㈠ 那裡有英文電影賞析
給你來一篇《怪物史萊克》的影評吧。
Green Power
"Shrek" is fun. People who haven't seen this movie, and are wary of seeing what's popular, should give it a try. It's worth watching, and will probably win you over.
Taking a Fractured Fairy Tale approach to a "Beauty And The Beast"-type plot, throwing in a few mild profanities, flatulence jokes, and Michael Myers' over-the-top faux-Scots accent, "Shrek" shows off a very snarky humor, full of jokes that will likely go over the heads of a cartoon's target audience while registering with their parents. 'Sure it's big enough, but look at the location,' Shrek observes upon seeing a giant castle in the middle of nowhere. The kids, though, will love 'Shrek' every bit as much. It's impossible not to be carried along by its merry madness.
Myers, as the title character, is certainly easier to take than he was in his last Austin Powers movie, his voice work registering real tenderness as well as the expected laughs as a misunderstood ogre who would rather tell a group of frightened villagers about the cruelties he will inflict on them and their dead bodies than cause those villagers any genuine harm. He's a bit of a softie, actually, and scared to let anyone know it.
Cameron Diaz is as beautiful to listen to hear as she is to look at in her other films. Her character, Princess Fiona, doesn't have as much room to shine as Shrek (the balance turns out better in the sequel) but she does well with what she's given.
The comic highpoints in terms of voice characterization is Eddie Murphy as Shrek's donkey companion and John Lithgow as nasty Lord Farquaad, who wants to rid his domain of Duloc of all fairy tale creatures. Murphy never stops being funny even as he helps set up key plot moments; in fact he's never been this funny since the first "Beverly Hills Cop" movie. "We can stay up late, swapping manly stories, and in the morning, I'm making waffles," the donkey tells a much put-upon Shrek, and you still laugh the fifth time you hear it. Lithgow just makes you smile whenever he opens his mouth, like when he grills a hapless gingerbread man in such a convoluted way it turns into a nursery-rhyme recitation.
Why exactly Farquaad is grilling this gingerbread man so closely isn't clear, and there are similar plot holes throughout the movie. Shrek may be too tame a character; we never really feel any worry around him. The donkey falls into a relationship with a dragon that screams "plot convenience," and there are strange little bits of cruelty, like turning a frog and snake into balloons, which just is thrown out there and let be.
But the central story, about how Shrek and Fiona struggle to overcome the odds and find true love, is really sweet and well-rendered. The animation is spectacular, a revolution for the eyes in its deep-dish panoramas and remarkable attention to textures. And the jokes keep flying, the major ones as well as hilarious bits of filigree you won't notice the first or second time but reward you for paying attention.
This is not a Disney movie, something "Shrek" makes very clear not only with its PG-13 humor but its knocks at Disney characters like Snow White and at the Magic Kingdom in the form of Duloc, where an array of "It's A Small World"-type dolls lecture Shrek and Donkey on all the things NOT to do. Frankly, "Shrek" could use a little injection of Disney heart, but Disney could use some of this picture's freshness as well. A very charming movie worth your time.
㈡ 急!!!!!一篇英文的影視作品鑒賞的論文 3000--5000
<< perfume>>的影評
Tom Tykwer adapts Patrick Süskind's bestselling novel about an 18th century French psychopath with a superhuman sense of smell
A German director, adapting a German novel set in France, with actors speaking English, plus extensive voice-over and a near-mute protagonist who spends a lot of his time sniffing. It doesn't exactly sound like a recipe for cinematic success. Remarkably, Tom Tykwer (Run Lola Run, Heaven) has pulled it off, creating a film that overcomes its more awkward elements to be a visually impressive, highly unusual period thriller.
If you've read Patrick Süskind's 1985 novel, doubtless you'll recollect its opening pages, where the profound stink of eighteenth century Europe is described and the protagonist, Jean-Baptiste Grenouille is born to his fish vendor mother, amid the guts and heads of a Paris fish market, "the most putrid spot in all the kingdom". Tykwer doesn't immediately take us to this scenario, but after a short prologue showing the grown-up Grenouille in chains and on his way to the scaffold, he unleashes the full glory of a splendidly yucky cinematic realisation of said birth scene. In the light of the usual tone of period dramas, it's refreshingly foul.
The first half of the film is defined by this grot as Jean-Baptiste is sent to an orphanage, where he grows up an odd child who unnerves the other children - as we're informed in the extensive narration provided by John Hurt. If you're of the school of thought that insists a good movie shouldn't use voice over, perhaps Perfume isn't for you, as much of the film relies on it, in part e to Grenouille not being much of a talker. Instead, he sniffs his way around the world, his sense of smell so acute he can identify pretty much any creature or substance within a large vicinity. After being sold to a tanner, he grows up into the appropriately wiry Ben Winshaw, who gives a gripping performance even if his delivery is a tad bious. Grenouille discovers the full panoply of scents on his first trip into the centre of Paris. He's drawn to a perfumer's shop, but then lured away by the scent of a beautiful young girl (Herfurth) selling plums. She becomes his first kill, almost by accident, and his lifelong obsession - the scent of her body is the most intoxicating he's experienced.
When happenstance brings him into contact with the once famous but faded perfumier Baldini (Hoffman, doing the film's only American accent), Grenouille so impresses him with his uncanny skills, he takes him on as an apprentice. This leads to him travelling to the perfume capital of Grasse in Provence, where he learns other techniques, which he then starts to exploit in his attempts to capture the elusive ideal scent of feminine youth and beauty. So begins his serial killing, and a new, ongoing mania for another beauty - Laura (Hurd-Wood), the daughter of a rich merchant, Richis (Rickman).
In the process, we learn some fascinating details about the proction of perfumes - which involve notes and chords, like music. We're also introced to a fabulous bit of psychopathology - Grenouille is half super-canine, half-superhuman nutter, whose powers enable him to manipulate people, though he's entirely without moral constraint or purpose. As such, he's a force, a power. The film closes in 1766, and it would be nice to read the culmination of his ambitions as in some way having an influence on French society, then starting to ferment and build towards revolution. It's probably reaching, but either way, the prior scenes of him manipulating a mob in the most extreme ways are an example of his remarkable abilities. The film plays around nicely with conventions, so when Grenouille first follows the plum seller, the musical cues are pure romance. However, it's not love for the girl our weird antihero feels, it's love for her smell. The whole endeavour is like a grotesque romance, as his obsessions move him on to his infatuation with Laura. Tykwer slyly shoots it as if she's gazing at him, or moving towards him, but he's actually hidden, and while she's oblivious, he's savouring her scent.
The film does suffer from some pacing issues ring its 140 minute running time. However, even when the story is dragging, the film is so visually rich, it retains a pull. The $50 million budget is certainly up there on the screen, with wonderful proction design, and cinematography by Tykwer's regular collaborator Frank Griebe. The first hour is amazing for its visions of old bridges packed with decrepit buildings and streets paved with filth. Grasse, on the other hand, introces a blaze of colour, with lavender fields and the town itself lit by the Provencal sun. It's a beautiful, bright backdrop for Grenouille's dark activities, which have him experimenting with elaborate equipment like some odour-oriented Dr Frankenstein.
Verdict
It's touch and go at times whether Tykwer will be able to sustain his drama about a sniffing psycho for two-and-half hours, but with the aid of notable visuals and Süskind's unique premise he does. Marvellous.
還有阿剛正傳的 這個短一點 Forrest Gump who is unfortunately to be born with a lower IQ and the muscle problem, usually, people always think this kind of person can't be successful in doing anything. But, instead, this unlucky man has achieved lots of incredible success, he is a football star, a war hero, and later a millionaire!
In the contention of the best picture of the 67th Oscar Award in 1995, film Forrest Gump Have got six Grand Prixes , such as the best picture , the best actor , the best achievement in directing , adapting drama , the best achievement in film editing and the best visual effect bestly ,etc. at one blow . The film was passed to a intellectual disturbance person the description of life has reflected every aspect of U.S.A.'s life, important incident of social political life make and represent to these decades such as U.S.A. from one unique angle. Film adapt Winston · novel of the same name of Groom since. Only the original work is that one is full of fantastic novels with a satiric flavour, but the film modifies and beautifies the story. Have abandoned the absurdity of the original work and revealed that satirizes meaning , have added a kind of tender feeling for the film. This undoubtedly makes the film suit audience and judging panel's taste even more, but has sacrificed the struggle spirit of the rebel of the original work , make the film become one kind and idealize ethical symbol .
Forrest Gump mould incarnation of virtue is honest keeping one's word , conscientiously , brave paying attention to emotioning among film. In the film, Forrest Gump is a very pure image, but Jenny has become the degenerate symbol . And write the great discrepancy originally in this. To all that narrated, since beginning all behave with a kind of tender feeling and well-meaning attitude after all for the film, having even joined poesy composition, this makes the film seem soft and have no injury. The film advocates to traditional moral concept and embodiment. Make film apt to accept by people, director superb lay out skill and film application of language make the film very attractive too. Success with commercial for film content of the film has given security, and the treatment on director's art makes the film more excellent, this is reason that the film succeeds. It was the box-office hits the most in that year to become U.S.A. in Forrest Gump.
Tom · Hanks very much sincere naturally performance having among film. He has obtained the laurel of the best actor of Oscar for the behavior in this film. This second movie emperor's money already whom he obtained in succession looks like. Success of Forrest Gump, make Tom Hanks become one of the most popular movie stars in Hollywood too. To Tom Hanks, those two years are the luckiest period of time in his performing art careers.
㈢ 英文影視賞析對於英語學習有哪些積極影響
(一)看英文電影有助於我們聽力水平的提高
根據很多英語學習者的反應,通過觀看原汁原味的英文電影,他們的英語聽力成績有了很好地提高,同時他們也在觀看電影中掌握了大量地道准確的英語表達方式。原聲英文電影中含有在聽力考試中經常出現的社會經濟文學等知識,更有來自不用種族,不同宗教信仰,不同性別,不同家庭背景和工作種類以及社會地位的人物之間的對話。這些對話源於生活所以顯得真實而自然,經過重新整合後更生動貼切的語言表達,再襯以對話的環境及會話人物的神情、姿態等便產生一種人身臨其境的效果。所以,通過原汁原味的英文電影來學習英語和練習英語聽力著實是一個有效和靈活的方式。
(二)看英文電影有助於我們地道的口語表達
任何一門語言的基礎和精髓在於它語音語調豐富的變化。只要在學習語言時發音正確才能更好的掌握一門語言。英語中的語音不單單只包括單詞發音,它還包括生活實際運用中所常用的表達以及習語的連續、失爆、弱化、重音等的許多的音變的形式。而語言的節奏則是英語表達的潤滑劑,如果你沒有很好地機會去接觸英語國家的人進行對話,那種語音語調在對話中帶來的思想和心靈的沖擊與震撼你就很難去體驗到了。語言是文化的載體,用詞和表達的正確可以體現你對異國文化的理解。那麼我們則可以說觀看英語電影是一個非常好的學習英語的方式。從生動地道的表達中,可以慢慢來模仿人物間的發音。通過長時間有效地模仿,會發現的單詞的發音將會得到大大的提高,以至於趨近標准地道的發音。通過模仿他們人物之間的對話,即便沒有機會跟老外練習口語,口語水平也能通過這一個途徑得到很好地提升。
英語電影有利於讓學習者掌握標準的、口語化的英語的表達。英語電影可以讓英語學習者有身臨其境的感覺,通過課堂上老師進一步的點評和強調,學習者就會很快地習得。通常來說,要表示某件事物很好,我們常用的表達是:「It』s very good.」但是通過觀看很大量的英文電影,我們掌握到他們常用「perfect」來表示做的非常好。這種表達既簡單又明確,從而達到了很好地表情達意的效果。對於英語學習者來說,在聲像並茂的情況下,注意力比較集中,就更容易地記住電影中出現的口語表達,從而使這一學習過程變得生動而高效。
(三)看英文電影有助於我們學習詞彙和語法知識
學生在課堂上接受的教 師教授的詞彙和語法知識是不靈活的、是比較呆板的傳統教學法,是強壓在學生的腦子里的,而通過看英文電影了解的詞彙和語法知識則是潛移默化的、深入人心的,我們都知道英文電影中含有大量的句子和詞彙,而我們中的大多數卻經常會在影片中遇到生詞和怪句。觀看英文電影不僅可以幫我們鞏固我們熟悉的詞,還幫我們記住一些怪詞,這就培養了我們的推理能力。但是如何進行推理呢?我們會依據當時的語言環境以及一系列的有機的邏輯推理及主觀判斷才得出與原文相近的意義。如影片《阿甘正傳》中的對白:『Forrest:
I thought I was going back to Vietnam, but instead they decided the best way for me to fight the communists was to play ping-pong. So I was in the special services, traveling around the country, cheering up those entire wounded veterans and showing how to play ping-pong.』中的「veterans」一詞是生詞,有些同學是這樣猜詞義的;首先結合當時的歷史背景,得知從越南戰爭中歸來的人又是wounded,所以大意應該是傷兵或者是退伍兵。這樣就不僅熟悉了詞彙還會鍛煉我們的推理能力。
在英文電影中,我們會遇到很多含有英語語法的句子,我們也不用刻意地去記憶語法點,一個句子就是一個語法。當我們看得多了,自然而然地記住了,比起在課堂上死記硬背語法點,在英文電影中學習句子掌握語法確實是一種更為有效地方法。總而言之,看英文電影有助於我們對詞彙、語法的學習。
(四)英文電影促進學生對中西方文化差異的理解
學習一種語言, 不僅要掌握一些語法知識, 培養基本的語言技能, 而且更重要的是要了解所學語言的文化背景。在跨文化交際過程中, 語法錯誤不是大問題, 但因文化差異而導致的文化沖突卻是大多數外國人難以容忍的, 往往會引起誤解, 阻礙了交際的順利進行。電影是一面鏡子, 是一個國家和民族的社會文化和生活的最直觀、最生動的反映。它包括了社會生活的方方面面, 反映了最突出的社會問題。電影故事本身和演員每一句台詞的設置都在展現和傳達著各種文化信息, 包括這些國家的生活方式、風俗習慣、價值取向和思維方式等。通過欣賞原版英文電影, 學生可以拓寬視野,更好地了解中西方文化的差異, 加深對英語語言的理解, 從而減少文化沖突。
㈣ 經典英文電影賞析的介紹
《經典英文電影賞析》是2009年國防工業出版社出版的圖書。
㈤ 歐美經典電影 英文賞析
這個是 中國影視庫 http://www.mdbchina.com/
電影 海報 影人什麼的簡介圖片都比較齊全 有利於你做幻燈片時候用
這個是 世界經典電影薈萃 自己選一部最愛的經典電影做為主題吧,然後尋找一下你想要的電影的資料 再從網上搜些英文對白 自己編輯一下 http://www.tianyabook.com/qita/jddy/
希望你能一切順利 ~~
㈥ 經典英文電影賞析的內容簡介
《經典英文電影賞析》由10個章節組成。每一章節包括電影背景、故事簡介、主要演員陣容及導演介紹、精彩部分節選、對影片的評論及注釋五大部分。相信許多讀者會在觀賞優美電影或閱讀《經典英文電影賞析》的過程中重溫自己過去的電影體驗,獲得新的感悟和理解。
英漢對照是《經典英文電影賞析》的一大特點。《經典英文電影賞析》既有英文原文,也提供了中文翻譯,有助於英語愛好者能更好地理解書中的內容。同時,《經典英文電影賞析》還提供了注釋,為讀者的自學提供了參考。
㈦ 經典英文電影對白賞析
經典英文電影對白網上都有
我是這樣賞析的,僅供參考:
「
I
wish
I
could
be
more
like
you.
我要像你一樣就好了。」
這兒用虛擬語氣。我覺得「more」用得很好,符合人物斯嘉麗的性格,既表現出一種羨慕,但又帶了點虛榮。
㈧ 急求一篇1000字的英文電影觀後感或者影視賞析
亂世佳人的影評
"GONE WITH THE WIND" was a mad dream in procer David Selznick's brain and he turned it into one of the great soap operas of cinema history. The last re-release celebrated the film's 50th anniversary in 1989. This time, the three-hour and 42-minute epic has been remastered in digital sound and the color has been tinkered with to bring back the original Technicolor glory.
The movie plays its role in movie history, becoming one of the great box-office performers in the pre-Steven Spielberg and George Lucas days. The search to find Selznick's ideal Scarlett O'Hara, the willful Southern belle who would destroy several Southern gentlemen in pursuit of the man she loved but who didn't love her, was the talk of Hollywood.
Bette Davis, Paulette Goddard, Jennifer Jones, Katharine Hepburn and many others failed to capture the showcase role that would go to British stage actress and girlfriend of Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh.
The sexual tension and humorous byplay between Leigh and co-star Clark Gable, in the role of gentleman rogue Rhett Butler, was riveting. And so was Leigh's portrayal of a viper trying to consume the good-hearted Ashley Wilkes, embodied by the fine-boned Hungarian-turned-British actor, Leslie Howard.
Victor Fleming was the accredited director of the picture, and he won the best-director Academy Award for it, but George Cukor worked on "Gone With the Wind" (he was fired after 10 days into filming), and so did many others. Selznick was as hands-on a procer as ever there was, so his imprint is seared in the final proct. Selznick is said to have used 15 writers but to have written and directed key scenes himself.
Although the picture is responsible for fostering many unpleasant racial biases in its depiction of the slaves working at Tara, the O'Hara estate, and Twelve Oaks, the Wilkes' place, the movie also has the virtue of featuring some of the great black performers of the time, including the memorable Hattie McDaniel.
Some of the wonderful scenes to look for include Scarlett's throwing herself at the polite Ashley and then learning that Rhett has heard the whole embarrassing thing, the burning of Atlanta, the sequence leading to the birth of Melanie's child and Scarlett's plucky seamstress work with the drapes.
If you've never seen this on the big screen, you are in for a treat.
㈨ 英語電影賞析,請教高手,急。。。。。。。。。。。
轉載別人的,4和10我做了改動,供你參考。
4. What did Joe Bradley decide to do when he recognized that Ann was a princess in F7?
when he recognized that,he decided to write a report, so he tracked Ann and took many valuable photos with his photogragher friend.
5. Do you think Captain Von Trap is a patriotic man in F5?
Yes, he is. V Trapp is a widowed ex-naval capt who lost his job when Austria lost its coast after the Treaty of Versailles. He is a proud nationalist and is worried about the rise of the far right in neighbouring Germany and talk of a union. V Trapp runs his household like a ship because he knows no other way and is in deep grieving for his wife. So he is a patriotic man.
6.Why didn』t Grace』s mother stay with Tom in F6?
she was Robert's wife. She was a hard woman with her family and with her job. She always did what she wanted to do. She tried to help Grace by searching Tom. But we think she was an evil woman with her family, an harpyTom was a very friendly and kind person, but he did some strange things. He tried to be loyal, but he fell in a deep love with Grace』s mother, the beautiful Annie. But when Annie wanted to leave Robert, he refused, so we think he wasn't too bad. He was a learned man about horses and about life
7 How did Joe stay one day with the princess in F7?
Bradley immediately realizes who he has in his apartment and gets the editor to agree to pay $5,000 if he can get a real interview with the princess. On the way out Bradley contacts a photographer friend, Irving Radovich (Albert) and arranges for him to met him later with his camera for a big scoop.
Returning to his apartment, Bradley picks up the princess for their planned tour of the city. Bradley's real aim is to get the pictures and story he promised his editor. But the innocent charm of the princess softens him and the two start to fall in love. They end up having a good time and some comical adventures. Bradley conceals the fact that he is a reporter who knows who she really is and she doesn't tell him that that she is a royal princess. But in the end the truth comes out and the princess realizes that her ty to her country and family come first and she reluctantly returns to her official role.
8. What is your impression of F8?
The story may sound simple, but the truth behind the words is remarkable. When I heard the name of the film first time, I considered the Shawshank to be a man』 name, but in face it is a jail——a hell in the world. Not only for the inhumanity of the jailors——they behaved brutally; but also for the jail gnawed at people』 heart by keeping them waiting and waiting as life passed. It seemed that only those utterly worthless people who gave up everything could survive. That』s where the story happened.
The part impressed me most is when Andy got out of the jai. He extended his arms in front of him in the heavy rain as if he were welcoming the fresh air and the freedom. At that moment, I saw the faith win the darkness, discharging light dazzling the eyes in the dark blue sky. Under the light, I could feel my recreant innermost being shivering as his voice said: 「Remember, Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things and no good thing ever dies!」
That』s why I like this film: it encourages people to fight to preserve the dignity of human beings, to appreciate the beauty of life, and the most important is to keep hope forever. He once that is born, that is die. Everyone is the same. The only difference is whether busy living or busy dying. The film tells me even a man can live once, but if he keeps faith, keeps hope and works his life right, then once is enough. The faith is the bird that feels the light when the dawn is still dark, the hope is the chief happiness that this world affords, and the life should be full of the singing of the bird and the happiness hope brings. " What』s that do you think? It』s the trembling of the heart, the singing of the mind, the flying of the soul and the hope to be free.」
9. Why did Maggie change her mind to cooperate with Ike (in F4)?
After Ike forces Maggie to face her fears, the two find themselves becoming more and more attracted to each other.
10. Why does Captain Von Trap treat his children like in an army (in F5)?
Because he is in deep grieving for his wife and he doesn't know how to show his love to his children. He believes to treat his children like in the army is the only right way to teach or discipline his chilren.