巴黎是艺术之都,白纱于是故事不得不带着颜料味,白纱吴镇宇是一位流浪画家,并且得上一种富有艺术气息的病症,在这病症惶惶终日,爱情许久远。杨恭如在上流场合里辗转,在一个切实的目标中寻觅,在爱情和金钱的天平上摇晃,就这样不期而遇上,开一场相互安慰的玩笑。吴镇宇、杨恭如来玩异国浪漫,在巴黎演一出新版的《秋天的童话》。《喜欢你》轻淡入戏,苦中带甜,两位主人公便只 在安慰中相互取暖。 在最接近的时候,仿佛最遥远。徐志摩说这是个肉艳的巴黎,那它是否容得下两个异乡人默默的期许?
巴黎是艺术之都,白纱于是故事不得不带着颜料味,白纱吴镇宇是一位流浪画家,并且得上一种富有艺术气息的病症,在这病症惶惶终日,爱情许久远。杨恭如在上流场合里辗转,在一个切实的目标中寻觅,在爱情和金钱的天平上摇晃,就这样不期而遇上,开一场相互安慰的玩笑。吴镇宇、杨恭如来玩异国浪漫,在巴黎演一出新版的《秋天的童话》。《喜欢你》轻淡入戏,苦中带甜,两位主人公便只 在安慰中相互取暖。 在最接近的时候,仿佛最遥远。徐志摩说这是个肉艳的巴黎,那它是否容得下两个异乡人默默的期许?
回复 :严格的说,这也许算不上是一部集锦影片,而是法国知识分子导演和电影工作者在越战时代的一次“良心大行动”,而且这也是不多的几部集锦纪录片之中的经典之作。在影片开始,解说词就已经点明影片的主旨:越战是一场富人和穷人的战争,是富裕的美国和贫穷的越南之间的战争。在接下来“欲哭的约翰逊”、“倒叙(闪回)”“镜头眼”、“我们为何而战”、“安与尤艾”、“目眩”等等段落里,我们随着编导进入越南和美国的现状、探讨越战的历史、旁观知识分子的讨论、参与世界各地人们的讨论,深入地、多侧面地接近越战。这里面既有导演的主观阐述,也有从新闻影片上剪接过来的“客观”纪实,甚至还有极端个人化的表达方式。大概是在戈达尔的段落里,我们不断看到一个摄影师/导演坐在摄影机后不同角度、不同景别的同一场面,而解说词却在说着:我们没法到越南去,只能在这里制作这部影片。在大量事实和观点,甚至是包括美国、越南以及世界各国人民对越战问题争论的罗列之后,影片最后的一段解说给所有人深刻的印象,也使得整部影片得到了最恰当的总结和升华:“战争就在我们周围,越南是为了我们而战”!————————————————《远离越南》(Loin du Viêtnam,尤里斯·伊文思等,1967年|120分钟|35毫米|黑白与彩色|有声)是由多位导演拍摄的反映越南战争的集锦片。除了尤里斯·伊文思,其他导演为阿兰·雷乃、让—吕克·戈达尔、阿涅斯·瓦尔达、克劳德·勒鲁什和美国摄影家威廉·克莱恩。影片首先对比了战争双方的军事力量,美方拥有无比先进的航空母舰,越方则以原始方式挖掘简陋的防空洞;随着一阵狂轰滥炸,银幕变得昏天黑地;一出独幕剧表现了巴黎呼吁和平的示威与纽约支持战争的游行;在越南,一出名为《约翰逊在哭泣》的话剧讽刺了好战的美国总统约翰逊;在巴黎,戈达尔一边将眼睛伏在取景器上取景,一边解释为什么美国一定要建立一个属于美国的越南,并在这个片段中插入了自己刚刚拍竣的影片《中国姑娘》的部分场景;一位美国战地女记者讲述了自己为什么在前线时希望成为另一个阵营的人;一位生活在巴黎的年轻的越南姑娘回忆起了在五角大楼前自焚的诺曼·莫里,他的远在大西洋另一边的妻子出现在镜头前。本片的诞生过程大致如下:克里斯·马凯在听了从越南归来的伊文思的讲述后,倡议法国新浪潮的几位著名电影导演以及纪录片大师伊文思和美国摄影家威廉·克莱恩(1928年生)共同拍摄一部关于越南战争的集锦片,每人负责拍摄其中的1到2个片段(总共拍摄了11个片段)。这些导演的艺术风格不同,拍摄的片段多姿多彩,最极端的莫过于戈达尔拍摄的名为“镜头眼”的片段,依照形式与内容相互分离的原则,这个片段中的声音和画面毫无关联,他还亲自跳到镜头前讲述自己为什么不能去越南而只能在巴黎拍摄。本片是电影史上著名的反战影片之一,具有极强的艺术感染力。
回复 :20世纪七十年代,罗杰(朗·里维斯顿 Ron Livingston 饰)与卡罗琳(莉莉·泰勒 Lili Taylor 饰)两夫妇带着他们五个可爱美丽的女儿,搬到了位于罗德岛哈瑞斯维尔的一幢旧宅居住。房屋虽然古旧沧桑,历史悠久,但是却让佩隆一家体会到回归田园的快乐与喜悦。谁知好景不长,接二连三的怪异事件相继出现,令女孩们惊声尖叫,也让佩隆夫妇的神经绷到极点。为此,他们辗转找到当时最负盛名的沃伦夫妇。丈夫埃德(帕特里克·威尔森 Patrick Wilson 饰)是天主教会唯一认可的驱魔师,妻子洛琳(维拉·法米加 Vera Farmiga 饰)则拥有窥见灵体的能力。他们不费吹灰之力便确定这座阴气十足的大房子的症结所在,而为了征得教会除灵的许可,他们必须深入期间搜集恶灵存在的证据……
回复 :Frank Lloyd Wright is America's greatest-ever architect. However, few people know about the Welsh roots that shaped his life and world-famous buildings. Now, leading Welsh architect Jonathan Adams sets off across America to explore Frank Lloyd Wright's masterpieces for himself. Along the way, he uncovers the tempestuous life story of the man behind them and the significance of his radical family background.In a career spanning seven decades, Frank Lloyd Wright built over 500 buildings, and changed the face of modern architecture: Fallingwater, the house over the waterfall, has been called the greatest house of the 20th century; the spiralling Guggenheim Museum in New York reinvented the art museum; the concrete Unity Temple was the first truly modern building in the world. But the underlying philosophy that links all Wright's buildings is as important as anything he built.Those ideas were rooted in the Unitarian religion of Frank Lloyd Wright's mother. Anna Lloyd Jones was born and raised near Llandysul in west Wales and migrated to America with her family in 1844, most likely to escape religious persecution. Her son, Frank, was raised in a Unitarian community in Wisconsin, a small piece of Wales in America. The values he absorbed there were based on the sanctity of nature, the importance of hard work, and the need to question convention and defy it where necessary. Wright's architecture was shaped by, and expressed, these beliefs.Frank Lloyd Wright set out to create a new American architecture for a new country. He built his own lifelong home in the valley he was raised in, and he named it after an ancient Welsh bard called Taliesin. It was the scene of many adventures - and a horrific crime. In 1914, a servant at Taliesin ran amok and killed seven people including Wright's partner, Mamah Cheney, and her two young children.Wright rebuilt his home and went on to marry a Montenegrin woman, Olgivanna Milanoff, some 30 years younger than him. It was Olgivanna who struck upon the idea that saved Wright's career after the Wall Street Crash and personal scandal laid it low. She decided that her husband should take on apprentices and that the apprentices should pay for the privilege. The Taliesin Fellowship had a hands-on approach, with apprentices often building extensions to Wright's own houses, labouring and cooking for him. Somehow it worked, lasting for decades and nurturing hundreds of young talents.Frank Lloyd Wright died in 1959 aged 91 while working on his final masterpiece, New York's incomparable Guggenheim Museum. He had been born in the wake of the American civil war, the son of a pioneer, and died a television celebrity, in the space age. He is buried in the shadow of Taliesin, alongside his Welsh ancestors.A 150 years after his birth, Jonathan Adams argues that Frank Lloyd Wright is now a vitally important figure who can teach us how to build for a better world. Wright believed in what he called organic architecture; buildings that grace the landscape, express an idea of how to live and respond to individual needs. This bespoke approach - a philosophy, not a style - puts him at the heart of modern architectural thinking.