恐懼的代價 The Wages of Fear
138 min. 1953
1953 Cannes Film Festival Grand Prize of the Festival
1953 Berlin International Film Festival Golden Berlin Bear
Writing credits
Georges Arnaud (novel)
Henri-Georges Clouzot (adaptation and dialogue) (as H.G. Clouzot)
Jérôme Géronimi (adaptation and dialogue) (as Jérome Geronimi)
Yves Montand ... Mario
Charles Vanel ... M. Jo
Folco Lulli ... Luigi
Peter van Eyck ... Bimba (as Peter Van Eyck)
Véra Clouzot ... Linda (as Vera Clouzot)
Jo Dest ... Smerloff
1.
Henri-Georges Clouzot originally planned on shooting the film in Spain, but Yves Montand and his wife, Simone Signoret, refused to work in Spain as long as fascist dictator Francisco Franco was in power.
1.5
Filming took place instead in the south of France, near Saint-Gilles, in the Camargue. The village seen in the film was built from scratch.
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相當於今天的金棕櫚獎
腥風怒吼 Candyman
98 min. 1992
Writing credits
Clive Barker (story "The Forbidden")
Bernard Rose (written by)
Original Music by
Philip Glass
Virginia Madsen ... Helen Lyle
Tony Todd ... The Candyman / Daniel Robitaille
Xander Berkeley ... Trevor Lyle
Kasi Lemmons ... Bernadette 'Bernie' Walsh
Vanessa Williams ... Anne-Marie McCoy
DeJuan Guy ... Jake
Carolyn Lowery ... Stacey
1.
There is a Guy Fawkes mask hanging next to Helen's bathroom mirror. 1.5
Fawkes is an infamous figure in English history (an influence from Clive Barker's original story perhaps), who attempted to blow up the English Parliament on November 5, 1605.
1.6
Every year the British celebrate Guy Fawkes Day by lighting bonfires and burning Fawkes in effigy.
2.
Virginia Madsen claims that she was hypnotized for some of the film's scenes.
3.
"Sweets to the Sweet" which is written on the walls in two areas of Cabrini Green is actually a line from Shakespeare's Hamlet.
4.
Philip Glass was asked by director Bernard Rose to compose a score for his film "Candyman". Glass accepted and wrote a "gothic" score for chorus and pipe organ.
4.5
The final version of the film was a disappointment to Glass. He felt that he had been manipulated. What was presented to him as a low budget independent project with creative integrity became (in his opinion) a low budget Hollywood slasher flick.
4.6
As a result, Glass with held his consent for the release of the recordings of the score for years, until 2001.
愛情和香煙 Romance & Cigarettes
105 min. 2005
James Gandolfini ... Nick Murder
Susan Sarandon ... Kitty Kane
Kate Winslet ... Tula
Steve Buscemi ... Angelo
Bobby Cannavale ... Fryburg
Mandy Moore ... Baby
Mary-Louise Parker ... Constance
Aida Turturro ... Rosebud
Christopher Walken ... Cousin Bo
P.J. Brown ... Police Officer
1.
The movie was delayed for almost two years because of James Gandolfini's commitment to The Sopranos (1999).
2.
Writer-director John Turturro chose the songs featured in this film before he had secured their rights. While waiting for Gandolfini to be free from shooting The Sopranos (1999), the director went around to secure these rights from their songwriters and singers.
3.
Although the film was shown at the Venice Film Festival and had an official release in the UK in 2006, the movie was not released in the US for years. This was mainly due to the fact that MGM was bought by a consortium headed by Sony in 2005, which led to a legal mess of whom, either MGM or Sony has the rights to the movie. In August 2007 director John Turturro decided to distribute the movie with his own money.
This is the film in which Widmark's character gigglingly pushes a wheelchair-bound old lady down a flight of stairs. Reviewer James Agee said it best: "You feel that murder is the kindest thing he is capable of".
龍爭虎鬥 Kiss of Death
98 min. 1947
Writing credits
Ben Hecht (screenplay)
Charles Lederer (screenplay)
Eleazar Lipsky (story)
Victor Mature ... Nick Bianco
Brian Donlevy ... Assistant D.A. Louis D'Angelo
Coleen Gray ... Nettie
Richard Widmark ... Tommy Udo
Taylor Holmes ... Earl Howser--Attorney
Karl Malden ... Sgt. William Cullen
Mildred Dunnock ... Mrs. Rizzo (uncredited)
Jo Jones ... Jazz Drummer (uncredited)
1.
Often cited as Victor Mature's best performance.
2.
Originally, Patricia Morison played Victor Mature's wife, who is attacked and raped by a gangster who is supposed to be watching out for her while Mature is in prison, and afterwards commits suicide by sticking her head in the kitchen oven and turning on the gas.
2.5
Both scenes were cut from the original print at the insistence of the censors, who wanted no depiction of either a rape or a suicide, so although Morison's name appears in the credits, she does not appear in the film at all.
2.6
Mention is made later in the film about Mature's wife's suicide and a now obscure reference is made by Nettie that the unseen gangster Rizzo contributed to the wife's downfall.
離迷劫 Irma Vep
99 min. 1996
Maggie Cheung ... Herself
Jean-Pierre Léaud ... René Vidal
Nathalie Richard ... Zoé
Antoine Basler ... Journalist
Nathalie Boutefeu ... Laure
Alex Descas ... Desormeaux
Dominique Faysse ... Maïté
Arsinée Khanjian ... L'américaine
Bernard Nissile ... Markus
Bulle Ogier ... Mireille
Lou Castel ... José Mirano
"Bonnie and Clyde"
Written by Serge Gainsbourg
Performed by Luna
"To a new world of gods and monsters."
眾神與野獸 Gods and Monsters
120 min. 1998
1999 Academy Awards Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium
1999 Independent Spirit Award Best Feature, Best Male Lead, Best Supporting Female
Writing credits
Christopher Bram (novel "Father of Frankenstein")
Bill Condon (screenplay)
Ian McKellen ... James Whale
Brendan Fraser ... Clayton Boone
Lynn Redgrave ... Hanna
Lolita Davidovich ... Betty
David Dukes ... David Lewis
Jack Plotnick ... Edmund Kay
Rosalind Ayres ... Elsa Lanchester
Jack Betts ... Boris Karloff
Todd Babcock ... Leonard Barnett
Cornelia Hayes O'Herlihy ... Princess Margaret
Brandon Kleyla ... Young Whale
Pamela Salem ... Sarah Whale
Michael O'Hagan ... William Whale
Amir Aboulela ... The Monster
Marlon Braccia ... Elizabeth Taylor
Kent George ... Whale at 25
Martin Ferrero ... George Cukor
1.
Ian McKellen said that he felt very comfortable playing the role of James Whale. For, like Whale, McKellan is a homosexual British actor who spent his early career in the theater and ultimately started a career in Hollywood.
2.
There are five original James Whale drawings in this film.
3.
As of 2007, one of only three films since the advent of the Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar to win the award without receiving a Best Picture nomination as well. The first was The Bad and the Beautiful (1952), the second was Sling Blade (1996).
4.
The role was an important one for Fraser, who was previously better-known for lighter fare, such as 1997's George of the Jungle. The movie was also a great success for writer-director Bill Condon, who was previously best-known for the B-movie sequel Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh (1995).
監視 Surveillance
98 min. 2008
Julia Ormond ... Elizabeth Anderson
Bill Pullman ... Sam Hallaway
Pell James ... Bobbi Prescott
Ryan Simpkins ... Stephanie
Cheri Oteri ... Mom
Michael Ironside ... Captain Billings
French Stewart ... Officer Jim Conrad
Kent Harper ... Officer Jack Bennett
Caroline Aaron ... Janet
Gill Gayle ... Officer Degrasso
Hugh Dillon ... Dad
"Speed Roadster"
Written by David Lynch
Performed by David Lynch
Published by Bobkind Music Inc. (ASCAP)
Courtesy of David Lynch Music Company
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獲邀坎城影展午夜放映
琴謎變奏曲 La Tourneuse de Pages
84 min. 2006
Catherine Frot ... Ariane
Déborah François ... Mélanie
Pascal Greggory ... M. Fouchécourt
Clotilde Mollet ... Virginie
Xavier De Guillebon ... Laurent
Christine Citti ... Mme Prouvost
Jacques Bonnaffé ... M. Prouvost
Antoine Martynciow ... Tristan
Julie Richalet ... Mélanie enfant
"What would you think if I shaved my moustache?"
鬍子驚魂 La moustache
86 min. 2005
Directed by
Emmanuel Carrère
Writing credits
Jérôme Beaujour (writer)
Emmanuel Carrère (novel) (screenplay)
Original Music by
Philip Glass (musical composition by)
Vincent Lindon ... Marc Thiriez
Emmanuelle Devos ... Agnès Thiriez
Mathieu Amalric ... Serge Schaeffer
Hippolyte Girardot ... Bruno
Cylia Malki ... Samira
Macha Polikarpova ... Nadia Schaeffer
Fantine Camus ... Lara Schaeffer
延伸閱讀:
I AM ALIVE AND YOU ARE DEAD:A JOURNEY INTO THE LIFE OF PHILIP K. DICK
VAMPYR was produced in 1931/32 in German, French and English versions. The original negative for picture and sound was lost. Partially complete prints of the German and French versions served as the basis for this restoration. The new German version of 1998 was a collaboration between Cineteca del Comune di Bologna, Deutsche Kinemathek and ZDF/Arte.
"Vampyr isn't the easiest classic film to enjoy, even if you are a fan of 1930s horror movies. It was originally shot as a silent film and later dubbed with a limited amount of dialogue;
the performances are uneven (with some stylized acting that's reminiscent of the silent era), the disjointed plot would be considered confusing in any era, and the sparse dialogue makes the film seem even more vague and disquieting."
--AllMovie
吸血鬼 Vampyr
75 min. 1931
Writing credits
Sheridan Le Fanu (based on a book by) (as J. Sheridan Le Fanu)
Christen Jul (screenplay)
Carl Theodor Dreyer (screenplay) (as Carl Th. Dreyer)
Julian West ... Allan Grey
Maurice Schutz ... Der Schlossherr (Lord of the Manor)
Rena Mandel ... Gisèle
Sybille Schmitz ... Léone
Original Music by
Wolfgang Zeller
Cinematography by
Rudolph Maté
Louis Née (uncredited)
1.
The movie was dubbed into English, French, and German versions for different markets. Its actors came from varied national and linguistic backgrounds, and so in certain versions it appears that some of them are speaking their lines phonetically.
1.5
Additionally, the film was shot fairly cheaply using an experimental sound process, and the technical quality of the soundtrack leaves much to be desired.
1.6
Most versions in distribution through the late 1990s (including those on video) are composites of the German and French versions, which differ for cuts made by the censors in each of those countries. As of 2004, no prints of the English version are known to circulate.
2.
In order to achieve the strange, dream-like photography, a thin gauze was put in front of the lens as a filter.
3.
This was the first talking picture directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer.
4.
The film was shot entirely on location. In fact, the old castle featured in the film also served as the lodging for the cast and crew.
5.
The dank doctor's surgery and its abandoned, dirty look covered in cobwebs was said to be achieved by the director breaking jam jars on the floor then leaving the room shut off for a little over a month to attract various bugs and insects.
"I'll suck your dick if you give me the job I want."
春心蕩漾俏媽咪 SherryBaby
96 min. 2006
Maggie Gyllenhaal ... Sherry Swanson
Michelle Hurst ... Dorothy Washington
Giancarlo Esposito ... Parole Officer Hernandez
Caroline Clay ... Parole Officer Murphy
Rio Hackford ... Andy Kelly
Brad William Henke ... Bobby Swanson
Bridget Barkan ... Lynette Swanson
Ryan Simpkins ... Alexis Parks
Danny Trejo ... Dean Walker
Sam Bottoms ... Bob Swanson Sr.
Kate Burton ... Marcia Swanson
One, two, three four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. Ready or not, here I come.
Marco.
Polo!
"Free from the exploitative qualities of Larry Clark's Kids, Alpha Dog shows the absolutely true transmogrification of bored suburban youths into drug kingpins and other reckless associates."
-- AllMovie
阿爾發狗 Alpha Dog
117 min. 2006
Bruce Willis ... Sonny Truelove
Matthew Barry ... Interviewer (as Matt Barry)
Emile Hirsch ... Johnny Truelove
Fernando Vargas ... Tiko 'TKO' Martinez
Vincent Kartheiser ... Pick Giaimo
Justin Timberlake ... Frankie Ballenbacher
Shawn Hatosy ... Elvis Schmidt
Alex Solowitz ... Bobby '911'
Alec Vigil ... P.J. Truelove
Harry Dean Stanton ... Cosmo Gadabeeti
Frank Cassavetes ... Adrian Jones
Regina Rice ... Dance Bitch Girl
Ben Foster ... Jake Mazursky
David Thornton ... Butch Mazursky
Anton Yelchin ... Zack Mazursky
Sharon Stone ... Olivia Mazursky
Alexandra Cassavetes ... Jonna Kirshner (as Xan Cassavetes)
Chris Kinkade ... Juergen Ballenbacher
Dominique Swain ... Susan Hartunian
Chris Marquette ... Keith Stratten (as Christopher Marquette)
Alex Kingston ... Tiffany Hartunian
Amanda Seyfried ... Julie Beckley
Charity Shea ... Sabrina Pope
Amber Heard ... Alma
Lukas Haas ... Buzz Fecske
Adrianna Belan ... Leigh Fecske
Sadie ... Dale Dierker's Dog (uncredited)
1.
To prepare for his role in this movie, actor Ben Foster asked one of his friends who was an ex-crystal meth addict for guidance. The friend introduced him to a group of people who gave Foster an all-access pass into the lifestyle.
2.
Ben Foster risked his sight for the movie by adding glaucoma drops to his eyes for much of the shoot to dilate his pupils, making him appear to be high. He'd hide in the bushes at night and cover his eyes between takes to keep the lights from shining into them. He would also talk to Nick Cassavetes with his eyes closed.
3.
In a scene where they have a fight, Sharon Stone hit Ben Foster so hard that his nose started bleeding. He told her to do so, because he said the scene needed to be as realistic as possible.
4.
The song "Say Goodbye to Hollywood" plays as Johnny Truelove (Emile Hirsch) is getting ready to skip town and go on the run from the police. This makes sense, as Jesse James Hollywood is the person Johnny Truelove is based on.
2008年12月29日 星期一
[下海] 就是不截圖 10.
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