备注:已完结
类型:剧情片
主演:马特·狄龙 诺亚·艾默里奇 安娜贝丝·吉什 蒂莫西·赫顿 罗伦·荷莉
导演:泰德·戴米
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:威利(蒂莫西·赫顿 Timothy Hutton 饰)热爱钢琴,却一直苦于没有成就,他和女友特雷西(安娜贝丝·吉什 Annabeth Gish 饰)亦因此而陷入了僵局。某日,他邂逅了十三岁的女孩马蒂(娜塔莉·波特曼 Natalie Portman 饰)竟然让威利开始以一种全新的目光重新审视自己的生活。 汤米(马特·狄龙 Matt Dillon 饰)难忘旧爱达利亚(罗伦·荷莉 Lauren Holly 饰),尽管他们都已经有了归属,却忍不住藕断丝连。保罗(迈克尔·拉帕波特 Michael Rapaport 饰)的古怪性格令苦守七年的女友感到绝望,并且最终选择了离开。吉娜(罗茜·欧唐内 Rosie O'Donnell 饰)是一名女权主义者,正在为了争取自己的权益而进行着激烈的“战斗”。在一场同学聚会上,这些人重新聚在了一起,透过他人的目光,他们也许能够发现真正的自己。
备注:已完结
类型:剧情片
主演:希拉里·斯万克 杰拉德·巴特勒 丽莎·库卓 吉娜·格申 詹姆斯·马斯特
导演:理查德·拉·格拉文斯
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:霍莉(希拉里•斯万克 饰)与盖里(杰拉德•巴特勒 饰)深爱彼此,虽然有时候他们会有争吵,可是这些都是他们生活中的情趣。霍莉感觉自己已经找到了最爱,盖里却在他们婚后罹患脑癌并逝世了。自此,霍莉便生活在失去挚爱的痛苦中。 她感觉丈夫并没有就此离开,她还能在家中感受到盖里的气息。她把自己困在家中,两位好友丹尼丝(莉莎•库卓 饰)、莎拉及霍莉的母亲还有母亲酒吧里的酒保丹尼尔都十分担心她。就在她三十岁生日的那天开始,她便不断收到由盖里给她寄来的信,每封信的最后都加上一句“我爱你”的附注。盖里的信为霍莉的生活注入了力量,她一步步的向前走,但事实上盖里已经死去了,她终究要自己独自生活。 丹尼丝怀孕了,莎拉即将要结婚,她们两个都生活在幸福当中,霍莉突感落寞。她又开始躲避众人,自认识霍莉后丹尼尔一直都陪在霍莉身边,丹尼尔向霍莉表达自己的爱意。霍莉第一次跑到母亲怀里痛哭,她也知道了盖里的信原来一直由母亲代寄。最后一封信就要拆开,霍莉会否得到重生呢?
备注:已完结
类型:伦理片
主演:伊丽莎白·伯克利 凯尔·麦克拉克伦 吉娜·格申 格伦·普拉默 罗伯特·
导演:保罗·范霍文
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:诺密(伊丽莎白·伯克利 Elizabeth Berkley 饰)是一名性感漂亮的女郎,年轻的她来到拉斯维加斯淘金,希望在这里能找到令她立足的工作。没想到,刚到此地,便被小混混骗走了行李,身无分文的她遇见了化妆师克里斯特(吉娜·格申 Gina Gershon 饰),两人一见如故结下了深厚的友谊。诺密发现,想在拉斯维加斯得到一个饭碗实在是太难了,热爱舞蹈的她最后决定加入当地最有名的艳舞团队。经过层层选拔,诺密得到了她的角色,而一旦开始涉入这个复杂的声色世界中,她沦陷的速度就再也不会停止。本来自尊自重的诺密,居然也开始为了向上发展而出卖自己的肉体。 诺密越来越有名,但她和克里斯特的距离也越来越远。为了弥补这段友情,诺密安排了克里斯特和她的偶像歌手见面,没想到看似偶像实则禽兽,克里斯特惨遭凌辱住进医院,也击碎了诺密关于名声和金钱的最后的幻觉。
备注:已完结
类型:剧情片
主演:塞米·鲍亚吉拉
导演:索菲亚·德佳玛
语言:法语
年代:未知
简介:Algiers, a few years after the civil war. Amal and Samir have decided to celebrate their twentieth wedding anniversary in a restaurant. While on their way, their share their views on Algeria Amal talks about lost illusions and Samir about the necessity to cope with them. At the same time, their son Fahim and his friends Feriel and Reda are wandering about in a hostile Algiers about to steal their youth.
备注:已完结
类型:爱情片
主演:弗雷德里克·马奇 伊夫琳·维纳布尔 盖伊·斯坦丁 凯瑟琳·亚历山大 吉
导演:米切尔·莱森
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:Because I could not stop for Death, he kindly stopped for me; the carriage held but just ourselves and immortality” – Emily Dickinson If Death took a holiday, the guns would go silent in Iraq, the slaughter on our nation’s highways would cease, and the news media would be compelled to cover positive events in the humanities, arts, and sciences. Unfortunately, Death has not had a vacation in recorded history, but Mitchell Leisen’s 1934 fantasy, Death Takes a Holiday, allows us to consider the possibility. Co-written by Maxwell Anderson and Gladys Lehman and based on the play La Morte in Vacanza by Alberto Casella, Death Takes a Holiday stars Frederic March as the Grim Reaper who takes on human form in an attempt to discover why men fear him so much. Why he has waited 5,000 years to satisfy this curiosity is not explained. [Spoiler] After a brief tryout as a shadowy figure who scares the daylights out of those that cross his path, Death shows up at, of all places, an upscale party at an Italian villa, posing as the mysterious Prince Sirki. Only one person knows who he really is, the host Duke Lambert (Guy Standing), and he is sworn to secrecy. Sirki proceeds to fascinate the guests. Given to bursts of wit and poetry, he can just as quickly turn sullen and threatening, and some soon find out that it is better not to look too deeply into his eyes. During the three days in which the Prince is at the villa, however, people all over the world miraculously escape death and potential suicides are doomed to frustration. To see what’s behind all the conversation about love, the suave but naïve Prince Sirki falls for the irresistible Grazia (Evelyn Venable), the daughter of one of Duke’s friends. Grazia knows who Death is but does not fear him, much to the chagrin of her fiancé, Corrado (Kent Taylor) who has developed a strong disdain for Prince Charming. More sinister than Brad Pitt in the 1998 remake Meet Joe Black, March turns in a very convincing performance as the creepy yet strangely appealing guest. Although the ending is melodramatic, the emotions are very real and the suggestion that Death may in reality be a friend disguised as a foe is quite touching. (Howard Schumann, talkingpix.co.uk) In this wearisome and predictable plot line, Death falls in love and bores us to death talking about it. (Dennis Schwartz, homepages.sover.net) I've heard DRACULA was advertised with the tag line The Weirdest Love Story ever told! (this is probably a paraphrase), but at heart, I've never felt that you could honestly call that movie a love story. The tag line would be much more appropriate for this one, since it ultimately boils down to what amounts to a love story. This movie is very good indeed, particularly if you consider that it is built around a concept that could have easily been handled in a cute or facile manner. Instead, it is handled as seriously as possible, with some real thought put into how death would try to come to terms with a life and an outlook that was to that point totally unfamiliar to him; much of the credit does go to Fredric March in the title role. It's quite scary when it needs to be, particularly during the first twenty minutes. From then on, it deals with its themes with subtlety, a quiet wit, an enduring sadness, and an everpresent tension on how Death might react if crossed. It's not perfect; some of the dialogue is self-conscious and artificial, as if the writers knew they were dealing with weighty issues and were trying to be profound. But I am certainly glad they didn't try to turn it into a musical comedy of sorts. (Dave Sindelar, scifilm.org) See also the remake Death Takes A Holiday (1971)