备注:已完结
类型:记录片
主演:唐纳德·克莱恩 菲尔·麦格劳 Jacoba Ballard Debbi
导演:露西·乔丹
语言:
年代:未知
简介:一名女子在家进行DNA鉴定,发现自己拥有许多同父异母的手足,从而揭穿一桩涉及精子捐赠和知名生殖医学医师的惊人阴谋。
备注:已完结
类型:记录片
主演:赞达亚 乔什·奥康纳 迈克·费斯特 Heidi Garza 费斯·费伊
导演:卢卡·瓜达尼诺
语言:
年代:未知
简介:Follows three players who knew each other when they were teenagers as they compete in a tennis tournament to be the world-famous grand slam winner, and reignite old rivalries on and off the court.
备注:已完结
类型:记录片
主演:洛根·安托弗莫 欧莱雅·阿玛拉 路易丝·舍维约特 安德烈·维尔姆斯 S
导演:菲利普·加瑞尔
语言:
年代:未知
简介:卢克(洛根·安托弗莫 Logann Antuofermo 饰)是一名出身平凡的小镇青年,他只身一人前往巴黎求学,在那里邂逅了名为杰米拉(欧莱雅·阿玛拉 Oulaya Amamra 饰)的美丽女子,两人之间很快就发展出了一段浪漫的关系。实际上,卢克在老家有一个交往多年的女 友让娜(路易丝·舍维约特 Louise Chevillotte 饰),当卢克返回老家后,他和杰米拉渐渐疏远了,反倒是和让娜旧情重燃,不仅如此,让娜的腹中还怀上了他的骨肉。 一封录取通知书的到来意味着卢克必须离开让娜,返回巴黎继续深造,他抛弃了让娜,并且和一个名叫贝茜(Souheila Yacoub 饰)的女孩走进了一段新的关系中。被抛弃的杰米拉将整件事情都告诉了卢克的父亲(安德烈·维尔姆斯 André Wilms 饰),与此同时,卢克发现贝茜不是一个省油的灯。
备注:已完结
类型:伦理片
主演:Paco Moyano Manolo Rodríguez France
语言:西班牙语
年代:未知
简介:A film essay about a singular couple, Paco and Manolo, two Catalan photographers from the outskirts of Barcelona, who have been together for thirty years. Both have managed to work as a single photographer and have captured their imagery in the Kink magazine, a very personal photography fanzine with an essentially Mediterranean homoerotic aesthetic. Paco and Manolo’s style can ...
备注:已完结
类型:伦理片
主演:艾伦·多丽特·彼得森 亨瑞克·拉斐尔森 薇拉·维塔利 Marius K
导演:埃斯基尔·沃格特
语言:其它
年代:未知
简介:《八月三十一日,我在奥斯陆》的金奖编剧艾斯基佛格,今年首执导演筒长片作品《盲》,一鸣惊人横扫国际各大影展,拿下柏林影展最佳欧洲电影奖、日舞影展世界电影单元最佳剧本奖,以及入围挪威奥斯卡七项大奖。透过独特的叙事结构与影像魅力,捕捉盲眼女主角内心的脆弱与偏执。 最近失明的英格丽 几乎足不出户,尽管失去了视力,但她的心与想像力仍旧清晰而活跃,但恐惧却让她在自己的内在世界,书写出另一个人生剧本。 她时常幻想外出上班的丈夫偷溜回家,观察她在家中的一举一动,或是在网路上认识了一名单亲妈妈,偷偷与她约会;英格丽看见他们在餐厅里谈笑着,突然间,女子失去视力... 而察觉到异样的丈夫不久和女子分手,但她却说自己怀孕了,还挺着大肚子到派对上找他对峙。正当女子一身滑稽的礼服成为众人的笑柄,英格丽仿佛走进自己的幻想世界,化身成穿着礼服的女子和丈夫对峙着...
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)