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    东北,东北 - 电影

    2009中国大陆剧情
    导演:邹鹏
    《东北东北》讲述在东北未成年的女孩晓雪白天在服装市场卖衣服,夜晚经常帮老板交际以维护她的人及关系。富有而有心机的伟哥看上了晓雪,晓雪陷入到感情的迷雾中,但她却意外地怀上了伟哥的孩子。伟哥让晓雪的老板劝说晓雪拿掉孩子,但晓雪却觉得自己受到侮辱,为回到原先的生活轨迹,晓雪选择了堕胎……   在《东北东北》里,用二人转的副线与晓雪的感情线相呼应,表现他们不由自主、讨好他人的人生。邹鹏在现场也称自己就像二人转的演员一样,“为观众付出很多。”邹鹏认为,相较故事,把握哈尔滨这个城市的气息更为重要。哈尔滨是邹鹏的家乡,当他自电影学院毕业,想要成为一名导演时,他自然地选择了哈尔滨为拍摄地。   该片结尾关注一列开往他方的火车,观众觉得此段落呈现出诗意气质。邹鹏解读称此种设计有两个意思,其一是离开了家乡,其二是指出站的时候有很多选择,最终只能选择属于自己的一条,孤独地向前走。   邹鹏的老师电影学院导演系教授王宏卫于现场介绍邹鹏,赞他自拍摄学生作业时直觉与热情就很好,没想到他毕业之后很快就付诸实践,“与中国其他青年导演的作品比较,有新鲜和不太一样的东西”。
    东北,东北
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    哥斯拉1954 - 电影

    1954美国科幻片
    1954年,正当原子弹的恐怖仍然徘徊于大部分日本国民的心中时,日本银幕上出现了一头比原子弹更恐怖,更具破坏力的大怪兽!
    哥斯拉1954
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    凤凰大视野:雾锁化龙桥——中共南方局解密 - 纪录片

    2016中国香港纪录片·历史
    导演:凤凰卫视
    凤凰大视野:雾锁化龙桥——中共南方局解密
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    1945 - 电影

    2017匈牙利剧情
    导演:弗兰克·托罗克
    演员:彼得·鲁道夫 本斯·塔斯纳迪 塔马斯·萨博·基梅尔
    闷热的八月,两名正统犹太人来到遥远的匈牙利村庄,当地村民却并不欢迎他们的到来。
    1945
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    1945 - 电影

    2022Drama·History·Action
    导演:Sathyasiva
    演员:Regina Cassandra Rana Daggubati Sathyaraj
    Set in Burma in the year 1945, Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose plans to launch the INA to fight the British. This is also the time when Adi comes back to Burma to take care of his family business. Upon his arrival, he gets engaged to a British Tasildar’s daughter. Just as he is set to get married, the atrocities of the British keep growing and Adi is forced to fight the British.
    1945
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    哥斯拉1954(Gojira) - 电影

    1954美国科幻片
    1954年,正当原子弹的恐怖仍然徘徊于大部分日本国民的心中时,日本银幕上出现了一头比原子弹更恐怖,更具破坏力的大怪兽!
    哥斯拉1954(Gojira)
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    鸡毛信(1954) - 电影

    1954内地战争片
    抗日战争时期,华北根据地龙门村有赵姓父子两人,父亲(舒适 饰)是民兵队中队长,12岁的儿子海娃(蔡元元 饰)则是儿童团团长。某天,赵父让海娃给八路军送一封有关攻打日军炮楼的鸡毛信,海娃装扮成放羊娃赶着一群羊携信上路。路途,海娃遇到敌人,急中生智把信藏在绵羊的尾巴之下,逃过一劫。海娃被迫带路,晚上却趁敌人熟睡取信逃跑,中间信一度得而复失、失而复得,海娃也再落敌人之手,这回,聪明勇敢的他将敌人引上了歧途,而敌人发现上当时,打伤了海娃的手,这时,八路军赶到。
    鸡毛信(1954)
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    湖中央 - 电影

    2017法国剧情·短片
    导演:Guillaume Mainguet
    After the cremation of his father, Vincent and his family gather relatives in the back shop of the family butchery for a final tribute. Vincent announce to his family that he leaves for some time with his boyfriend Olivier.
    湖中央
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    中央谷地 - 纪录片

    2000美国纪录片
    导演:詹姆斯·班宁
    I began El Valley Centro in November of 1998; I was driving through the Great Central Valley looking for places to film. I wasn’t going to start shooting for at least six months; I wanted to just look and listen – to get to know the Valley well before I would make images. But almost immediately I came across an oil well fire with flames high into the sky. I returned home for my Bolex and Nagra. Determined that landscape is a function of time, I let a full roll of 16mm film (100 feet) run through the camera. At that moment I knew I would make a portrait of The Great Central Valley using 35 two and a half minute shots.   As its name suggests, the Great Central Valley – El Valley Centro in Spanish – runs long and wide down the middle of California, encompassing much of that vast state’s cultivated farmland. Benning’s film explores this vast area, his camera pausing for the allotted two and a half minutes before he cuts to another location, another vista presented for our absorption. There are no ‘actors’ as such, no ‘characters’, no ‘dialogue’ as we know it, no ‘narration’ as we know it, hardly any sounds, hardly any ‘real’ action.   But the audience soon realises that each of these apparent ‘absences’ is, in Benning’s hands, a plus. He forces us to concentrate our eyes and ears on what he shows us, and the attentive viewer will find their efforts more than amply rewarded. As well as slowly compiling a remarkable portrait of a remarkable place, Benning thrillingly redefines the basic syntax of film-making and film-watching. The effect is staggering – as one of Caspar David Friedrich’s contemporaries commented when seeing his painting ‘Monk by the Sea’ for the first time: “it is as if one’s eyelids had been cut off.”   The film begins with a shot of a lake, apparently draining away into what looks like a huge plughole. It’s an ideal starting point – we’re being drawn into Benning’s world as surely as the water is being drawn into that hole, and we’re aware that our eye is specifically being directed to a certain point on the screen. But the two and a half minutes for which this shot is projected gives us ample time to explore the peripheries, and this is also part of Benning’s grand design. This is equally true of the remaining 34 shots in the sequence – he shows us places where ‘nothing’ is apparently happening, but which he reveals as stages on which a drama unfolds: the ‘subject’ of the shot may be a series of tiny orange blobs in the distance (as in the sequence showing a penitentiary), but they’re enough. We can work out the rest for ourselves.   Benning works at the interface of mathematics and geography: the exact position of the camera is absolutely crucial – he’s faced with an infinite number of possibilities, and the essence of El Valley Centro lies in his process of selection. Timing is equally important – there’s no environment in the world where this kind of film can’t be made, provided the right two and a half minutes are chosen. Benning’s judgement is exceptional, and he’s also aided by some providential turns of fate, trains and cars coming into our out of shot at just the right time.   The most spectacular moment of serendipity comes during a shot of a large ship making its progress along a river – the river is invisible, all we can see is fields. Then, coming the other way, a smaller boat appears and passes in front of the ship. For a moment we’re disoriented – how can the water run both ways at once? Then we realise it’s more a matter of how the craft are being propelled. But while this activity is taking place on the water, a car appears – the road is as invisible as the channels – and zips along and out of sight. It’s a delightful moment of accidental choreography (just like a later shot of tumbleweeds skidding across a dusty scrubland, almost alive, like the corps in a Martian ballet.)   Benning himself calls the ship/boat/car scene ‘such a crowd-pleaser,’ ahere’s an unexpected strain of humour in the film – most overtly in the sequence showing a champion goat-tier, repeatedly catching, tying then letting go an increasingly befuddled-looking goat with her back squarely to camera. Once he’s established certain ‘rules’, Benning is able to have fun with his choice of images – on more than one occasion he has characters going about their work in the fields, slowly advancing towards the camera, closer and closer until they seem sure to collide. At the last minute, however, they turn back, never even acknowledging Benning’s presence. This is just as well – after just a few minutes inside the Benning world-view, the viewer’s eyes effectively become Benning’s camera: and if any of the figures in the landscape did look up and catch us staring, it would be impossible not to flinch and look guiltily away.   But the workers-in-the-field shots connect to Benning’s serious theme: he shows the Valley as a place of toil, of man’s incursion into the natural environment and, most of all, of ownership. After the final two-and-a-half-minute ‘action’ shot there’s a final section of equal length telling us where each sequence was filmed and, in most cases, which farming conglomerate owns the land. But Benning’s careful, patient approach invests so much in each scrap of landscape that he, too, becomes a kind of ‘owner’ – as do we, watching in the cinema as the indelible images burn into our minds.   As Chinatown famously shows us, water and power go hand in hand in California: one of the most fascinating of El Valley Centro’s shots shows the welcoming ‘gate’ above the road entering the city of Modesto, a neon slogan-board reading ‘Water wealth contentment health.’ The phrase takes on a savage irony in this kind of exhaustive geographical-political-social context: the film starts and ends with water, water flows through so many of the frames, its moneyed manipulators sequestered in offices far away from Benning’s prying lens. Modesto also happens to be George Lucas’s home town, the place he set his masterpiece American Graffiti – perhaps in homage, Benning’s Modesto shot also includes cars at night, the retro glow of neon, the excited voices of teenagers as they drive in and out of the frame. You have to strain to hear them, of course – but this is a film in which the buzzing of a fly becomes a major movie event. This is a film whose every single shot deserves a full-length essay of its own.
    中央谷地
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    中央机场 - 电视剧

    2018法国·德国·巴西人文·社会
    导演:卡里姆·埃诺兹
    2014年,巴西阿尔及利亚导演卡里姆·埃诺兹曾带着前作《未来海岸》来到柏林,并提名最佳影片。新片《中央机场》是一部关于柏林废弃机场THF(滕珀尔霍夫机场)的纪录片,讲述关于出发与到达的议题,以及那些来这里逃离日常生活的柏林人和那些终于“到达”于此的难民。
    中央机场
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