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    谁是谁的菜 - 电影

    2022印度喜剧·爱情
    导演:Gireesaaya
    演员:Panja Vaisshnav Tej KetikaSharma Naveen Chandra
    Rishi和Radha作为青梅竹马本彼此相爱,但是在一次事件后对彼此产生了厌恶,这种厌恶甚至在他们成年后仍然存在。当他们进入同一所医学院时,他们决定修补两人之间的感情并重新袒露对彼此的爱意。
    谁是谁的菜
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    谁是谁的谁 - 电影

    2016中国大陆剧情·喜剧·黑色电影
    导演:郭坚
    演员:郭巳明 冀雅凡 范子绮
    夜晚的马路空旷而寂静,没有风,连路边的野草也停止了舞动,就在这时,一辆飞奔的汽车风驰而过,速度太快,只看见了影子和听到了声音就消失了,车窗里扔出了一个可乐瓶子,叮铃当啷砸在地上滚到镜头前停下来,夜晚又恢复了平静,风也不见了…   就在这样的夜晚,一家便利店被打劫了,懦弱无能的店老板(张帅 饰)面对起了内部矛盾的劫匪又能怎样呢?玩世不恭的当地青年贾英俊(闫天 饰)怎么也不会想到自己的泡妞计划也在这个夜晚全被改变了,没有正经职业的中年男子(崔学文 饰),整天靠着坑蒙拐骗却也被卷入其中,便利店的服务员白雪(冀雅凡 饰)惊奇的发现整个事情没有想象的那么简单,所有人看似自然的来到便利店,但又有惊人的相似之处,好像都是被安排好的一样,劫匪(郭天杰、刘其元、 范子绮 饰)、老板、店员、贾英俊、中年男子等最后会有什么样的结果呢?好像还有另外的结局…
    谁是谁的谁
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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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    爱的契约 - 电视剧

    2012中国大陆剧情
    导演:刘一志
    演员:夏凡 赵柯 涂松岩
    艾勤奋是一个穷得叮当响的淘宝店主,为了给妹妹凑齐学费,将祖传的花瓶抵押给朋友胡光子,然后载着一车货物到郊区清仓甩卖,却在半路将钱霏霏撞成了重伤。钱霏霏是4s店的销售经理,女强人,未婚夫周展名借她的钱炒股,令本来就因筹备婚礼而拮据不堪的钱霏霏捉襟见肘。幸好一桩大生意即将敲定,合约签订就会拿到高额提成,但就在前往郊区的途中,发生了车祸……
    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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    爱谁是谁 - 电视剧

    1995中国大陆
    导演:谢晓嵋
    演员:夏力薪 杨子纯 郭涛
    爱谁是谁
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    这是谁的家 - 电视剧

    2020内地生活·综艺
    演员:李维嘉 薇娅
    《这是谁的家》是一档生活服务类节目,每期节目将由主持人李维嘉与生活达人黄薇(薇娅)作为出题者,通过“探家”视频引出题面并给予竞猜线索,由现场猜猜团围绕生活故事、生活好物、生活新技能等方面展开知识问答。每期共设置11道问答题,每题得分呈递进式增长,最终得分最高的猜猜团成员,获得本期问答胜利。同时节目与扶贫公益相结合,在节目中融入扶贫产品,在娱乐的同时拓展公益帮扶。
    这是谁的家
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    这是谁的家 - 电视剧

    2020内地生活·综艺
    演员:李维嘉 薇娅
    《这是谁的家》是一档生活服务类节目,每期节目将由主持人李维嘉与生活达人黄薇(薇娅)作为出题者,通过“探家”视频引出题面并给予竞猜线索,由现场猜猜团围绕生活故事、生活好物、生活新技能等方面展开知识问答。每期共设置11道问答题,每题得分呈递进式增长,最终得分最高的猜猜团成员,获得本期问答胜利。同时节目与扶贫公益相结合,在节目中融入扶贫产品,在娱乐的同时拓展公益帮扶。
    这是谁的家
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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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