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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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    美森谷地 - 电影

    2020中国大陆剧情
    导演:王思
    作家王思电影处女作《美森谷地》
    美森谷地
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    荆棘丛 - 电视剧

    2020美国剧情·犯罪
    导演:安娜·莉莉·阿米普尔
    演员:罗莎里奥·道森 阿德里安·贝拉尼 金·迪肯斯
    调查人员阿莱格拉·迪尔(Allegra Dill)重返得州边陲小镇圣耻(Saint Disgrace),誓将妹妹弗莉西蒂(Felicity)之死查个水落石出,不曾想个人缉凶升级为与腐败家乡的全面战争。   剧集由《大群》联合制片安迪·格林沃尔德(Andy Greenwald)开发,与《黑客军团》主创山姆·埃斯迈尔(Sam Esmail)共同执行制作,改编自美国犯罪小说家罗斯·托马斯(Ross Thomas)1984年同名作《荆棘丛》。
    荆棘丛
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    枪林炮丛 - 电影

    1961美国剧情
    导演:乔纳斯·梅卡斯
    Guns of the Trees de Jonas Mekas   Etats-Unis, 1962, 16mm, 96’, nb, vostf   interludes poétiques écrits et dits par Allen Ginsberg   musique : Lucia Dlugoszewski   avec Ben Carruthers, Argus Speare Juilliard, Frances Stillman, Adolfas Mekas, Frank Kuenstler, Leonard Hicks, Sudie Bond, Louis Brigante, Barbara Tucker, George Maciunas…   Deux couples – l’un blanc, l’autre noir – vivent à New York où plane, diffus, le spectre de la bombe atomique.   « Premier long métrage de Jonas Mekas, c’est un film vif, passionné, un enregistrement du New York des années 60. Jonas Mekas décrit ce film comme une tentative de dépeindre "l’intérieur" d’une génération à travers ses sentiments, pensées et attitudes. C’est une œuvre amère mais lyrique. C’est révolutionnaire par la forme, en étant différent par la technique de tout ce que vous avez vu jusqu’alors. C’est un poster, une déclaration, un manifeste. Je tiens Guns of the Trees pour le film le plus important et de loin de la " Nouvelle vague" américaine. »   Herman G. Weinberg
    枪林炮丛
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    蓝 - 电影

    2012中国大陆爱情·同性
    导演:高波
    演员:卢希安 宋嘉豪
    电影《蓝》由高波携主创人员在2011年春节期间远赴三亚拍摄,讲述了一个叫安的同志在去三亚的火车上认识了去海南闯荡的的直男豪,因缘际会二人住在一起,安陷入了对豪的爱而不能自拔,而豪却是一个为了发财不择手段又被人骗的人,他对Gay十分排斥。   “同志爱上直男的故事,我们已经看过或者听过很多次,但却真实发生在同人之间。痴心爱着一个不可能回报自己的人,结局往往比看上去更凄惨。作为一个同人,你是否曾经有过这样的经历?现在回想起来是否觉得自己很傻?或者,像《盛夏光年》一样充满着浓浓的情愫?不管如何,我要再讲一遍这个故事。因为,爱情有多单纯,就会换回多少伤痕。”高波在创作《蓝》缘起中如是说。   影片基调唯美,文艺气质十足,而拍摄地三亚又是风景宜人,使得观众在一睹男男情路的过程中,同时领略三亚的迷人风光。
    蓝
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    蓝 - 电影

    2025中国大陆短片
    导演:劳晓晴
    运用蓝晒工艺结合日常生活材料,以实物投影的曝光方式进行逐帧蓝晒动画的创作。我试图通过阳光收集这些寻常事物的影子,将其定格于画纸之上,记录下它们的另一面所组成的世界。
    蓝
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    蓝 - 电影

    2025中国大陆短片
    导演:劳晓晴
    运用蓝晒工艺结合日常生活材料,以实物投影的曝光方式进行逐帧蓝晒动画的创作。我试图通过阳光收集这些寻常事物的影子,将其定格于画纸之上,记录下它们的另一面所组成的世界。
    蓝
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    蓝 - 电影

    2024美国剧情·短片
    导演:高歌
    演员:Angela Lin Stacy Pan Chu
    Meng Lan, a 15-year-old Chinese girl, received a spine surgery which traumatized her both physically and mentally. Being in a foreign country, the conflict between Meng and her mother Wen Li became even more violent. Coincidentally, she had a chance to meet Olivia, an ethnic Chinese girl adopted by an American couple. The two girls quickly became close friends.   Olivia invited Meng Lan to go swimming and encouraged her to do whatever she wants. Meng Lan kept the truth from Wen Li that she skipped her rehabilitation training and tried returning into water for the first time after her surgery. While enjoying the pleasure brought by rebellion, her relationship with Olivia is also experiencing a subtle change.   However, Wen Li soon discovered Meng Lan’s secret. She decided to end Meng’s rehabilitation earlier and take her back home...
    蓝
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    蓝 - 电影

    2006日本情色
    导演:神野太
    演员:紅月ルナ 柳之内たくま 須加尾由二
    蓝
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    蓝 - 电影

    2018德国动画·短片
    导演:David Jansen
    The ocean. The vastness of the sea. A whale cow and her calf. In Blau the life and mythology of these giant marine mammals are woven into one fantastical story.
    蓝
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