纽约客 上海

时间:2024-06-24 22:40:39编辑:奇事君

十大经典烧脑电影,被称为史上最难看懂的电影有哪些?

烧脑高智商电影有很多,以下十部个人推荐,每一部都非常精彩。如果你是这类电影爱好者,以下电影必看。盗梦空间梦中与现实的来回穿插,很大程度的凸现出梦境的巧妙,各种意想不到的突发点更是给悬疑点加分。最惹人紧扣心弦的莫过于柯布的情感纠结,剧中层层铺垫又层层的剥开谜团,一步一步的深入,并以阿丽瑞德妮的挖掘为辅助线,能够很好地吸引住观影者的眼球,引发继续往下看的欲望,悬疑点处处存在。不得不说一句,诺兰出品,必属精品。2. 恐怖游轮恐怖游轮是所有悬疑片中情节最复杂的,但又似乎有一个很清晰的思路。在看它的过程中,你的大脑不得不飞速运转,才能理清全片的结构。3.穆赫兰道(2001)穆赫兰道可以算是每个悬疑片爱好者必观影片,电影开头的细节提示可以算是技术含量最高的了——那个谁也不会注意到的细节,竟然是全片的最重要的地方。让我想起了爱因斯坦曾说过的一句话:“第一句话错误,整个假设失败。”4.禁闭岛小岛关押着精神病患者,一名高智商调查员,想要揭开岛上人体实验的黑暗内幕,却难以想象自己原来是……5.蝴蝶效应1这部电影,很棒,看完后,一个人,活脱脱地呆住了。有很多片段,他们已经成了记忆的一部分,我们会尽力忘掉这些片段,仅仅是因为我们无法回到那时刻,改变他们。如果给了我这个可能,让我重回旧日十字路口,如果我能在那一刻预先知道了某种选择所带来的我并不愿发生的结果,让我收住脚步,转身向另一个方向迈出一步,我的历史,会不会就此更完美?这部电影,不但假设出这种可能,甚至还试着给出了一个让人意想不到的答案……6.致命魔术(2006)致命魔术的结局很有震慑力,烧脑但不恐怖,其实片中很多细节都揭示了这个结局。7.致命ID(2003)类型的电影看多了,这当之无愧是其中最好的。总之,看本片心情是相当的纠结:从肯定A是凶手到肯定B是凶手到肯定C是凶手到肯定D……最后不知道谁是凶手。最后的最后以为就那样了,又再一次被震惊……8.记忆碎片《记忆碎片》注定不是一般的作品,电影故事其实不太复杂,但很难看懂,这是由于它采用两条平行故事线,一条倒叙,以彩色呈现,另一条顺叙,以黑白呈现,两条线每隔几分钟穿插一次,直至片尾天衣无缝地与片头衔接在一起(观看者可注意何时衔接到了一起)。9.源代码继《月球》后,导演邓肯•琼斯再次带来的精彩之作。情节紧凑,逻辑合理,想象力毋庸置疑。作为科幻电影,虽然动作场面少,特效场面少但却始终引人入胜,牢牢抓住观众。唯一有待商榷的就是结局,如若停留在那一吻,或许会更棒!从一开始就情节紧凑,抽丝剥茧。导演在结尾的处理混乱了之前构建的世界,能在观看中带出很多悬念,又能在观看后引发许多讨论!10.十二宫二十世纪70年代,旧金山出现了一个自称“十二宫”的杀人狂,杀人后,向媒体寄一封信,留下密码、线索,向警方挑衅,多次的阴差阳错使案件陷入僵局,警方渐渐束手无策。连环杀人案件也引起了《旧金山纪事报》的记者罗伯特和保罗的注意,他们在警察大卫的帮助下,开始调查这一系列的连环凶杀案件,在和“十二宫”杀手斗志斗勇的同时,他们个人的生活也面临了极大的挑战。

纽约客@上海的剧情简介

当雄心勃勃的纽约律师山姆(丹尼尔·亨利饰)被意外的派到上海时,他立即陷入了法律泥潭,使他差点丢了工作。但随着一位聪明性感的助理(朱珠饰),一个机灵的上海记者(耿乐饰),一位漂亮的迁居专家(伊丽莎·库伯饰),以及一个人脉广泛的老前辈(比尔·帕克斯顿饰)的帮助,山姆可能有机会保住工作,寻找到爱情,并且学着去欣赏他美好的故乡 。

你觉得朱珠在《纽约客@上海》中表现如何?

华人女星朱珠带着自己的最新作品《纽约客@上海》亮相洛杉矶,吸引了外媒和影迷的热切关注。与《云图》中所饰演的朴实真诚的70年代女科学家的形象相比,《纽约客@上海》中朱珠饰演的女主角芳芳是一位性感女助理,淋漓尽致的展现出朱珠一贯开放明朗的性格魅力以及特有东方女孩气质。有些影迷评论朱珠在该片中的表演:没有很多其他电影里女主角那种装出来的智慧,讲台词的时候真的是把台词内化为自己的东西了。难怪朱珠也因为在该片中的出色表现,而被导演夏伟夸赞为“所见过演员中最聪慧最睿智最不可替代的”。影片中一身白裙飘飘,古典脱俗的朱珠,让大家很难将其和印象中那个时尚、国际范儿的中国女孩相连结。该片在去年底登陆美国电影市场,首映日就以310万美元的成绩登上了排行榜第三位,成为去年叫好又叫座的影片之一。

名著读后感,或英语电影影评,1000字以上,要英文的,三篇……谢谢

  你不给我加分,怎么对得起我!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  英文影评:千与千寻(Spirited Away)
  Animated feature from Japanese master Hayao Miyazaki. A young girl finds herself trapped in a mystical realm, where she must find a way to save her parents - who have been turned into pigs
  There's something almost criminal about the way Spirited Away took over two years to reach Britain after its original Japanese release. In Japan, Hayao Miyazaki is both commercially successful (his films regularly beat box office records) and highly respected (Akira Kurosawa said: "I am somewhat disturbed when critics lump our works together. One cannot mimimise the importance of Miyazaki's work by comparing it to mine."). In Britain, however, his work has barely got more than a few cursory arts venue screenings. At least Spirited Away - which took the Berlin Golden Bear in 2002 and the Best Animated Film Oscar in 2003 - made it. Better late than never.

  After the stress of making his last film, 1997's Princess Mononoke, Miyazaki had a breakdown and retired. But he came out of retirement when an idea to create another, lighter film began to take shape. Princess Mononoke was an action-packed epic that ranged across 15th century Japan. For Spirited Away he returned to the quieter - but no less serious - themes that he addressed to a degree in 1988's My Neighbor Tortoro. Both films feature a family moving house, girls getting used to upheaval, and elements of 'Alice In Wonderland'. But where the 1988 film used a few specific motifs from Carroll's book (a plunge into a 'rabbit hole', a version of the Cheshire cat), Spirited Away casts its 10-year-old protagonist, Chihiro (Hîragi; or Chase in the US dub), fully into a Wonderland, a mystical otherworld populated by animal spirits and gods. Chihiro arrives in this realm by accident. Her parents, heading for their new home, take a road that leads into the woods. Arriving at a dead end, they walk down a corridor through a building and emerge in what dad takes to be "an abandoned theme park". It's something like a Japanese Portmeirion, but eerily deserted. While her parents greedily help themselves to food, Chihiro wanders off and meets Haku (Irino; or Marsden), a boy who warns her to leave before dark. She's too late though - a lake has appeared, blocking her route, ghostly forms have populated the town and her parents have turned into pigs. She's trapped.

  The only way to survive, Haku tells her, is to get work in the bath house that dominates the town. Here "eight million gods rest their weary bones", according to Yubaba (Natsuki; or Pleshette), the witch who runs the establishment. Chihiro makes her way to meet Yubaba with the help of Kamajii (Sugawara; Ogden Stiers), a multi-limbed codger who runs the boiler house, Lin (Tamai; Egan), a serving woman with a taste for "roasted newt", and even a 'Radish God', a giant sumo of a chap with tuber-like appendages. Yubaba is hardly forthcoming - her realm is "no place for humans" - but she's forced to give Chihiro work, thanks to an oath she swore. Chihiro gets work helping Lin. But the management give them the worst jobs - such as assisting a hideous oozing creature they take to be a "Stink God; an extra large stinker at that". It's an entity so foul its smell makes food rot instantaneously, while its suppurations fill the room with a noxious gloop.

  Chihiro - or Sen as she becomes when Yubaba takes her name as part of her contract - does get by in the bath house, but it's not without further incident. She may lose her identity, but she retains her decency. One act of kindness results in a dangerous spirit, No Face, getting into the bath house and wreaking havoc by playing on the greed of the other employees ("Gold springs from his palms!"). She even gets involved in an adventure that reveals her mysterious bond with Haku. But can she save her parents? It's often said that Katsuhiro Otomo's Akira (1988) is the greatest anime ever. That's as maybe, but every one of Miyazaki's films is a masterpiece, so it's hard to pick just one that stands out. It's also tricky to compare his works with the more traditionally received notion of anime (giant robots, demons with phallic tentacles, telekinetic fighting, atom bomb-style explosions etc).

  Although Miyazaki insists it's not his role to be didactic, all of his work (notably his second feature Nausicaa Of The Valley Of The Wind and Princess Mononoke) has strong messages about ecology and the human relationship with the natural world. But he's also fascinated with coming-of-age stories, notably about how girls (many of his protagonists are young females) can not only face up to adult responsibility, but also how they can become strong, principled members of society. Here Chihiro is forced to grow up fast, but the process, while gruelling, is not without real benefits, as her understanding of the way society functions and experience of adult emotions develops exponentially.

  Some aspects of the film are likely to be too foreign for Westerners - we're ignorant of Japanese belief systems, with their hierarchies of entities - but Miyazaki's work has the power to transcend such culturally specific elements. While many of his earlier films drew on European stories (such as 1986's Castle In The Sky, from Swift), the folkloric features he reworks are often universal. But most of all, his team's animation - here utilising more digital techniques, while still being grounded in 2D traditions - is always beautiful and, in places, breathtaking. Locations are atmospheric, details are immaculate (you can identify the flower species in the gardens) and characters are diverse. Yubaba, for example, is a bizarre creation, a stocky woman with a huge head and even bigger hairdo; the bath house itself is stocked with all sorts of weird and wonderful creatures, from a Kermit-like assistant, to creatures reminiscent of his cuddly woodland deity from My Neighbor Tortoro, to troll-like beasts that look related to Maurice Sendak's 'Wild Things'). The only factor that could be seen as mildly misjudged is Jô Hisaishi's score, which is overbearing in places.
  It's no wonder the likes of Pixar's John Lasseter (who executive produced the US dub) are so full of praise for Miyazaki. He's a true genius, an artist and great filmmaker who happens to work in animation - a medium often belittled as childish in the West. Spirited Away is wonderful.


  蜜蜂总动员 Bee Movie review by Roger Ebert
  From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.

  -- Karl Marx


  Applied with strict rigor, that's how bee society works in Jerry Seinfeld's "Bee Movie" and apparently in real life. Doesn't seem like much fun. You are born, grow a little, attend school for three days, and then go to work for the rest of your life. "Are you going to work us to death?" a young bee asks during a briefing. "We certainly hope so!" says the smiling lecturer, to appreciative chuckles all around.

  One bee, however, is not so thrilled with the system. His name is Barry B. Benson, and he is voiced by Seinfeld as a rebel who wants to experience the world before settling down to a lifetime job as, for example, a Crud Remover. He sneaks into a formation of ace pollinators, flies out of the hive, has a dizzying flight through Central Park, and ends up (never mind how) making a friend of a human named Vanessa (voice of Renee Zellweger). Then their relationship blossoms into something more, although not very much more, given the physical differences. Compared to them, a Chihuahua and a Great Dane would have it easy.

  This friendship is against all the rules. Bees are forbidden to speak to humans. And humans tend to swat bees (there's a good laugh when Barry explains how a friend was offed by a rolled-up copy of French Vogue). What Barry mostly discovers from human society is, gasp!, that humans rob the bees of all their honey and eat it. He and Adam, his best pal (Matthew Broderick), even visit a bee farm, which looks like forced labor of the worst sort. Their instant analysis of the human-bee economic relationship is pure Marxism, if only they knew it.
  Barry and Adam end up bringing a lawsuit against the human race for its exploitation of all bees everywhere, and this court case (with a judge voiced by Oprah Winfrey) is enlivened by the rotund, syrupy voiced Layton T. Montgomery (John Goodman), attorney for the human race, who talks like a cross between Fred Thompson and Foghorn Leghorn. If the bees win their case, Montgomery jokes, he'd have to negotiate with silkworms for the stuff that holds up his britches.

  All of this material, written by Seinfeld and writers associated with his television series, tries hard, but never really takes off. We learn at the outset of the movie that bees theoretically cannot fly. Unfortunately, in the movie, that applies only to the screenplay. It is really, really, really hard to care much about a platonic romantic relationship between Renee Zellweger and a bee, although if anyone could pull if off, she could.

  Barry and Adam come across as earnest, articulate young bees who pursue logic into the realm of the bizarre, as sometimes happened on the "Seinfeld" show. Most of the humor is verbal, and tends toward the gently ironic rather than the hilarious. Chris Rock scores best, as a mosquito named Mooseblood, but his biggest laugh comes from a recycled lawyer joke.

  In the tradition of many recent animated films, several famous people turn up playing themselves, including Sting (how did he earn that name?) and Ray Liotta, who is called as a witness because his brand of Ray Liotta Honey profiteers from the labors of bees.

  Liotta's character and voice work are actually kind of inspired, leaving me to regret the absence of B.B. King, Burt's Bees, Johnny B. Goode, and the evil Canadian bee slavemaster Norman Jewison, who -- oh, I forgot, he exploits maple trees.

  贫民富翁(Slumdog Millionaire)
  An orphaned Mumbai slum kid tries to change his life by winning TV's 'Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?' in a feelgood fable from director Danny Boyle and the writer of The Full Monty, Simon Beaufoy
  Jamal Malik ('Skins' star Dev Patel) is being beaten by Mumbai police for allegedly cheating on hit TV show 'Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?' One question away from the ultimate 20 million rupee prize, no one, including slick show host Prem (Anil Kapoor), believes a chai wallah (teaboy) like Jamal could know all the answers. As the tough inspector (Irfan Khan) replays Jamal's appearance on the show, it's revealed that each question corresponds to a specific life lesson from Jamal's tragic past.

  Raised in abject poverty in Mumbai's grimmest slum along with older brother Salim, then orphaned by a Hindu mob attack, Jamal and Salim are forced to fend for themselves on the streets through opportunistic petty crime. They pick up a young girl, fellow orphan Latika (Freida Pinto), escape the clutches of a vicious Fagin-like crime boss, lose Latika, and continue their picaresque adventures, one step ahead of the law. As adolescents, however, Salim becomes entranced by a life of crime and Latika's unexpected return sets brother against brother. Will Jamal salvage his girl, his fortune and his life on 'Millionaire'?

  Adapted by Full Monty writer Simon Beaufoy from Vikas Swarup's hit novel 'Q&A', Slumdog is an underdog tale. Beaufoy's lively screenplay scampers after Swarup's self-consciously Dickensian storytelling tradition, and is even built around the 'Millionaire' show, as iconic a symbol of Western capitalist entertainment as exists.

  Director Danny Boyle and cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle have evidently immersed themselves in India's sensory overload. The film revels in the sub-continent's chaotic beauty and raging colours, from Mumbai shantytowns to Agra's regal Taj Mahal. The thrillingly off-the-cuff digital imagery reflects a nation in a state of explosive flux, looming skyscrapers erupting from wasteland, slum kids turning into overnight millionaires through the kiss of television. The film's uniquely vibrant, headlong 21st century rush is that of the infinite possibilities of modern India itself.


  Slumdog's such a crowd-pleaser that some critics might brand it Boyle's best since Trainspotting . It even echoes a couple of that film's classic set pieces, notably a slum chase reminiscent of Renton and Co's opening Edinburgh dash and a lavatorial incident so stomach-churning (yet hilarious), it makes Trainspotting's infamous toilet scene seem like Ewan McGregor took an Evian bath.

  In fact, the likable Boyle has been on great form for some time - 28 Days Later revamped the zombie movie, Millions is perhaps the best kids film of recent years. No other current British director makes such thrillingly current (all his films are set in either the present or future), kinetic, inherently visual films and proper recognition is long overdue - though, true to form, he's insistent here on crediting co-director Loveleen Tandan, whose major contribution seems to have been unearthing the wonderfully naturalistic kids to play Jamal, Salim and Latika.
  Verdict
  A spirited underdog fable marinated in modern India's melting pot. Danny Boyle's still the master of spices.


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