Ein überzeugender wie großformatiger Ost-West-Stoff, der die großen Themenkomplexe Stasi-, Republikflucht und Loyalität unter Freunden in einer packenden Liebesgeschichte erzählt.
本片讲述的是几个小孩子智斗小偷的故事,滑稽搞笑呆头呆脑的小偷被一群聪明伶俐、擅于就地取材的小孩子所制服,这群小孩利用自己手中的弹珠、弹弓、水枪、航模飞机等当武器,使用调虎离山之计,成功守护了被小偷差点偷走的国宝”小佛像”。
以真实事件为基础,讲述一个人为生存而奋斗的史诗故事。居希·凯特拉,在美国大萧条期间回到芬兰,美国方面政治动荡日益严重。1930年的一个夏天晚上,民族主义暴徒绑架了他,他被迫走上永恒之路,去了苏联,在那里残酷似乎永无终结,他唯一的梦想是回到他芬兰的家中,但是苏联也并非工人阶级的乐园……
安迪(塞斯·罗根 Seth Rogen 饰)是一个旅行爱好者,目前,他正在兴致勃勃的准备着他的第一次公路之旅。一个人的旅程难免空虚寂寞,选择谁成为自己的旅伴成为了安迪首当其冲需要解决的问题。安迪的朋友不多,无奈之下,他只得把目光放在了自己的母亲乔伊斯(芭芭拉·史翠珊 Barbra Streisand 饰)的身上。 刚刚上路,安迪就意识到自己犯了一个巨大的错误,乔伊斯的专制和自大让安迪感到忍无可忍,两人的关系几欲破裂。但是,随着时间的流逝,安迪渐渐开始发现,自己与母亲并非冰火那般无法共存,相同的基因让两人之间始终维持着血脉相通的亲切。在乔伊斯的鼓励和帮助下,安迪也渐渐找到了人生的方向。
本片乃王晶早期賣座的愛情喜劇,本片無論橋段、笑料、節奏、演員等,均具備了觀眾最喜愛的喜劇片元素。有錢仔(傅聲)與另一富家子(陳百祥)爭女。鬥錢多,鬥本事,分別追求女星(劉雪華),黑社會頭子之女(錢慧儀)……但只有樸實的護士(鍾楚紅)才是有錢仔的最愛……
导演舒吉特·瑟加(Shoojit Sircar)的新片《谍战马德拉斯/悍战谍影》(Madras Cafe)是一部关于印度情报部门特工的影片,背景设置于80年代末90年代初。就在印度和平力量撤退之后,某特工被派去斯里兰卡,执行秘密破坏内战反动势力的任务。深陷混战与政治阴谋之中,他遇到了一名英国记者,并化解了一场刺杀行动。本片由摄影师卡玛里吉·耐基(Kamaljeet Negi)使用ALEXA拍摄。拍摄地包括马来西亚、泰国、伦敦和印度。最近耐基接受了ARRI的专访,分享了他的拍摄经验。
Social realism regarding struggles of reservation-dwelling Native Americans in the North Central states of the US. Main character is an introspective and lovable person in a process of seeking pride and identity through tradtional and mystical means of gathering power. His high school friend, who is a Vietnam War Veteran, is exerting power as a highly principled social activist, using a modern rational materialist adversarial model of progress.
A queen who lost three kingdoms. A wife who lost three husbands. A woman who lost her head. Mary Queen of Scots spends her childhood in France and is meant to become also Queen of France. However, her ailing husband dies and the young widow returns alone to Scotland, a country devastated by war. Elizabeth has just become Queen of England, for Mary she is like a twin sister to whom she can open her heart. Mary weds again and gives birth to an heir to the thrown. Her second husband, Lord Darnley, proves to be a weakling. When Mary finds the love of her life, the Earl of Bothwell, she has Darnley murdered and marries Bothwell. Horrified by this deed and the blind passion that motivated it, both the nobles and the people of Scotland spurn her. To avert a bloody battle, Mary is compelled to give up her beloved Bothwell. In desperate straits, she turns to Elizabeth for help. In response, the Queen of England imprisons her. After 19 years spent in a golden cage, Mary finds release at last: Elizabeth sends her to the block.
Master director Joel Lamangan tells the story of Eunice aka Moonlight Butterfly, the hottest GRO in Angeles, Pampanga and the three men in her life. She soon learns to play the game of lust and love in order to survive and provide for her family.
The subtitle of Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet’s first feature, from 1965, “Only Violence Helps Where Violence Reigns,” suggests the fierce political program evoked by their rigorous aesthetic. The pretext of the film, set in Cologne, is Heinrich Böll’s novel “Billiards at Half Past Nine,” which they strip down to a handful of stark events and film with a confrontational angularity akin to Bartók’s music that adorns the soundtrack. The subtlest of cues accompany the story’s complex flashbacks. The middle-aged Robert Fähmel tells a young hotel bellhop of persecutions under the Third Reich; his elderly father, Heinrich, an architect famed for a local abbey, recalls the militarism of the First World War, when his wife, Johanna, incurred trouble for insulting the Kaiser. A third-generation Fähmel is considering architecture, just as the exiled brother of Robert’s late wife, returns, only to be met by their former torturer, now a West German official taking part in a celebratory parade of war veterans. Straub and Huillet make the layers of history live in the present tense, which they judge severely. The tamped-down acting and the spare, tense visual rhetoric suggest a state of moral crisis as well as the response—as much in style as in substance—that it demands.