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    我成了女明星的契约情侣 - 短剧

    2024短剧·男频
    导演:刘有友
    演员:王羽菲
    大明星林月月和豪门女婿赵光耀私情被记者曝光,为了息事宁人,他高薪聘请外卖员王风做替身,而林月月为了赌气答应跟王风做了契约情侣。没想到的是却假戏真做一发不可收拾。
    我成了女明星的契约情侣
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    穿书后我成了反派男主的心尖宠 - 电视剧

    2024
    演员:叶皓然 徐徐
    穿书后我成了反派男主的心尖宠:乔晚意外穿越至她厌恶的小说,成为恶毒女配。她决心改写命运,摒弃对沈靳修的执着,展现智慧和魅力,赢得众人尊重。她巧妙应对虚伪,用实力反击轻视者,并发现内心的力量。沈靳修开始重新评估乔晚,被她的独立和魅力所吸引。两人关系从厌恶到欣赏,最终产生情愫。乔晚凭借智慧和努力,成功改写命运,找到幸福,与沈靳修携手共度余生。这是一个关于逆袭、成长与爱情的故事,展现信念和努力能改变命运的主题。
    穿书后我成了反派男主的心尖宠
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    穿书后我成了反派男主的心尖宠 - 电视剧

    2024
    演员:叶皓然 徐徐
    穿书后我成了反派男主的心尖宠:乔晚意外穿越至她厌恶的小说,成为恶毒女配。她决心改写命运,摒弃对沈靳修的执着,展现智慧和魅力,赢得众人尊重。她巧妙应对虚伪,用实力反击轻视者,并发现内心的力量。沈靳修开始重新评估乔晚,被她的独立和魅力所吸引。两人关系从厌恶到欣赏,最终产生情愫。乔晚凭借智慧和努力,成功改写命运,找到幸福,与沈靳修携手共度余生。这是一个关于逆袭、成长与爱情的故事,展现信念和努力能改变命运的主题。
    穿书后我成了反派男主的心尖宠
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    穿书后我成了三个反派的后娘 - 电视剧

    2025中国大陆
    穿书后我成了三个反派的后娘
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    爱的契约 - 电视剧

    2011中国内地都市题材·剧情类
    导演:刘一志
    演员:夏凡 赵柯 涂松岩
    《爱的契约》讲述了美丽、干练、孝顺的汽车销售经理钱菲菲,为满足父亲遗愿,在身体和财产双重透支的情况下,筹备着“贵族式婚礼”,然而突如其来的车祸…
    爱的契约
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    疯狂的契约 - 电影

    2019中国大陆喜剧
    导演:王海
    演员:雷牧 贾宗超 吕克·本扎
    事业有成的男主角彦彬被诊断出不治之症,突如其来的噩耗让他对自己的人生产生了怀疑,一场酒局后,彦彬发现自己和兄弟莫名身处渺无人烟的荒原,在赶回手术台路上发生的一系列奇葩爆笑的故事。
    疯狂的契约
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    疯狂的契约 - 电影

    2019中国内地喜剧
    导演:王海
    演员:雷牧 贾宗超 吕克·本扎
    事业有成的男主角彦彬被诊断出不治之症,突如其来的噩耗让他对自己的人生产生了怀疑,一场酒局后,彦彬发现自己和兄弟莫名身处渺无人烟的荒原,在赶回手…
    疯狂的契约
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    我的契约爱人 - 短剧

    2024短剧·女频
    导演:刘长青
    演员:朱天天
    孤儿苏倩自幼被舅舅一家养大,为了偿还舅舅欠给林家少爷林庭琛的赌债,苏倩签下了卖身契约,成了林庭琛的契约女友。林家奶奶并不喜欢林庭琛的正牌女友简言,反而对苏倩喜爱有加。已然成为简言眼中钉的苏倩,就此卷入简言和韩家少爷韩越联合夺取林家资产的阴谋。
    我的契约爱人
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    穿书后反派大佬偏宠我 - 电视剧

    2023中国大陆
    穿书后反派大佬偏宠我
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    魔鬼的契约 - 电影

    1968捷克斯洛伐克
    导演:Jozef Zachar
    演员:西尔薇·图尔博娃 Viera Simekova 伊万娜·卡尔班诺娃
    "It’s kind-of small town and big boredom…” is the sharp judgment that a character in Jozef Zachar’s film, Contract With the Devil, passes on any Slovak town (including its capital city). At the point when storyline examines and explains the events that have already taken place, this comment reveals the main theme of the film, namely the forms of our boredom, the protagonists of our boredom, and what to do about our boredom. It is a theme that many viewers by the end of the 1960s appreciated as interesting, provocative, or daring. However, Zachar’s film certainly does not mark a breakthrough in filmic resolution of the theme. More than anything else, this trifle of a comedy—popular with viewers—is an interesting and emblematic battlefield of carelessly wasted opportunities. It holds viewers’ attention through a series of mere hints at insubordination to the societal constraints imposed or petrified by Communism. But the unfinished, careless filmic execution of those hints shows in high definition, so to say, the limits of many filmmakers’ thinking during the precious period of relaxed Communism in the 1960s.   The storyline is mundane, or as Pavel Branko characterized it, “a prurient story calculated for commercial success. [1] ” It begins with the discovery by high-school officials that five female students left erotic photos (presumably theirs) in a classroom, along with a contract with the devil that they would lose their virginity before graduation. Their parents’ reactions range from “Our Eva has the best upbringing, austere and Christian… and Communist!” to “I used to have a body like this, too!” The parents try to annul the contract with the devil by their own avowal to supervise and discipline their offspring more severely. But the girls run away from the gynecological exam that was to confirm their virginity, and from their model homes and school. What follows is a series of episodes of their “courageous,” hopeful, as well as embarrassing attempts to breech the interdiction imposed by the two basic educational institutions—school and family.   The film’s wasted potential is most palpable in two scenes that strive to assault the viewers’ presumed, unprincipled, small-town provincialism, summed up in the phrase “don’t get involved and you’ll be fine.” These scenes are “counterattacks” against the operation of schools and families. The first scene is a variation on the device of a film-within-a-film: a family screens their “morally uplifting” 16-mm home movie for Marcela, one of the girls. The father operates the small gadget, the family projector, hoping to affirm the workings of the basic societal contraption, the family. However his projector, just like his family, keeps breaking off.   The second scene is the party at the home of the son of “big-league parents,” where Emma, another of the girls, performs a striptease. According to The History of Slovak Film, at that time “formerly quite prudish filmmaking, which, of course, tabooed a naked female body in the name of Communist—and Catholic—norms, now incorporated striptease and love scenes that were not exactly copied from a handbook of appropriate behavior.”[2] But the erotic charge of the scene is not the only issue. The interesting, tension-creating polarization between the characters (abandon versus corruption), the use of characteristic dialogue, and the overall, vividly acted “playfulness”—all of these contain the potential for a better film. The daring culmination of the scene is not the image of a naked student, but the heretical burning of a cross in a glass of cognac that is set on fire.   The paradoxical reception of Contract with the Devil at the time of its release is often forgotten. While Juraj Jakubisko’s Crucial Years (also known as Christ’s Years; Kristove roky, 1967), released in the same year, was met with acclaim by reviewers and has remained a common topic in works on Slovak cinema, at the same time its popular reception was lukewarm, attendance low, and some viewers even criticized it as immoral. By comparison, Contract with the Devil generated good ticket sales. On the one hand, this was indicative of the level of the relaxation of communism in 1967, but also, on the other, of the degree to which Contract with the Devil was behind the times: the film, which clearly intended to offend what it saw as ossified prudish morality, actually received praise from Ctibor Štítnický, the communist-appointed Director of the Koliba studios, as a “decent” film, both in terms of its commercial success and its content. [3] Paradoxically then, Contract with the Devil, conceived as a piercing thematic breakthrough, merely became a popular entertainment film by the time of its release due to the quick pace of political changes in the country, and it did not contain enough artistry to sustain a reputation among cinéastes afterwards.
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