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    高高的陷阱 - 电影

    1962美国动画·短片
    导演:Gene Deitch
    演员:Allen Swift
    蛮荒西部,非法横行。杰瑞是当地一个臭名昭著的奶酪大盗,他经常潜入当地的奶酪店大快朵颐,任凭老板如何防范也挡不住他的脚步。奶酪老板恼羞成怒,找到小镇治安官要求严惩杰瑞。警长淡定自若,声称已经请来技术高超的捕鼠专家汤姆,不日将把杰瑞捉拿归案。这一消息也让在门外偷听的杰瑞恐慌不已。未过多久,高傲自信的汤姆抵达小镇,他在警长面前大秀自己拙劣的手法和技巧,稍后奉命和杰瑞站在小镇中央决斗。可是他忙中出错,闹出丢脸的事来,反倒由此助长了杰瑞的嚣张气焰。   此后,杰瑞逃进家中,而愤怒的汤姆依然想将他捉拿归案,警匪之争逐渐升级……
    高高的陷阱
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    高高的陷阱 - 电影

    1962美国动画·短片
    导演:Gene Deitch
    演员:Allen Swift
    蛮荒西部,非法横行。杰瑞是当地一个臭名昭著的奶酪大盗,他经常潜入当地的奶酪店大快朵颐,任凭老板如何防范也挡不住他的脚步。奶酪老板恼羞成怒,找到小镇治安官要求严惩杰瑞。警长淡定自若,声称已经请来技术高超的捕鼠专家汤姆,不日将把杰瑞捉拿归案。这一消息也让在门外偷听的杰瑞恐慌不已。未过多久,高傲自信的汤姆抵达小镇,他在警长面前大秀自己拙劣的手法和技巧,稍后奉命和杰瑞站在小镇中央决斗。可是他忙中出错,闹出丢脸的事来,反倒由此助长了杰瑞的嚣张气焰。   此后,杰瑞逃进家中,而愤怒的汤姆依然想将他捉拿归案,警匪之争逐渐升级……
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    乐高的秘密世界 - 电视剧

    2015其他·丹麦·英国社会
    导演:Christian Trumble
    演员:Matthew Ashton Hugh Bonneville Justin Ramsden
    去年乐高成为最盈利的桌面游戏制造商。我们去探索使它与众不同的原因,采访它的一些关键人物,并且前所未有地揭示该公司更多的DNA。
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    哦,至高的光 - 电影

    2010法国短片
    导演:Jean·Marie Straub
    演员:Giorgio Passerone
    Taking the last verses of Paradise in Dante Alighieri’s The Divine Comedy, Straub extends the same didactic/exploratory tendencies he already was trying with texts by Cesare Pavese in Dalla nube alla resistenza (1979) and its sequel, Quei loro incontri (2006). Now, the meditation deals with repetition, light, and absence, using Edgar Varèse’s genius in an introduction that sets a somber tone so what comes next would be pure light and sublimation. (-bafici.gob.ar)   There's no denying that the late work of Jean-Marie Straub can be highly forbidding, even by the tough-minded, rigorous standards established throughout his career with his late partner Daniéle Huillet. Ironically, one of the aspects of Straub-Huillet work that has made it so challenging, so seemingly resistant to immediate viewing comprehension as well as closer analysis, is the fact that on its surface it often appears quite simple.   The Straubian method entails shooting with direct sound, minimal camera movement, and a highly focused, almost declamatory performance style that foregrounds the text being presented rather than any actorly or theatrical values. There is almost a "readers' theatre" quality to Straub's films. But if one were forced to generalize about this highly developed method, it would probably be most correct to say that it stakes out a territory between two kinds of modernism.. On the one hand, the modernism of Clement Greenberg is present, in that these films insist upon the separation of their elements and the maintenance of each contributing artform in its irreducible specificity. Writing remains writing, not theatre; music is music; and film, film. On the other hand, Straub employs the modernist intransigence of Theodor Adorno's "negative dialectic." The films exist as aesthetic objects, in a relative autonomy. But they simultaneously gesture outward, into the material specificity of the landscape they occupy, the concrete visual and soundworld that envelops the filmic act, but does not transform it into fiction (or vice versa). Straub's method maintains a tension between a documentary foundation -- that which is recorded in the profilmic scene -- and a rehearsal or reconstitution of the creative energies of a previous moment in history -- the instantiation of a text or set of texts not from the "now." From an Adornian standpoint, these two times might one day be reconciled in a utopian social form as yet unformulated. For now, their irreconcilability indicates the work we still have before us.   In some ways, O somma luce is the most satisfying of Straub's landscape based works, although I hesitate to say so. I tend to find it the most open and inviting of his films since Huillet's passing. But I don't entirely trust this impression, and even as I articulate it I wonder if perhaps I missed some complicating nuances. Here, the separation of aesthetic elements is made nearly absolute, and while Straub has mined this terrain before, O somma luce's use of stark sensory contrast is more explicitly bolstered through the film's own thematics. The first eight or so minutes of the film are imageless black digital video. Inside this "video void" (to borrow David Larcher's term), we hear one of the most distinctive works in the modern repertoire, Déserts (first movement) by Edgard Varèse. This 1954 chamber work, which includes electronic elements on tape, is notable for its wide ranging dynamics -- piercing horns, pealing bells, a substantial percussion variance at the base, and generally a great deal of sonic space throughout. In a sense, Déserts is a logical extension of the explorations one finds in Mahler (a Straub favorite), while Varèse has clearly abandoned tonality for clusters of sound that, for lack of the technical expertise to describe them, I would have to call primal in their sense of generative force. This could be said to rhyme, in a broad sense, with Straub's cinematic use of space and landscape. There is a radical particularity in the land formations Straub commits to film or video; in using the camera to register a place's sonic existence, or its reflected light, Straub is also giving us a concrete segment of its accumulated physical history, practically a core sample. So in that regard, Déserts is music that hints at pure sound, the sound between sounds, and the molecular level of deep listening.   The final few notes of the movement are heard in a "sound bleed," a (literally) pivotal moment in O somma luce. This half-second, which takes us from darkness to light, is so out of character with Straub's customary insistence on separation, and on unadulterated straight cuts, that it is quite shocking indeed. Of course, in the context of another filmmaker's work, it wouldn't register as anything strange at all. But there is something in the explicit themes of O somma luce which could explain why such an uncharacteristic transition seemed like Straub's best choice. This pivot, after all, gives us a moment of "total cinema," of music, text, performance, and conventional editing -- an Adornian utopia, if you will -- which then slips away. Afterward, we are in a rustic but nondescript Italian landscape, rocky hills in the background, as actor Giorgio Passerone reads Canto XXXIII from Dante's Paradiso. This Canto is the story of the creation and recognition of Light. In fact, in its description of moving from darkness to illumination, ignorance to knowledge, Canto III clearly prefigures the "Untutored Eye" doctrine of Stan Brakhage's Metaphors on Vision. Dante was an obvious influence of Brakhage, and just as Brakhage posited a pre- and post-lapsarian narrative of light-bathed sensation and the subsequent fall into language, so O somma luce presents an unexpected "knot" of confluence (the music / image union) which is instantly thrown into the past the minute its existence is even recognized. This desire to reclaim the moment of Light's epiphany, while recognizing its impossibility, is encapsulated in lines 67 through 75 of Dante's Canto: "O Light exalted beyond mortal thought, / grant that in memory I see again / but one small part of how you then appeared / and grant my tongue sufficient power / that it may leave behind a single spark / of glory for the people yet to come, / since, if you return but briefly to my mind / and then resound but softly in these lines, / the better will your victory be conceived."   It is, interestingly, at this point in O somma luce that Passerone pauses, picks his script up from the ground, adjusts his glasses, and continues reading. The film then cuts to a left to right tracking shot of the skyline above the landscape, with mountains in the background. The shot ends on a thicket of brush tangled in a ragged fence. Straub repeats this arc (Heideggerian earth and sky, down to the banal ground of private property) twice, with slightly different qualities of sunlight. During this segment, Passerone reads the following lines: "substances, accidents, and the interplay between them, / as though they were conflated in such ways / that what I tell is but a simple light. / I believe I understood the universal form / of this dense knot because I feel my joy expand, / rejoicing as I speak of it." That is to say, Dante believes that he can extract the sense of Holy Light from the ordinary, profane illuminations surrounding him. O soma luce clearly agrees, but from the same sort of standpoint that, once upon a time, "stood Hegel on his head." "Exalted Light" is the close, sensual appreciation of this world, the only one within which we're privileged to exist, the one we are charged with stewarding. For Straub, this is the materialist reading of Dante. It's Canto XXXIII, refracted through the window of "Feuerbach" Thesis 11. (-academichack.net)
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    最高的奖赏 - 电影

    1939苏联 Soviet Union剧情·悬疑
    导演:Yevgeni Shneider
    演员:Nikolai Svobodin Tamara Altseva Vladimir Tumalaryants
    通过某帝国主义国家企图盗窃苏联军事设计图样,揭露了帝国主义间谍、特务分子的无耻阴谋,歌颂了苏联保卫工作者认真负责、忘我的工作作风和机智勇敢的高度爱国主义精神,使间谍特务全部落网。
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    哦,至高的光 - 电影

    2010法国短片
    导演:Jean·Marie Straub
    演员:Giorgio Passerone
    Taking the last verses of Paradise in Dante Alighieri’s The Divine Comedy, Straub extends the same didactic/exploratory tendencies he already was trying with texts by Cesare Pavese in Dalla nube alla resistenza (1979) and its sequel, Quei loro incontri (2006). Now, the meditation deals with repetition, light, and absence, using Edgar Varèse’s genius in an introduction that sets a somber tone so what comes next would be pure light and sublimation. (-bafici.gob.ar)   There's no denying that the late work of Jean-Marie Straub can be highly forbidding, even by the tough-minded, rigorous standards established throughout his career with his late partner Daniéle Huillet. Ironically, one of the aspects of Straub-Huillet work that has made it so challenging, so seemingly resistant to immediate viewing comprehension as well as closer analysis, is the fact that on its surface it often appears quite simple.   The Straubian method entails shooting with direct sound, minimal camera movement, and a highly focused, almost declamatory performance style that foregrounds the text being presented rather than any actorly or theatrical values. There is almost a "readers' theatre" quality to Straub's films. But if one were forced to generalize about this highly developed method, it would probably be most correct to say that it stakes out a territory between two kinds of modernism.. On the one hand, the modernism of Clement Greenberg is present, in that these films insist upon the separation of their elements and the maintenance of each contributing artform in its irreducible specificity. Writing remains writing, not theatre; music is music; and film, film. On the other hand, Straub employs the modernist intransigence of Theodor Adorno's "negative dialectic." The films exist as aesthetic objects, in a relative autonomy. But they simultaneously gesture outward, into the material specificity of the landscape they occupy, the concrete visual and soundworld that envelops the filmic act, but does not transform it into fiction (or vice versa). Straub's method maintains a tension between a documentary foundation -- that which is recorded in the profilmic scene -- and a rehearsal or reconstitution of the creative energies of a previous moment in history -- the instantiation of a text or set of texts not from the "now." From an Adornian standpoint, these two times might one day be reconciled in a utopian social form as yet unformulated. For now, their irreconcilability indicates the work we still have before us.   In some ways, O somma luce is the most satisfying of Straub's landscape based works, although I hesitate to say so. I tend to find it the most open and inviting of his films since Huillet's passing. But I don't entirely trust this impression, and even as I articulate it I wonder if perhaps I missed some complicating nuances. Here, the separation of aesthetic elements is made nearly absolute, and while Straub has mined this terrain before, O somma luce's use of stark sensory contrast is more explicitly bolstered through the film's own thematics. The first eight or so minutes of the film are imageless black digital video. Inside this "video void" (to borrow David Larcher's term), we hear one of the most distinctive works in the modern repertoire, Déserts (first movement) by Edgard Varèse. This 1954 chamber work, which includes electronic elements on tape, is notable for its wide ranging dynamics -- piercing horns, pealing bells, a substantial percussion variance at the base, and generally a great deal of sonic space throughout. In a sense, Déserts is a logical extension of the explorations one finds in Mahler (a Straub favorite), while Varèse has clearly abandoned tonality for clusters of sound that, for lack of the technical expertise to describe them, I would have to call primal in their sense of generative force. This could be said to rhyme, in a broad sense, with Straub's cinematic use of space and landscape. There is a radical particularity in the land formations Straub commits to film or video; in using the camera to register a place's sonic existence, or its reflected light, Straub is also giving us a concrete segment of its accumulated physical history, practically a core sample. So in that regard, Déserts is music that hints at pure sound, the sound between sounds, and the molecular level of deep listening.   The final few notes of the movement are heard in a "sound bleed," a (literally) pivotal moment in O somma luce. This half-second, which takes us from darkness to light, is so out of character with Straub's customary insistence on separation, and on unadulterated straight cuts, that it is quite shocking indeed. Of course, in the context of another filmmaker's work, it wouldn't register as anything strange at all. But there is something in the explicit themes of O somma luce which could explain why such an uncharacteristic transition seemed like Straub's best choice. This pivot, after all, gives us a moment of "total cinema," of music, text, performance, and conventional editing -- an Adornian utopia, if you will -- which then slips away. Afterward, we are in a rustic but nondescript Italian landscape, rocky hills in the background, as actor Giorgio Passerone reads Canto XXXIII from Dante's Paradiso. This Canto is the story of the creation and recognition of Light. In fact, in its description of moving from darkness to illumination, ignorance to knowledge, Canto III clearly prefigures the "Untutored Eye" doctrine of Stan Brakhage's Metaphors on Vision. Dante was an obvious influence of Brakhage, and just as Brakhage posited a pre- and post-lapsarian narrative of light-bathed sensation and the subsequent fall into language, so O somma luce presents an unexpected "knot" of confluence (the music / image union) which is instantly thrown into the past the minute its existence is even recognized. This desire to reclaim the moment of Light's epiphany, while recognizing its impossibility, is encapsulated in lines 67 through 75 of Dante's Canto: "O Light exalted beyond mortal thought, / grant that in memory I see again / but one small part of how you then appeared / and grant my tongue sufficient power / that it may leave behind a single spark / of glory for the people yet to come, / since, if you return but briefly to my mind / and then resound but softly in these lines, / the better will your victory be conceived."   It is, interestingly, at this point in O somma luce that Passerone pauses, picks his script up from the ground, adjusts his glasses, and continues reading. The film then cuts to a left to right tracking shot of the skyline above the landscape, with mountains in the background. The shot ends on a thicket of brush tangled in a ragged fence. Straub repeats this arc (Heideggerian earth and sky, down to the banal ground of private property) twice, with slightly different qualities of sunlight. During this segment, Passerone reads the following lines: "substances, accidents, and the interplay between them, / as though they were conflated in such ways / that what I tell is but a simple light. / I believe I understood the universal form / of this dense knot because I feel my joy expand, / rejoicing as I speak of it." That is to say, Dante believes that he can extract the sense of Holy Light from the ordinary, profane illuminations surrounding him. O soma luce clearly agrees, but from the same sort of standpoint that, once upon a time, "stood Hegel on his head." "Exalted Light" is the close, sensual appreciation of this world, the only one within which we're privileged to exist, the one we are charged with stewarding. For Straub, this is the materialist reading of Dante. It's Canto XXXIII, refracted through the window of "Feuerbach" Thesis 11. (-academichack.net)
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    凡高的生与死 - 电影

    1987澳大利亚·比利时剧情·动画·传记
    导演:保罗·考克斯
    演员:约翰·赫特 马里卡·里维拉 Gabriella Trsek
    本部纪录片以梵高在1872年直到1890年间,给其弟提奥的书信为线索,用画外音的叙述方式,向我们描绘了这位天才画家的心灵自述。用直击灵魂的第一视角,再现了他的生与死。这些描摹梵高视觉的主观镜头,加之代言其身的画外音,既无任何梵高生前的画作,也无煽情矫作的表演高潮。一切,都恰如其分的记录着这高贵又痛苦的灵魂。《村声》杂志称:这是一部难得的正直触及天才灵魂的作品。   本片被赞誉为影史上关于艺术家的最好的纪录片之一。在短短的一个多小时的时光中,写尽了这位伟大的艺术家的一生。
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    乐高的故事 - 电影

    2012丹麦动画·短片
    导演:Kim Pagel
    THE LEGO GROUP CELEBRATES ITS 80TH BIRTHDAY WITH AN ANIMATED LOOK BACK AT ITS ORIGINS AND HISTORY. AN UNUSUALLY AMBITIOUS AND BLATANT BRANDED FILM.
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    走进乐高的圣诞世界 - 电视剧

    2015其他·英国社会
    2015年,乐高被评为世界最强品牌,乐高的总部设在丹麦,这一家族企业已经成为国际巨头。圣诞节是乐高的重大工程期之一,在此期间可生产1.7吨积木,也是乐高多语言呼叫中心一年里最繁忙的时候。走进乐高积木铁杆粉丝的圣诞世界!
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    那孩子的孩子 - 电视剧

    2024日本剧情·爱情
    导演:阿部罗秀伸 山浦未阳 松浦健志
    演员:樱田日和 细田佳央太 茅岛水树
    本剧改编自同名漫画,讲述了高中2年级的川上福,和青梅竹马的恋人月岛宝,父母也公认两人的关系,两人分别上不同的高中,度过了平静的青春时代。不久,两人自然而然地以恋人的身份相爱并结合。但是,有一天,避孕失败了,之后,发现身体的异常的福怀孕了。为绝不可能发生的事情而烦恼、纠结的两人,“真的能生儿育女吗?”——被提出这种根本性问题的“还是孩子”的福和宝…
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