一个新世界,最终获得了自由。
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类型:爱情片
主演:弗雷德里克·马奇 伊夫琳·维纳布尔 盖伊·斯坦丁 凯瑟琳·亚历山大 吉
导演:米切尔·莱森
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介: Because I could not stop for Death, he kindly stopped for me; the carriage held but just ourselves and immortality” – Emily Dickinson If Death took a holiday, the guns would go silent in Iraq, the slaughter on our nation’s highways would cease, and the news media would be compelled to cover positive events in the humanities, arts, and sciences. Unfortunately, Death has not had a vacation in recorded history, but Mitchell Leisen’s 1934 fantasy, Death Takes a Holiday, allows us to consider the possibility. Co-written by Maxwell Anderson and Gladys Lehman and based on the play "La Morte in Vacanza" by Alberto Casella, Death Takes a Holiday stars Frederic March as the Grim Reaper who takes on human form in an attempt to discover why men fear him so much. Why he has waited 5,000 years to satisfy this curiosity is not explained. [Spoiler] After a brief tryout as a shadowy figure who scares the daylights out of those that cross his path, Death shows up at, of all places, an upscale party at an Italian villa, posing as the mysterious Prince Sirki. Only one person knows who he really is, the host Duke Lambert (Guy Standing), and he is sworn to secrecy. Sirki proceeds to fascinate the guests. Given to bursts of wit and poetry, he can just as quickly turn sullen and threatening, and some soon find out that it is better not to look too deeply into his eyes. During the three days in which the Prince is at the villa, however, people all over the world miraculously escape death and potential suicides are doomed to frustration. To see what’s behind all the conversation about love, the suave but naïve Prince Sirki falls for the irresistible Grazia (Evelyn Venable), the daughter of one of Duke’s friends. Grazia knows who Death is but does not fear him, much to the chagrin of her fiancé, Corrado (Kent Taylor) who has developed a strong disdain for Prince Charming. More sinister than Brad Pitt in the 1998 remake Meet Joe Black, March turns in a very convincing performance as the creepy yet strangely appealing guest. Although the ending is melodramatic, the emotions are very real and the suggestion that Death may in reality be a friend disguised as a foe is quite touching. (Howard Schumann, talkingpix.co.uk) In this wearisome and predictable plot line, Death falls in love and bores us to death talking about it. (Dennis Schwartz, homepages.sover.net) I've heard DRACULA was advertised with the tag line "The Weirdest Love Story ever told!" (this is probably a paraphrase), but at heart, I've never felt that you could honestly call that movie a love story. The tag line would be much more appropriate for this one, since it ultimately boils down to what amounts to a love story. This movie is very good indeed, particularly if you consider that it is built around a concept that could have easily been handled in a cute or facile manner. Instead, it is handled as seriously as possible, with some real thought put into how death would try to come to terms with a life and an outlook that was to that point totally unfamiliar to him; much of the credit does go to Fredric March in the title role. It's quite scary when it needs to be, particularly during the first twenty minutes. From then on, it deals with its themes with subtlety, a quiet wit, an enduring sadness, and an everpresent tension on how Death might react if crossed. It's not perfect; some of the dialogue is self-conscious and artificial, as if the writers knew they were dealing with weighty issues and were trying to be profound. But I am certainly glad they didn't try to turn it into a musical comedy of sorts. (Dave Sindelar, scifilm.org) See also the remake: Death Takes A Holiday (1971)