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    真千金团灭户口本 - 电视剧

    2024电视剧
    秦音梦醒逆袭人生,虐渣宠夫掀翻绿茶妹,金融音乐神医马甲全开!
    真千金团灭户口本
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    别跑!你的户口本被我预定了 - 电视剧

    2025
    他从宿醉中醒来,身边躺着一个陌生又绝色的女人,昨夜的荒唐记忆碎片般涌上心头 —— 这是一场彻底失控的一夜情。当他离开之后却没想到这竟成了他 “噩梦” 的开始。那个女人不仅貌美如花,竟是身价百亿的集团千金。女人被父母催婚催到崩溃,于是便开始一直追着他要结婚。
    别跑!你的户口本被我预定了
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    户口 - 电视剧

    2009中国大陆剧情
    导演:傅东育
    演员:刘欣 李梦男 邵峰
    剧情简介:中国老百姓是家家有户口,人人都在户口簿上,户口之重要,几乎可以影响到人的一生……围绕“城镇户口”而引发的绵延20余年故事的电视连续剧。该剧以“户口”这一影响深远的历史情节为由头,在时代大背景下展开曲折跌宕的故事,折射出改革开放20多年来中国农村、中国社会的发展历程。
    户口
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    户口 - 电视剧

    2009中国大陆农村·剧情
    导演:傅东育
    演员:刘欣 李梦男 邵峰
    剧情简介:中国老百姓是家家有户口,人人都在户口簿上,户口之重要,几乎可以影响到人的一生……围绕“城镇户口”而引发的绵延20余年故事的电视连续剧。该剧以“户口”这一影响深远的历史情节为由头,在时代大背景下展开曲折跌宕的故事,折射出改革开放20多年来中国农村、中国社会的发展历程。
    户口
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    户口 - 电视剧

    2009中国大陆农村·剧情
    演员:刘欣、李梦男、邵峰
    剧情简介:中国老百姓是家家有户口,人人都在户口簿上,户口之重要,几乎可以影响到人的一生……围绕“城镇户口”而引发的绵延20余年故事的电视连续剧。该剧以“户口”这一影响深远的历史情节为由头,在时代大背景下展开曲折跌宕的故事,折射出改革开放20多年来中国农村、中国社会的发展历程。
    户口
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    家家户户 - 电影

    1954中国香港剧情
    导演:秦劍
    演员:張瑛 紅線女 黃曼梨
    馬素琴(紅線女)自嫁章仲余(張瑛)為妻,每因家務與章母(黃曼梨)齟齬。琴懷孕後關係緩和, 到生下孩子,雙方又因不同的養育方法起爭執。琴抵受不了家婆的橫蠻, 更憤丈夫的軟弱, 一怒而去。影片最後以家婆賠不是作結, 寫得最真切的卻是左右做人難的丈夫。秦劍除了穩當地處理影片的戲劇張力外,更適當地以鏡頭展現角色之間的關係變化。新聯早期作品離不開婆媳不和,《家家戶戶》是寫得最專注深刻的一部,堪稱五十年代家庭倫理影片的經典。
    家家户户
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    一觉醒来,我上了死对头的户口本 - 电视剧

    2025中国大陆
    一觉醒来,我上了死对头的户口本
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    临终 - 纪录片

    1989美国纪录片
    导演:弗雷德里克·怀斯曼
    ''Your lungs are about as bad as they can get,'' the nurse explains to the 83-year-old man. ''Your lungs aren't going to get better, and so the act of putting you on the machine is almost a futile effort.'' In a long conversation, the nurse lets this patient know what his options are and tries to determine his wishes, as kindly as possible but with the suggestion that she has done this many times before. ''I want to help you, but I only want to help you in the manner in which you want to be helped,'' she says. ''I don't want to keep you alive unless you like living.''   A half-dozen young medical professionals gather around the bed of an old woman, a stroke victim who cannot speak and can communicate only by means of the faintest movements. They want to discuss the possibility of removing her breathing tube and the machine to which it is connected. Does she understand what the consequences of this may be? Is she prepared for the worst? Is she worried about the way her death may affect her devoted husband? The woman attempts to answer this barrage of difficult questions by weakly signaling yes or no, but she is soon exhausted. She indicates that she would like the conversation to stop.   A semiconscious man who will die within a matter of days is being groomed by a slightly impatient young nurse. He looks momentarily startled as she adjusts his head so that he can be shaved. It looks as if moving the tubes attached to his face is slightly painful. It's hard to tell. The man gives the nurse one more startled look as she perfunctorily runs a comb through his hair.   In a room filled with medical machinery, the line on a monitor goes flat. A nurse stands by, still holding the patient's hand. A doctor touches the patient efficiently, then checks for breath from her open mouth. ''Okay, she's dead,'' he says. ''7:53.''   These are the unforgettably sobering sights and sounds of ''Near Death,'' Frederick Wiseman's great, fearless and monumental six-hour documentary chronicling the workings of the medical intensive care unit at Boston's Beth Israel Hospital. They are the sorts of images that become grimly commonplace during the course of a film that is less a viewing experience than a total immersion. It isn't the running time that makes ''Near Death'' so overwhelming; it's the subject itself. But at this length, the film has time to carry its audience from an initially raw emotional response to a calmer consideration of the difficult issues raised here, and finally on to some sort of resolution.   It is Mr. Wiseman's method to make himself an extremely attentive fly on the wall, observing long exchanges between doctors and patients, doctors and family members, and among the various members of the unit's medical staff. This particular intensive care unit is not a place for emergency surgery or for treating sudden illnesses; it's a place offering medically sophisticated treatment to people whose final days mark the last stage of slow, agonizing decline. Everyone the camera observes has spent time watching life erode and has had extensive experience with debilitating pain.   One of the doctors has a sister who practices medicine at another hospital. ''She doesn't say 'What do you think?' - she says 'You're father's dying,' '' he tells a colleague. But at this particular ward, great care is taken to talk more humanely and less abrubtly about what the terminally ill patient's prospects really are, and to try to involve patients and family members in making life-or-death decisions. This is even harder than it sounds. Patients who thought they would never want heroic measures can sometimes feel differently when their worst fears become reality; relatives who want everything possible done for their loved ones reach a point where they may feel the dying patient has been through enough.   The doctors have their own perspective. Experience has inevitably touched some of them with cynicism, however hard they fight against their own pessimism. ''I really believe that from the moment that diagnosis was made - like in 'Treasure Island,' when that old captain got handed a black spot? She got handed a black spot,'' a doctor tells a colleague about one patient. ''It's not clear we have anything to offer,'' this same doctor subsequently acknowledges. ''But in this day and age, we're extremely reluctant to say 'We can't do anything for that.' '' The doctors are always first to recognize hopeless situations, and they find themselves gently trying to steer patients toward the recognition that high-tech life-prolonging efforts may be futile and self-defeating. Phrases like ''We never know the future for sure, but. . . .'' and ''a borderline situation between surviving and not surviving'' have become delicate staples of their conversation.   Among themselves, the doctors talk differently; they may use less gentle euphemisms, like ''just call it a day.'' ('' 'Quality of life' is for furniture salesmen,'' one says.) For the most part, the doctors in the film are as young and energetic as their patients are weak and old, and at times it is difficult not to regard as cavalier the very hardiness that allows them to do this work at all. One of the things that emerges over six hours is an enormous appreciation of the doctors' stamina and tact.   As ''Near Death'' focuses attention on questions of just where life ends and how its ending can best be handled, it flinches at nothing. It's not for the timid. Though there is no full autopsy sequence depicted here, doctors are seen studying diseased organs in a post-autopsy evaluation session; another section of the film shows exactly how nurses remove the dead from their rooms and transport them inconspicuously to the morgue. The nurses' casualness about this is at least as chilling as the process itself.   And if squeamishness is not spared, neither is pure emotion. There are scenes of heartbreaking tenderness in which longtime spouses, soon to be left alone, try to comfort the people they love. The families who allowed Mr. Wiseman to film long, uninterrupted takes chronicling such private and painful moments have made an invaluable contribution.   ''Near Death'' will be shown today at 11:30 as part of the New York Film Festival. Those who see it will find themselves irrevocably altered by the experience.   'We Never Know'   NEAR DEATH, directed, produced and edited by Frederick Wiseman; photography by John Davey; production company, Exit Films; a Zipporah Films Release. At Alice Tully Hall, as part of the 27th New York Film Festival. Running time: 350 minutes. This film has no rating.
    临终
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    临终 - 电影

    2019瑞典短片
    导演:Lars Vega Isabelle Björklund
    A man arrives at the hospital to see his father on his deathbed. He would like to have a last good time with him, but the father worries above all about knowing what to do with two jars of mustard that have been started.
    临终
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    临终 - 电影

    2019瑞典短片
    导演:Lars Vega Isabelle Björklund
    A man arrives at the hospital to see his father on his deathbed. He would like to have a last good time with him, but the father worries above all about knowing what to do with two jars of mustard that have been started.
    临终
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