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    脸红的夏日 - 电影

    2009阿根廷·西班牙·法国剧情
    导演:茱莉亚·索罗门诺芙
    演员:Guadalupe Alonso Nicolás Treise 米涅娜·帕斯夸尔
    故事发生在风景如画的阿根廷。对少女桥格林纳(瓜妲卢裴·阿隆索 Guadalupe Alonso 饰)来说,炎热的夏天意味着洒满阳光的小路、划过脸颊的微咸汗水和肆意挥洒的灿烂笑容。然而,这一年,桥格林纳发现在不经意之间,自己的周围已经发生了翻天覆地的变化,父母之间的关系越来越差,渐渐长大的姐姐开始不再愿意和自己一同玩耍。   郁闷之中,桥格林纳跟随着父亲来到了风景如画的乡间,在那里,她遇见了农夫的儿子马里奥(尼可拉斯·特雷瑟 Nicolás Treise 饰)。懵懂的爱情,甜蜜的禁果,仿佛一夜长大的桥格林纳逐渐看清了人生的真相,以纯真而又懵懂的方式与所有人分享着她的快乐和秘密。
    脸红的夏日
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    脸红的夏日 - 电影

    2009阿根廷·西班牙·法国剧情
    导演:茱莉亚·索罗门诺芙
    演员:Guadalupe Alonso Nicolás Treise 米涅娜·帕斯夸尔
    故事发生在风景如画的阿根廷。对少女桥格林纳(瓜妲卢裴·阿隆索 Guadalupe Alonso 饰)来说,炎热的夏天意味着洒满阳光的小路、划过脸颊的微咸汗水和肆意挥洒的灿烂笑容。然而,这一年,桥格林纳发现在不经意之间,自己的周围已经发生了翻天覆地的变化,父母之间的关系越来越差,渐渐长大的姐姐开始不再愿意和自己一同玩耍。   郁闷之中,桥格林纳跟随着父亲来到了风景如画的乡间,在那里,她遇见了农夫的儿子马里奥(尼可拉斯·特雷瑟 Nicolás Treise 饰)。懵懂的爱情,甜蜜的禁果,仿佛一夜长大的桥格林纳逐渐看清了人生的真相,以纯真而又懵懂的方式与所有人分享着她的快乐和秘密。
    脸红的夏日
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    脸红的儿媳妇 - 电影

    2020韩国剧情
    导演:Choi Sung·eun
    Hail is worried because Seungha, a pretty and sexy daughter-in-law, looks like a woman these days. An open-minded way of walking around the house in short clothes without hesitation, showing aegyo, etc. It is becoming increasingly intolerable to the tsunami. Hearing the sound of his son Do-jin and Seung-ha having sex is also starting to get harder. One day, the tsunami was spent relaxing at an illegal massage parlor. He takes a nap, but Seung-ha appears and seduces himself to dream of having sex. Seungha gazes at the tsunami who wakes up after having a sweet dream.
    脸红的儿媳妇
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    脸红的神仙游戏 - 综艺

    2021韩国真人秀
    演员:徐章勋 金钟国 成始璄
    脸红的方便面研究所,以神仙游戏回归!众多厨艺高手的比拼下,以挑食为名的四位神仙,谁将获得金斧头?
    脸红的神仙游戏
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    脸红的神仙游戏 - 综艺

    2021韩国真人秀
    演员:徐章勋 金钟国 成始璄
    脸红的方便面研究所,以神仙游戏回归!众多厨艺高手的比拼下,以挑食为名的四位神仙,谁将获得金斧头?
    脸红的神仙游戏
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    马赛 - 电影

    2004德国·法国剧情
    导演:安格拉·夏娜莱克
    演员:玛伦·艾格特 艾米莉·阿特夫 亚历克西·洛雷
    The first movie of the "Berliner Schule" ("La Nouvelle Vague Allemande" Cahiers Du Cinema) that gained international recognition with it being screened in the "Un certain regard"-section of Cannes Film Festival 2004.   After the very sparse white on black of the opening credits we see the back of Sophie's head. She's in a car, she speaks awkward French, the woman who drives gets out, gets her a map, of Marseille. We learn, very soon, that they are exchanging apartments, the other woman, her name, we learn later, is Zelda, will go to Berlin and Sophie will stay, for a few weeks, in Marseille. Zelda says: Guten Tag, Auf Wiedersehen, Mein Freund, der Baum, ist tot - the latter phrase being a German song by a German singer who died young. Zelda disappears, Sophie stays. Zelda very literally disappears because there won't be a trace of her when Sophie will return to Berlin. The Marseille apartment, empty, unlived in as it is, will have been a gift, something inexplicably given in a film that ends with something - almost a life - taken.   Sophie, for the first third of the film, is in Marseille. She walks around, she takes pictures. She looks at the pictures, she moves without a direction, the camera is with her, sometimes distant, sometimes following her closely. Sophie is a stranger in a strange world, she sometimes seems cut off from her surroundings. We hear sounds, we see her face but the background is blurred. She does not seem unhappy, she does not seem happy. She does not talk much and she always thinks for a long time when she is asked. In the end she will be asked what it is she photographs. She will think for half a minute (or perhaps she does not think, but simply refuses to answer, to herself, to the policeman who asks) and then she says: The streets.   We do not know much of her and we do not learn much of her in these minutes we spend in Marseille, walking around with her. She meets a young man from a garage, who lends her his car, she drives around, which we don't see. There is a lot we don't see - although it takes some time to realize how much. She meets the young man in a bar, they drink, a friend arrives who insults Sophie, for no reason. Sophie and Pierre, the young man, walk up in a street that is lit in brownish golden light and they sleep with each other, which we don't see (and, really, don't know). The next night they dance.   One very sharp cut later Sophie is back in Berlin, she is approached by a young woman who returns a cap to her, a cap she has left in a McDonald's restaurant before she went to Marseille. There is more she has left, or rather: she has run away from. (At least this is what can - but does not have to be - inferred.) There is Ivan, a photographer she might be in love with. There is Hanna, an actress, Ivan's girl friend, their son Anton. We learn more about Ivan, we learn more about Hanna. We see Ivan taking pictures of women workers in a factory, without an explanation. We just see and watch. We watch the women from a sidewards angle, then we watch Ivan taking the pictures, then we watch the woman from Ivan's perspective. They talk, but not much. We just hear and see and watch. There is a lot we see - although it takes some time to realize how much. We are left with these images. They remain unexplained and they don't explain what we see. "Marseille" has a bewildering structure, switching from the elliptical cut (shocking, really) to the insistent gaze (frustrating first, but amazing after all).   For ten minutes, at least, we watch a rehearsal. Hanna plays a minor role in a Strindberg play. The same scene is rehearsed three times. We watch the man talking to the woman in an aggressive Strindberg way and we see Hanna entering the stage. Then the camera moves to the left and we watch the woman answering to the man in an aggressive Strindberg way. This time we don't see Hanna entering the stage. When leaving she makes a mistake, she adds a word that does not belong in her line. We see her then off stage, cowering. Hanna is not happy. She is not happy with David, she suffers from unexplainable pain. We do not learn much more about her. Sophie is out of sight for quite some time. We start doubting if this is really her story we are told. Oh yes, it is, but Schanelec refuses to follow her and her story in linear fashion. Ivan's taking of pictures, Hanna's rehearsal become important, not so much as explanations for their behaviour, just as the parts of their lives Schanelec has decided to follow.   Sophie then returns to Marseille and after the most daring ellipsis we see her at a police station, in a yellow dress. She sits, then she talks, then she does not talk for half a minute. She is asked what it is she photographs. The streets, she says after what seems a very long time. She cries. We see her on a sidewalk, the camera moving parallel to her. She crosses the street, the camera remains on the sidewalk, Sophie is moving away from it. Then she stops and the camera stops. She enters the German consulate. In Schanelec's (and cinematographer Reinhold Vorschneider's) films you see the most intelligent and subtle travellings imaginable - and even mor effective as they starkly contrast with a lot of very long, very static takes that just make you watch and see.   "Marseille" ends with a series of takes on the beach. It is getting dark, the streetlamps are switched on. We see Sophie in her yellow dress, distant, moving, we see the sea and there is a strange kind of consolation in this image of the dress, Sophie, the sea.
    马赛
    搜索《马赛》
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    马赛 - 电影

    2004德国·法国剧情
    导演:安格拉·夏娜莱克
    演员:玛伦·艾格特 艾米莉·阿特夫 亚历克西·洛雷
    The first movie of the "Berliner Schule" ("La Nouvelle Vague Allemande" Cahiers Du Cinema) that gained international recognition with it being screened in the "Un certain regard"-section of Cannes Film Festival 2004.   After the very sparse white on black of the opening credits we see the back of Sophie's head. She's in a car, she speaks awkward French, the woman who drives gets out, gets her a map, of Marseille. We learn, very soon, that they are exchanging apartments, the other woman, her name, we learn later, is Zelda, will go to Berlin and Sophie will stay, for a few weeks, in Marseille. Zelda says: Guten Tag, Auf Wiedersehen, Mein Freund, der Baum, ist tot - the latter phrase being a German song by a German singer who died young. Zelda disappears, Sophie stays. Zelda very literally disappears because there won't be a trace of her when Sophie will return to Berlin. The Marseille apartment, empty, unlived in as it is, will have been a gift, something inexplicably given in a film that ends with something - almost a life - taken.   Sophie, for the first third of the film, is in Marseille. She walks around, she takes pictures. She looks at the pictures, she moves without a direction, the camera is with her, sometimes distant, sometimes following her closely. Sophie is a stranger in a strange world, she sometimes seems cut off from her surroundings. We hear sounds, we see her face but the background is blurred. She does not seem unhappy, she does not seem happy. She does not talk much and she always thinks for a long time when she is asked. In the end she will be asked what it is she photographs. She will think for half a minute (or perhaps she does not think, but simply refuses to answer, to herself, to the policeman who asks) and then she says: The streets.   We do not know much of her and we do not learn much of her in these minutes we spend in Marseille, walking around with her. She meets a young man from a garage, who lends her his car, she drives around, which we don't see. There is a lot we don't see - although it takes some time to realize how much. She meets the young man in a bar, they drink, a friend arrives who insults Sophie, for no reason. Sophie and Pierre, the young man, walk up in a street that is lit in brownish golden light and they sleep with each other, which we don't see (and, really, don't know). The next night they dance.   One very sharp cut later Sophie is back in Berlin, she is approached by a young woman who returns a cap to her, a cap she has left in a McDonald's restaurant before she went to Marseille. There is more she has left, or rather: she has run away from. (At least this is what can - but does not have to be - inferred.) There is Ivan, a photographer she might be in love with. There is Hanna, an actress, Ivan's girl friend, their son Anton. We learn more about Ivan, we learn more about Hanna. We see Ivan taking pictures of women workers in a factory, without an explanation. We just see and watch. We watch the women from a sidewards angle, then we watch Ivan taking the pictures, then we watch the woman from Ivan's perspective. They talk, but not much. We just hear and see and watch. There is a lot we see - although it takes some time to realize how much. We are left with these images. They remain unexplained and they don't explain what we see. "Marseille" has a bewildering structure, switching from the elliptical cut (shocking, really) to the insistent gaze (frustrating first, but amazing after all).   For ten minutes, at least, we watch a rehearsal. Hanna plays a minor role in a Strindberg play. The same scene is rehearsed three times. We watch the man talking to the woman in an aggressive Strindberg way and we see Hanna entering the stage. Then the camera moves to the left and we watch the woman answering to the man in an aggressive Strindberg way. This time we don't see Hanna entering the stage. When leaving she makes a mistake, she adds a word that does not belong in her line. We see her then off stage, cowering. Hanna is not happy. She is not happy with David, she suffers from unexplainable pain. We do not learn much more about her. Sophie is out of sight for quite some time. We start doubting if this is really her story we are told. Oh yes, it is, but Schanelec refuses to follow her and her story in linear fashion. Ivan's taking of pictures, Hanna's rehearsal become important, not so much as explanations for their behaviour, just as the parts of their lives Schanelec has decided to follow.   Sophie then returns to Marseille and after the most daring ellipsis we see her at a police station, in a yellow dress. She sits, then she talks, then she does not talk for half a minute. She is asked what it is she photographs. The streets, she says after what seems a very long time. She cries. We see her on a sidewalk, the camera moving parallel to her. She crosses the street, the camera remains on the sidewalk, Sophie is moving away from it. Then she stops and the camera stops. She enters the German consulate. In Schanelec's (and cinematographer Reinhold Vorschneider's) films you see the most intelligent and subtle travellings imaginable - and even mor effective as they starkly contrast with a lot of very long, very static takes that just make you watch and see.   "Marseille" ends with a series of takes on the beach. It is getting dark, the streetlamps are switched on. We see Sophie in her yellow dress, distant, moving, we see the sea and there is a strange kind of consolation in this image of the dress, Sophie, the sea.
    马赛
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    马赛物语 - 电影

    2016法国剧情·喜剧
    导演:凯德·麦拉德
    演员:凯德·麦拉德 Patrick Bosso 韦朗第洛·维朗迪尼
    保罗已经25年没见哥哥约瑟夫了,为了照顾自己粗犷年老的父亲,保罗决定放弃在加拿大平静和谐的生活,带着儿子回到马赛,期望不会在父亲身边逗留太久。
    马赛物语
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    马赛物语 - 电影

    2016法国剧情·喜剧
    导演:凯德·麦拉德
    演员:凯德·麦拉德 朱迪斯·厄尔·泽恩 韦朗第洛·维朗迪尼
    保罗已经25年没见哥哥约瑟夫了,为了照顾自己粗犷年老的父亲,保罗决定放弃在加拿大平静和谐的生活,带着儿子回到马赛,期望不会在父亲身边逗留太久。
    马赛物语
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    马赛惊魂 - 电影

    2028美国惊悚
    马赛惊魂
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