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温馨提示:[DVD:标准清晰版] [BD:高清无水印] [HD:高清版] [TS:抢先非清晰版] - 其中,BD和HD版本不太适合网速过慢的用户观看。
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温馨提示:[DVD:标准清晰版] [BD:高清无水印] [HD:高清版] [TS:抢先非清晰版] - 其中,BD和HD版本不太适合网速过慢的用户观看。
节奏确实缓慢,两个多小时的作品给人以四个小时的错觉。如很多人所说,确实前后人物交代并不完全,女主哥哥和弟弟都再未出现,我倒是觉得这和影片以女性视角独立成长与这片土地的主题完全契合。土地上万物都只是瞬间的呼吸,只有自己和这片土地永存。
Sunset Song
Matt Zoller Seitz
"Sunset Song," about a rural Scottish girl growing to womanhood in the years before World War I, is one of the great director Terence Davies' best films: an example of old school and new school mentalities coming together to create a challenging and unique experience. The movie feels as if it could have been made in the 1940s, were there no such thing as censorship. There's frank sex and violence, and the movie doesn't shy away from the nastier aspects of life in that time and place. But there's never a feeling that Davies is rubbing our noses in suffering, because the film displays so much empathy for its characters and such awareness of the social, political and historical forces that hover beyond the edges of their consciousness.
What to tell you about the plot? I don't want to tell you anything, not because the events themselves are surprising (they aren't—and Davies often purposefully telegraphs what's coming, as a 19th century novelist might) but because the pleasure and pain of the tale lies in the telling. As the observant, reactive Chris, Agyness Deyn makes a marvelous audience surrogate. Her narration suggests that she one day escaped the grinding life depicted here and became the writer and teacher you always figure she could become. But there's no undue self-awareness or condescension in Deyn's acting, or in Davies' presentation of her character, and the supporting cast contains not a single bad performance or false note. Among the standouts areEwan Tavendale as Deyn's suitor and later husband, Kevin Guthrie, who is clearly too kind to emerge from this maelstrom of misfortune unscathed; and Peter Mullan, the poster boy for toxic manhood, as Deyn's father, a scowling King of the Castle-type whose power resides in his propensity for violence and his society's sanctioning of it, not in moral authority. (In its deft illustration of how macho values oppress men as well as women, "Sunset Song" is one of the most eloquent feminist statements of the screen year; that its statements mostly emerge organically from Davies' portrait of a time and place make them resonate more strongly.)
"Sunset Song"has gotten mixed reviews, and I can see why. Adapted by Davies from Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s novel, a national touchstone written in Scottish dialect, it'salready a tough sell because it deals with a historical period that has passed from living memory, and features actors who aren't household names. But rather than invite viewers into this film's world by going warm and cuddly and reassuring them that people back then were Just Like Us, Davies constantly underlines how different things were, and how hard life could be if you were a poor Scottish farmer living in a glen; harder still if you were a sensitive or, God forbid, pacifist man—or any sort of woman. Childbirth often ended in death. Battery and rape were considered unfortunate but standard aspects of married life. Sudden changes in political fortunes could send a generation of men off to suffer and die in war to prove their patriotism and machismo; anybody who objected was demonized or worse. There are moments when the film veers into what feels like polemic—you'll know them when they come—but not too many. Davies is committed to the here and now—to the present-tense triumphs and struggles of the characters.
But the filmmaker doesn't revel in misery and ugliness; it's not his way. Instead, Davies, his cinematographer Michael McDonough, art directorsMags Horspool, Ken Turner and Diana van de Vossenberg, and costume designer Uli Simon have made a movie that's beautiful rather than superficially pretty—a film that has soul, and that is more concerned with the emotional meaning of shocking events than the precise physical details.When a teenaged son is whipped with a belt for disobeying his father, the boy faces us, and we see the blows but not the impact of the belt on flesh. Both rough off-screen sex and childbirth are conveyed entirely through sound: we hear moans and screams upstairs, but the movie shows the reactions of characters who are sitting downstairs. A sexual assault begins with a struggle that grows more frenzied and desperate until the camera finally lowers itself slowly on the other side of the bed, creating a wipe effect that blacks out the screen; it's as if the film is covering our eyes for us.
Davies, a nostalgia buff steeped in the traditions of old Hollywood movies, weds John Ford dramas about poor families (in particular "How Green Was My Valley" and "The Grapes of Wrath") and the lush widescreen epics of director David Lean ("Lawrence of Arabia," "Ryan's Daughter"), weaving period folk songs (some performed live, others recorded) into the soundtrack and shooting the Scottish landscapes on 65mm film, the format used for so-called "road show" pictures in the 1960s. At the same time, he retains a modernist sensibility, lingering on empty rooms after all the people have left them (a technique he's deployed in other movies, notably "Distant Voices, Still Lives"), never shying away from the story's harsher aspects, and shooting the film's interiors on high definition digital video, which captures such fine gradations of shadow that you can make out the textures of characters' skin, hair and clothing even when they're lit by candles alone.
Davies and cinematographer McDonough capture the splendor of late-night dinners and wedding receptions,sunlight and moonlight streaming through windows and the way a field trembles as a breeze strokes the grass. The wind, the birds, the bleating livestock and whirring insects provide another sort of music on the soundtrack.The dialogue and voice-over make a point of reminding us of these squabbling humans' smallness in relation to the land on which they work, love, reproduce, age and die. The film has an awareness of the eternal that's rare in Western cinema. People come and go but the land remains. The ethereal nature of human relationships (and humans, period) gives the entire movie a stoic quality: we do the best with what we have, and try to be thankful to be alive, and take pleasure in moments that begin to fade the second we realize that we're in them. As the film's heroine puts it, "There are lovely things in this world—lovely that do not endure, and the lovelier for that."
Matt Zoller Seitz is the Editor at Largeof RogerEbert.com, TV critic for New York Magazine and Vulture.com, and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in criticism.
好电影分两种 一种是技术和内容的好 二是这样的 它的存在 让人心生欢喜
agyness 啊 怎么说 模特 乐队玩腻了 来拍电影 是个明智的规划 而且 看起来还是很会演 出道第一步就当主角 课件导演相信他的内力 虽然有些不够入戏 是一个记号的开始 可能先入为主的觉得好 谁叫那么喜欢他 啥都好 就胸小 或者干脆就没有 看起来天真带点傻气 实际上情高遮 做演员 也算是天生的 问题是 以后少长皱纹多长肉 你们都想着瘦 瘦的女人是用来看的 没有多少人真正喜欢瘦子 而且 瘦人不经老呀女同志们
总的一句话 主要不是看电影 是看agyness来着的 在学校哪一段 恍恍惚惚 想到了当年学校里的那个在图书馆窗台边阳光下熏风里长发飘扬宛如自带光环的女神的女孩 想来 是情结难解罢
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期待anja rubik也来演电影 那时候 不知道会是何等光景
后来,就跟所有四季交替,日出日落的变化一样,下起了暴雨,夜晚降临。它潜伏在人们的鼾声中,暴露在电闪雷鸣的交替中。我那时,吓得发抖。我正被某种力量统治着。只有在这时,我才会思考了。可土地的主人早已经习惯了。我可没他那种错愕的神通。我变得小心翼翼,畏首畏脚。生怕打扰到谁的样子,一步一步地走在主人家的木地板上,地板发出吱嘎吱嘎的响声,我听得一清二楚,尽管外面这时是狂风暴雨。但还有一种声音,是这里面的。突然,他朝我吼道:“快去收拾二楼阳台上的衣服,把门窗锁死了,你这该死的佣人。”
便在这时,我又是个不思考的家伙了。因为,我必须让自己忙碌起来。遄飞的和天气做赛跑。那细微的声响,又躲藏了起来,收进某个口袋里,潜伏着。下一次,我会想着,我有一天一定得改变这现状,从此以后做自己人生的管家。也许,我某天会安静下来,偷偷地走进这家的书房。我们在农闲的时候,总是能看到这里发生过很多怪诞的事情。农人变成了一个学人,书架上有摆放着整齐的书籍,一张椅子,一张桌子,是别样的天地。我企盼着哪天,我也拥有小少爷那专注的眼睛了。我在夜晚,透着门缝,在一盏煤油灯的黄光下看到,他闪耀的光斑的瞳仁。我在白天,能看到,他穿着一身整齐的西装,背起大号的皮夹盒子的书包,和他的同伴们有说有笑地出门。我是有这机会的,总会在思考中。是那视线偷偷地告诉我的。
可说来惭愧,我已经一把年纪了,仍然还有这冲动。照理说,我要跟许多面容枯槁的人一样。做个安分守己的人。比如,有人结婚,做了某人的丈夫或妻子。生儿育女,做了某人的父亲或母亲。他们就要本本分分,要在时代和风俗的背景下,甘于平凡。女人要守得住寂寞,做生殖机器,男人要努力打拼,在外奔波闯荡,好给家里补贴家用。奇怪的是,他们为什么还会在大多时候抱怨。母亲想做个快乐的人,想着她年轻的时候,父亲没给兑现的诺言。父亲虽然有绝大部分的财力可以支配,但也闷闷不乐地朝别人发脾气,喜怒无常。我记得小时候,我会不想做他那样子的人,至少,当我有了小孩的时候,我不会打他骂他,我会拥抱他,跟他说许多的甜言蜜语。
可惜,我只是个连自己都难保的可怜的人。
四月转眼就过去,到了秋收的季节,麦田更黄了,穗桔更高。人们又从善变的思考,转为从不思考的动物。他们没有思惟地庆祝丰收的季节。那天,我们收拾了谷仓,腾出一大片地方,摆设了长条方桌和花纹布巾,盘子,碗碟,刀叉,汤勺,还有插在锻铁架子上的蜡烛。负责厨房伙食的女佣,她也一把年纪了。在接过主人给的食物订单后。我们在后厨商量着怎么安排好。她竟在我毫不设防的情况下哭了,她说:“天哪!真不敢相信这字条上写的都是真的。要知道,这够养活一家子好几个月的开销了。”不过,在随后的狂欢中,她也不无高兴的参与了。只是,后来她又哭了。我不知道,是不是因为那天留下的烂摊子要我们收尾的原因。
风光真好,真美,女主颜值没得说啊,只是这剧情确实挺烂的,也不知道女主怎么想的,自身条件也不差,而且获得了家里的财产继承,妥妥的土豪啊,然后居然看上了个一穷二白的穷屌丝,是恋爱脑了?关键也没看出这个男的哪里好,才见了几次面就马上决定要结婚了?一见钟情也不是这样的。
然后再说到男主参战回来,性格突然来了个180度大反转,变得粗暴恶俗小人,还打骂女主,性格转变的这么厉害是讽刺战争的残酷么??
当女主听到男主战死,错了是逃兵,被处决,这种男的真的太没用了,被人逼急去当兵,在家打骂老婆,上了战场当逃兵,这种烂人,女主居然还伤心过度?我是没明白这种男人有什么好伤心的,是一定要把女主设成弱势恋爱脑才行么?
最后女主还哭着说这样做都是因为她,男主自己自尊心受伤去当兵,完了还当逃兵,与女主什么关系?
总之这剧本可真烂!