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    突击中央银行 - 电影

    2011巴西剧情·动作·惊悚
    导演:Marcos Paulo
    演员:埃里贝托·莱昂 艾米拉·盖德斯 米尔黑·考塔兹
    “男爵”在策划一起完美的银行抢劫案,目标是重达3吨的现金,又不用暴力强抢。为此他需要找到合适的、愿意为百万美元酬金为他效力的人……   本片根据实事改编,2005年,一家巴西中央银行1.68亿里拉被盗(相当于8千万美元),这是历史上最大的和平时期抢劫案,也是一次最大胆的银行抢劫案。
    突击中央银行
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    银行 - 电影

    1915美国喜剧·短片
    导演:查理·卓别林
    演员:查理·卓别林 艾德娜·珀薇安丝 比利·阿姆斯壮
    Charlie does everything but an efficient job as janitor. Edna buys her fiance, the cashier, a birthday present. Charlie thinks "To Charles with Love" is for him. He presents her a rose which she throws in the garbage. Depressed, Charlie dreams of a bank robbery and his heroic role in saving he manager and Edna ... but it is only a dream.
    银行
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    银行 - 电影

    1915英国喜剧·短片
    导演:查理·卓别林
    演员:查理·卓别林 艾德娜·珀薇安丝 比利·阿姆斯壮
    查理除了做一个高效的看门人外,什么都干。埃德娜给她的未婚夫收银员买了一份生日礼物。查理认为“爱查尔斯”是为了他。他送给她一朵玫瑰,她把它扔进了垃圾桶。郁闷的查理梦见了一场银行抢劫,梦见他在拯救经理和埃德娜时扮演的英雄角色。。。但这只是一个梦。
    银行
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    酒美中国 - 纪录片

    2020中国大陆纪录片
    导演:刘嘉
    《酒美中国》以味道出发,探讨因酒而形成的生活方式和生活场景的改变。囊括了中国以及如日本、西班牙、法国波尔多等多个知名产地,选择了包括茅台、洋河、长城葡萄酒、酒鬼酒、孔乙已等在内的近10家中国名酒,探索国内外不同风土下美酒的秘密。节目植根中华酿造文明,以天酿美酒、道法自然的酿造哲学为依托,传递中华美酒的酿造技艺、饮酒礼仪、美酒艺术和故事,从人类学的角度去探讨酒与人的关系,旨在揭开美酒香气的秘密,破解酒的味道密码。
    酒美中国
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    酒美中国 - 纪录片

    2020中国大陆纪录片
    导演:刘嘉
    《酒美中国》以味道出发,探讨因酒而形成的生活方式和生活场景的改变。囊括了中国以及如日本、西班牙、法国波尔多等多个知名产地,选择了包括茅台、洋河、长城葡萄酒、酒鬼酒、孔乙已等在内的近10家中国名酒,探索国内外不同风土下美酒的秘密。节目植根中华酿造文明,以天酿美酒、道法自然的酿造哲学为依托,传递中华美酒的酿造技艺、饮酒礼仪、美酒艺术和故事,从人类学的角度去探讨酒与人的关系,旨在揭开美酒香气的秘密,破解酒的味道密码。
    酒美中国
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    醉美中国 - 电视剧

    2020中国大陆
    导演:陈怡
    演员:陈铭 刘仪伟 李立宏
    中国第一部以酒为主题的体验式纪录片;第一次以酒文化引领生活美学和仪式感的回归;探访嘉宾带着关于“醉”字的未解之谜,携酒探访。在不同的饮酒场景中,探索不同品类酒的内涵。搭配真实电影手法,演绎制作技艺、场景、人物经历。将不同酒品中所蕴含的东方美学、生活理念、人文情感等“醉”式生活主张,用一种摩登的新式形态呈现。带领观众领略传统酒文化与新时代青春意趣兼备的“醉”式文化。
    醉美中国
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    醉美中国 - 电视剧

    2020中国大陆
    导演:陈怡
    演员:陈铭 刘仪伟 李立宏
    中国第一部以酒为主题的体验式纪录片;第一次以酒文化引领生活美学和仪式感的回归;探访嘉宾带着关于“醉”字的未解之谜,携酒探访。在不同的饮酒场景中,探索不同品类酒的内涵。搭配真实电影手法,演绎制作技艺、场景、人物经历。将不同酒品中所蕴含的东方美学、生活理念、人文情感等“醉”式生活主张,用一种摩登的新式形态呈现。带领观众领略传统酒文化与新时代青春意趣兼备的“醉”式文化。
    醉美中国
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    诗美中华 - 纪录片

    2024中国大陆纪录片
    诗是云上的月光,亦是碗里的茶汤。寻一句平仄,温半世浮生。在成都的晨昏里触摸东方美学,让千年诗句跃入烟火人间,这是诗词的温度。
    诗美中华
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    湖中央 - 电影

    2017法国剧情·短片
    导演:Guillaume Mainguet
    After the cremation of his father, Vincent and his family gather relatives in the back shop of the family butchery for a final tribute. Vincent announce to his family that he leaves for some time with his boyfriend Olivier.
    湖中央
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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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