2009年1月1日 星期四

[下海] 就是不截圖 13.






snapshot20110305223928



殺死妳的溫柔 Killing Me Softly

100 min. 2002



Directed by

Kaige Chen (as Chen Kaige)

Writing credits

Sean French (novel) (as Nicci French)

Kara Lindstrom (screenplay)



Heather Graham  ...  Alice 

Joseph Fiennes  ...  Adam Tallis 

Natascha McElhone  ...  Deborah 

Ulrich Thomsen  ...  Klaus 

Jason Hughes  ...  Jake 

Kika Markham  ...  Mrs. Blanchard 

Amy Robbins  ...  Sylvie 

Yasmin Bannerman  ...  Joanna Noble 

Rebecca R. Palmer  ...  Michelle Stowe (as Rebecca Palmer)  



Produced by

Ivan Reitman ....  executive producer  





snapshot20110228171850



迷情漩渦 Maelström

95 min. 2000



Directed by

Writing credits

Denis Villeneuve 

2001 Berlin International Film Festival FIPRESCI Prize 

For its innovative dramatic structure, its playfulness, and its contemporary sensibility.



Marie-Josée Croze  ...  Bibiane Champagne 

Jean-Nicolas Verreault  ...  Evian 

Stephanie Morgenstern  ...  Claire Gunderson 

Pierre Lebeau  ...  The Fish (voice) 

Klimbo  ...  Head-Annstein Karlsen  



延伸閱讀:

坎城影后瑪麗喬絲克魯茲





snapshot20110227102418



有關時間旅行的熱門問題 Frequently Asked Questions About Time Travel

83 min. 2009



Chris O'Dowd  ...  Ray 

Marc Wootton  ...  Toby 

Dean Lennox Kelly  ...  Pete 

Anna Faris  ...  Cassie 

Meredith MacNeill  ...  Millie  





snapshot20110226220436



豺狼之日 The Day of the Jackal

141 min. 1973



Writing credits

Frederick Forsyth (book)

Kenneth Ross (screenplay)



Edward Fox ...  The Jackal

Adrien Cayla-Legrand ...  The President

Olga Georges-Picot ...  Denise

Derek Jacobi ...  Caron

Michael Lonsdale ...  Lebel (as Michel Lonsdale)

Jean Martin ...  Wolenski

Eric Porter ...  Colonel Rodin

Delphine Seyrig ...  Colette

Jean Sorel ...  Bastien-Thiry

Nicole Desailly ...  Yvonne De Gaulle (uncredited) 



1.

Edward Fox was cast as the Jackal after director Fred Zinnemann was impressed with him in The Go-Between (1970).

2.

There are 31 individual insert shots of clocks in the movie. By contrast, High Noon (1952), also directed by Fred Zinnemann and more directly concerned with the passage of time, contains only 13 insert shots of clocks.

3.

When the Jackal meets the weapons supplier in Genoa, there is a picture of John F. Kennedy on the cover of an Italian magazine reporting on President Kennedy's recent visit to Europe. The scene is set on 2 August 1963, about three months before Kennedy himself was assassinated.

4.

The film features no soundtrack music other than diegetic background music from marching bands, street musicians and radios after the first five minutes.

5.

Michael Caine, Jack Nicholson and Roger Moore were considered for the role of the Jackal. 





snapshot20110226175841



再死一次 The Dead Zone

104 min. 1983



Writing credits

Jeffrey Boam (screenplay)

Stephen King (novel)



Christopher Walken  ...  Johnny Smith 

Brooke Adams  ...  Sarah Bracknell 

Tom Skerritt  ...  Sheriff Bannerman 

Herbert Lom  ...  Dr. Sam Weizak 

Anthony Zerbe  ...  Roger Stuart 

Colleen Dewhurst  ...  Henrietta Dodd 

Martin Sheen  ...  Greg Stillson 

Nicholas Campbell  ...  Frank Dodd 

Sean Sullivan  ...  Herb Smith 

Jackie Burroughs  ...  Vera Smith 

Géza Kovács  ...  Sonny Elliman

Ramon Estevez ...  Teenage Boy with Camera  



1.

Director David Cronenberg had to re-shoot the scene in which John Smith has his first premonition. It showed a little girl's room burning and a small E.T. doll could be seen on one of the shelves. The scene had to be re-shot when Universal Pictures threatened to sue.

2.

Cronenberg fired a .357 Magnum loaded with blanks just off camera to make Smith's flinches seem more involuntary; this was Christopher Walken's own idea.

3.

Before the accident, Johnny instructs his class to read "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow". Christopher Walken would later go on to appear in Tim Burton's Sleepy Hollow (1999).

4.

One of only three David Cronenberg films that do not have a score by his friend, composer Howard Shore. This was due to studio politics in which Paramount wanted a more familiar composer to write the music for the film. Michael Kamen, who had written the music for the film Venom (1981) for the studio, was chosen instead.

5.

This film (and Stephen King's novel) are both loosely based upon the life of famous psychic Peter Hurkos. Hurkos claimed to have acquired his alleged powers after falling off a ladder and hitting his head.

6.

The poem Johnny reads in the beginning of the film is the end of "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe.

7.

The Dead Zone was the first of several Stephen King novels and short stories that took place in the small town of Castle Rock. Others include Stand by Me (1986), Cujo (1983), The Dark Half (1993), and Needful Things (1993).





snapshot20110226124630



羅蘭祕記 Laura

90 min. 1944



Directed by

Otto Preminger   

Rouben Mamoulian (uncredited)  



Writing credits

Vera Caspary (novel)

Jay Dratler (screenplay)

Samuel Hoffenstein (screenplay) 

Elizabeth Reinhardt (screenplay) (as Betty Reinhardt)

Ring Lardner Jr. (uncredited)



Gene Tierney  ...  Laura Hunt 

Dana Andrews  ...  Det. Lt. Mark McPherson 

Clifton Webb  ...  Waldo Lydecker 

Vincent Price  ...  Shelby Carpenter 

Judith Anderson  ...  Ann Treadwell 

Grant Mitchell ...  Lancaster Corey (scenes deleted)

Dorothy Adams ...  Bessie Clary, Laura's Maid (uncredited) 



1.

The film was begun by Rouben Mamoulian, but Otto Preminger, who initiated the project as producer and took over the direction, brought on a new cameraman and scrapped all of Mamoulian's footage.

2.

The character of Waldo Lydecker appears to be based on the columnist, broadcaster, and "New Yorker" theater critic Alexander Woollcott, a famous wit who, like Waldo, was fascinated by murder. Woollcott always dined at the Algonquin Hotel, where Laura first approaches Waldo.

3.

Darryl F. Zanuck was opposed to casting Clifton Webb because of his known homosexuality, but Preminger prevailed and the 54-year-old Webb, making his first screen appearance since the silent era, was nominated for an Oscar. 





snapshot20110221234829



靈嬰 The Brood 

92 min. 1979



Original Music by

Howard Shore 



Oliver Reed  ...  Dr. Hal Raglan 

Samantha Eggar  ...  Nola Carveth 

Art Hindle  ...  Frank Carveth 

Henry Beckman  ...  Barton Kelly 

Nuala Fitzgerald  ...  Juliana Kelly 

Cindy Hinds  ...  Candice Carveth 

Susan Hogan  ...  Ruth Mayer 

Gary McKeehan  ...  Mike Trellan 

Robert A. Silverman  ...  Jan Hartog (as Robert Silverman)  



1.

David Cronenberg wrote the film following the tumultuous divorce and child-custody battle he waged against Margaret Hindson. Cronenberg also said that Samantha Eggar's character, Nola Carveth, possessed some of the characteristics of his ex-wife.





snapshot20110220223159



波蘭斯基:通緝與渴望 Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired 

100 min. 2008



Directed by

Marina Zenovich  

2009 Emmy Awards Outstanding Directing for Nonfiction Programming

Writing credits

Joe Bini

P.G. Morgan

Marina Zenovich

2009 Emmy Awards Outstanding Writing for Nonfiction Programming



Produced by

Steven Soderbergh ....  executive producer  



Sharon Tate ...  Herself / Sarah Shagal (archive footage)

Terence Stamp ...  Himself (archive footage)

Laurence J. Rittenband ...  Himself (archive footage)

Roman Polanski ...  Himself (archive footage)

Jack Nicholson ...  Himself / Jack Gittes (archive footage)

Hugh M. Hefner ...  Himself (archive footage)

Roger Gunson ...  Himself

Faye Dunaway ...  (archive footage)

Mia Farrow ...  Herself (also archive footage)

Harrison Ford ...  Himself (archive footage)

Douglas Dalton ...  Himself (also archive footage)

Catherine Deneuve ...  Herself / Carole Ledoux (archive footage)

John Cassavetes ...  Guy Woodhouse (archive footage) 



"Lullaby"

Written by Krzysztof Komeda (as Christopher Komeda)

Sung by Mia Farrow





snapshot20110220135053



赤子冰心 L'eau froide

93 min. 1994



Virginie Ledoyen  ...  Christine 

Cyprien Fouquet  ...  Gilles 

László Szabó  ...  Père de Gille 

Dominique Faysse  ...  Mère de Christine 

Smaïl Mekki  ...  Mourad 

Jackie Berroyer  ...  Père de Christine 





snapshot20110220103955



狂犬病 Rabid

91 min. 1977



Directed by

Writing credits

David Cronenberg  

Produced by

Ivan Reitman ....  executive producer  



Marilyn Chambers  ...  Rose 

Frank Moore  ...  Hart Read 

Joe Silver  ...  Murray Cypher

Howard Ryshpan  ...  Dr. Dan Keloid 

Patricia Gage  ...  Dr. Roxanne Keloid  



1.

Sissy Spacek was David Cronenberg's first choice to play Rose. Ivan Reitman suggested Marilyn Chambers because he wanted sex appeal.

2.

A poster for Carrie (1976) is visible after Rose walks out of the porn theatre. Sissy Spacek, who played Carrie in that film, was the first choice for Rose but was turned down because of her Texas accent.

3.

The song that plays on the radio in Hart's workshop is Marilyn Chambers' own disco single "Benihana" (about 25 minutes into the film). 



"Benihana"

by Marilyn Chambers (uncredited)





snapshot20110219003559



窗外有藍天 A Room With a View

117 min. 1986



Directed by

James Ivory    

Writing credits

E.M. Forster (novel)

Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (screenplay)

1987 Academy Awards Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium

Produced by

Ismail Merchant ....  producer  



Maggie Smith ...  Charlotte Bartlett, a chaperon

Helena Bonham Carter ...  Lucy Honeychurch, Miss Bartlett's cousin and charge (as Helena Bonham-Carter)

Denholm Elliott ...  Mr. Emerson, an English tourist

Julian Sands ...  George Emerson

Simon Callow ...  The Reverend Mr. Arthur Beebe

Patrick Godfrey ...  The Reverend Mr. Eager, Chaplain of the Anglican Church in Florence

Judi Dench ...  Eleanor Lavish, a novelist

Fabia Drake ...  Miss Catharine Alan

Joan Henley ...  Miss Teresa Alan

Daniel Day-Lewis ...  Cecil Vyse (as Daniel Day Lewis)

Rosemary Leach ...  Mrs. Marian Honeychurch

Rupert Graves ...  Freddy Honeychurch

Mia Fothergill ...  Minnie Beebe

James Wilby ...  Party Guest (uncredited) 



1.

In the book, Lucy kisses George in a field of violets, but it was the wrong season for this when filming so just a plain field of barley was used.

2.

Charlotte Bartlett and Eleanor Lavish discuss the plotline of E.M. Forster's other Italian novel "Where Angels Fear to Tread" when on the picnic. Helena Bonham Carter starred in the film adaptation of the novel, Where Angels Fear to Tread (1991).

3.

My Beautiful Laundrette (1985) and A Room with a View (1985) both opened in New York on the same day, March 7, 1986. Both movies featured Daniel Day-Lewis in prominent and very different roles:

3.1

in A Room with a View, he played a repressed, snobbish Edwardian upperclassman, while in Laundrette, he played a lower-class gay ex-skinhead in love with an ambitious Pakistani businessman in Thatcher's London.

3.2

When American critics saw Day-Lewis, who was then virtually unknown in the US, in two such different roles on the same day, many (including Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times and Vincent Canby of The New York Times) raved about the talent it must have taken him to play such vastly different characters.

4.

First cinema film of Helena Bonham Carter.

5.

During a film making discussion with Gus Van Sant during the Oregon Sesquicentennial Film Festival, James Ivory stated that he chose to make A Room with a View (1985) because he wanted to return to Italy. 





snapshot20110215221653



"OK, before you go, then, just answer me this one question, Did you or did you not trim your pubic hair before we met?"



尋找午夜之吻 In Search of a Midnight Kiss

90 min. 2007



Directed by

Writing credits

Alex Holdridge

Produced by

Seth Caplan ....  producer

Scoot McNairy ....  producer

2009 Independent Spirit Awards Independent Spirit Awards



Scoot McNairy  ...  Wilson

Sara Simmonds  ...  Vivian

Brian McGuire  ...  Jacob

Kathleen Luong  ...  Min (as Katie Luong)

Twink Caplan  ...  Wilson's Mother

Robert Murphy  ...  Jack

Bret Roberts  ...  Bui



"Wind of Change"

Performed by Sybil

Written by Scorpions (as The Scorpions)





snapshot20110213225801



深閨疑雲 Suspicion

99 min. 1941



Writing credits

Samson Raphaelson (screenplay) 

Joan Harrison (screenplay)  

Alma Reville (screenplay)

Anthony Berkeley (from the novel "Before the Fact" by) (as Francis Iles)



Cary Grant ...  Johnnie

Joan Fontaine ...  Lina 

1942 Academy Awards Best Actress in a Leading Role



Cedric Hardwicke ...  General McLaidlaw (as Sir Cedric Hardwicke)

Nigel Bruce ...  Beaky

Dame May Whitty ...  Mrs. McLaidlaw

Isabel Jeans ...  Mrs. Newsham

Heather Angel ...  Ethel - Maid

Auriol Lee ...  Isobel Sedbusk

Reginald Sheffield ...  Reggie Wetherby

Leo G. Carroll ...  Captain Melbeck

Carol Curtis-Brown ...  Jessie Barham (uncredited)

Alfred Hitchcock ...  Man Mailing Letter (uncredited) 



1.

Director Cameo: [Alfred Hitchcock] about 45 minutes in, mailing a letter at the village post office.

2.

In the scene where Johnnie brings a glass of milk up to Lina, Alfred Hitchcock had a light hidden in the glass to make it appear more sinister.

3.

Joan Fontaine's performance in this movie is the only Oscar-winning performance that Alfred Hitchcock directed.

4.

This movie marked Alfred Hitchcock's first film as a producer as well as director.

5.

Alfred Hitchcock wanted an ending similar to the climax of the novel, but the studio, more concerned with Cary Grant's "heroic" image, insisted that it be changed.

5.5

Writer Donald Spoto, in his biography of Hitchcock, "The Dark Side Of Genius", disputes Hitchcock's claim to have been overruled on the film's ending.

5.6

Spoto claims that the first RKO treatment and memos between Hitchcock and the studio show that Hitchcock emphatically desired to make a film about a woman's fantasy life.

6.

SPOILER: Alfred Hitchcock originally wanted Johnnie to be guilty, but the studio insisted that the public wouldn't accept Cary Grant as a murderer. Hitchcock's original ending had Johnny killing Lina by poisoning her milk, but then convicting himself by mailing a letter that Lina had written.


















沒有留言:

張貼留言