备注:已完结
类型:剧情片
主演:艾玛·汤普森 艾伦·瑞克曼 Andi Soric 肖邦·哈里森 约瑟夫
导演:尼亚尔·迈克考米克
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:“他”(艾伦·瑞克曼 Alan Rickman 饰)是伦敦一名默默无闻的图书编辑,经历了写作生涯的惨痛失败后,只能在工作之余写写诗,一边唾弃着他平淡无奇的工作,一边为曾经的失败爱情心怀遗憾,渐入颓唐中年。 “她”(艾玛·汤普森 Emma Thompson 饰)是“他”的 旧情人,离开他之后嫁给了一位极负盛名的作家,在巴黎过着光鲜滋润的生活。 分开15年后,两人再度相约在以前常去的餐厅共进午餐。满怀期待赴宴的“他”却发现,餐厅已面目全改,曾经熟悉的一切无迹可寻。“她”依然亮丽,却少了他记忆中的样子,食物依旧,话题却不尽人意。这一切只是他沉溺诗歌的幻想,还是他真的已经随着那老去的一切被遗弃了? 本片改编自克里斯托弗·里德(Christopher Reid)的同名叙事诗,诗人携该诗于2010年获柯斯达文学奖(Costa Book Awards)“年度代表作”奖。
备注:已完结
类型:欧美剧
主演:David Sutcliffe Brooke Nevin Luisa
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:After an embarrassing and meijubar.net public breakdown, Detective Aidan Black (David Sutcliffe) is reassigned from his beloved SWAT team to the newly created Psych Crimes and Crisis Unit. There, he's dismayed to find his partner is not another cop, but forensic psychiatrist, Dr. Daniella Ridley (Stefanie von Pfetten). The unit also includes Detective Poppy Wisnefski (Luisa d'Oliveira) and psychiatric nurse Leo Beckett (Dayo Ade), with Inspector Diane Caligra (Karen LeBlanc) keeping a close watch over the unique partnerships. Passionate and opposing viewpoints are an inherent part of the job in Psych Crimes, and the answers the teams seek never come easy. Aidan's deep insight and investigative skills combine brilliantly with Daniella's keen ability to decipher human behaviour. Learning to work cohesively, the Psych Crimes and Crisis Unit investigates city's most troubling and psychologically complex crimes. Whether or not the unit is still around in a few months...
备注:已完结
类型:剧情片
主演:珍妮·艾加特 布莱恩·马歇尔 Clare Sutcliffe 西蒙·沃
导演:大卫·格瑞尼
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:The story appears simple on the surface, but is revealed, especially after multiple viewings, as more multi-layered and textured than Cassavetes at his best. Ostensibly it concerns a 14-year old Catholic girl, Wynne (Agutter) growing up in this post-modern wasteland, who develops a crush on her much older adoptive brother (Marshall)- a crush which perversely deepens and grows into infatuation once she starts to believe he is the local sex killer. This is in itself an idea that makes you sit up and jolt, but as the narrative develops, it continues not necessarily along a linear path but in several confusing and fascinating directions the family's history, (detailed effectively in chilling flashback during an improvised seance) is a chequered one, and has suffered at least one major relocation and upheaval in the last ten years. At the crux, however, it's the depiction of socialal changes that make I Start Counting so fascinating and elevate its language far beyond the confines of the standard horror film. The major subtext- that teenage girls were maturing more quickly than before, and developing full sexual and romantic appetites (even if in thought rather than deed) but were not possessed of enough discretion to make the right choices- was a step forward for a genre in which its young females had previously been portrayed as bimbo victims (Cover Girl Killer and The Night Caller spring to mind), but not one that all viewers would necessarily agree with. But most striking of all, and possibly the most enduring image which the viewer will take away with them, is of the masterful symbolism with which director Greene invests every shot. Every inch of the Kinch family's world- their house, their walls, their TV, Agutters underwear, bedroom furniture and toys, Sutcliffe's clothes, Marshalls van, the local Catholic church, their town centre, their record shop) - is painted a bright, scintillating white- a white which, by inference, is slowly becoming smudged and corrupted with the dirt of the outside world. White also symbolises, of course, purity and innocence (two qualities Catholic schoolgirls are supposed to hold dear), and it is into this world of innocence that the ever-present red bus (a symbol of violation and penetration), conducted by the lecherous yet similarly juvenile Simon Ward, makes regular journeys. The allegory is further expanded in one scene where Agutter believes she sees the Christ figure in church weeping blood by the time we acknowledge it, its gone, but the seed has already been planted. Rarely in a genre production has the use of colour and background been so important or effective in creating a uniformity of mood. I Start Counting is as near-perfect an end to a decade as one could hope for, and exactly the kind of film people should be making now- which is, of course, exactly why they never will. A genre essential. by D.R.