1. 电影《傲慢与偏见》英文简介
电影《傲慢与偏见》英文简介:
Elizabeth Bennet (Keira Knightley) and her sister Jane Bennet (Rosamand Parker), sister Mary Bennet (Dalula Lely), Katie Bennet (Kerry Mulligan) and Lydia Bennet (Gina Malone) are all sisters from small landlord families. Mrs. Bennet's greatest goal in life is to find the right man for all five of her daughters. Unfortunately, the second daughter, Elizabeth, can always find out 100 reasons for refusing to marry her mother.
When Mrs. Bennet heard that the neighbouring manor was rented by a wealthy bachelor and would come to spend the summer with his distinguished friends, she excitedly decided that it was a blessing for her daughters. The suitor was on the verge of coming, and things were going as she had expected.
The monotonous and slightly quiet life of the five sisters was accompanied by the arrival of wealthy single Handacy (Matthew McFadden) and his friend Gray, two young men. A beautiful love story full of pride and Prejudice unfolded after the healthy and upward Gray and the wealthy Darcy met the five golden flowers of the Bennet family in the town.
Elizabeth (Keira Knightley) is the most diligent of the five sisters. She is also a talented college student. She never considered marriage before graation. But when she met the handsome, cynical Gray and the wise businessman Darcy (Matthew McFadden), her judgment began to be tested. Because the wealthy son Darcy soon fell deeply in love with the beautiful Elizabeth after a brief exchange.
Moreover, Darcy bravely proposed to her regardless of the family and wealth gap, but because of Elizabeth's misunderstanding and prejudice against him, he was relentlessly refused. The reason why Elizabeth misunderstood and prejudiced him was that Darcy, a wealthy man, often showed immortal arrogance, which made the honest and kind Elizabeth disgusted. Because Darcy's arrogance is actually a reflection of status differences, so long as there is such arrogance, there can be no common thoughts and feelings between him and Elizabeth, nor can there be an ideal marriage.
But after a period of time, graally, Elizabeth found and witnessed a qualitative change in Darcy's way of dealing with people and a series of actions. Especially his past proud and conceited manner disappeared completely, so Elizabeth's misunderstanding and prejudice towards him graally disappeared, and a happy marriage finally achieved. Her sisters also got the sweet life they wanted.
中文对照:
伊丽莎白·班纳特(凯拉·奈特莉饰)和姐姐珍·班纳特(罗莎曼德·派克饰)、妹妹玛丽·班纳特(妲露拉·莱莉饰)、凯蒂·班纳特(凯瑞·穆丽根饰)以及丽迪亚·班纳特(吉娜·马隆饰)这5个出身于小地主家庭的姐妹个个如花似玉。班纳特太太(布兰达·布莱斯饰)最大的人生目标就是给她的这5个女儿都找到如意的郎君。可惜天不从人愿,二女儿伊丽莎白总能找出100个不愿结婚的理由拒绝母亲。
当班纳特太太听说邻近的庄园被一个富有的单身汉租下,并且会带着他那些有身份的朋友们前来消夏时,她兴奋地认定这是女儿们的福分,求婚的人眼看着就要上门了,而事情也正如她预想的那样发展开来。
姐妹5人原本单调且略显平静的生活伴随着富有的单身汉达西(马修·麦克费登饰)和他的好友格莱两个年轻小伙子的到来而泛起了波澜。健康向上的格莱和富家子达西这对要好的朋友在结识了镇上班纳特家的这五朵金花之后,一段美丽而饱含傲慢与偏见的爱情故事就此展开。
伊丽莎白(凯拉·奈特莉饰)是5个姐妹中最勤勉的一个,她还是个有才智的大学生,在毕业之前她从没有考虑过谈婚论嫁。但是当她遇到英俊潇洒,玩世不恭的格莱和理智的商人达西(马修·麦克费登饰)后,她的判断力开始接受考验。因为富豪子弟达西在短暂的交往后很快便深深地爱上了美丽的伊丽莎白。
并且,达西不顾门第和财富的差距,勇敢地向她求婚,但却因为伊丽莎白对他存有的误会和偏见,而遭到了无情的拒绝。伊丽莎白对他存有误会和偏见的原因是,出身富贵的达西经常表现出不可一世的傲慢,这令正直善良的伊丽莎白讨厌不已。因为达西的这种傲慢实际上是地位差异的反映,只要存在这种傲慢,他与伊丽莎白之间就不可能有共同的思想和感情,也不可能有理想的婚姻。
但经过了一段时间之后,渐渐地,伊丽莎白发现并亲眼看到了同样善良的达西在为人处世和一系列所作所为上有了质的改变。特别是他过去那种骄傲自负的神态完全不见了踪影,于是伊丽莎白对他的误会和偏见也逐渐消失,一段美满的姻缘也就此最终成就。她的姐妹们也各自得到了想要的甜蜜生活。
1、《傲慢与偏见》是根据简·奥斯汀同名小说改编,由焦点电影公司发行的一部爱情片,由乔·怀特执导,凯拉·奈特利、马修·麦克费登、唐纳德·萨瑟兰等联合主演。该片于2005年9月16日在英国上映。
该片讲述了19世纪初期英国的乡绅之女伊丽莎白·班内特五姐妹的爱情与择偶的故事。
2、影片评价:
《傲慢与偏见》温暖人心、令人愉悦、浪漫,美国影评界对这部名著改编作品丝毫不吝惜溢美之辞。凯拉·奈特利的表演光芒四射(《亚特兰大宪报》 评论)。
该片最大限度地保留了原著的精华,在传承经典的同时又巧妙地融合了许多现代元素,好看且耐人回味,是一部难得的改编力作。(台海网 评论)。
该片画面精致,从镜头的转换到原声音乐表现,清新,养眼的俊男美女与悦目的英国乡村风光更符合一部新世纪电影的感觉。(新浪网评论)。
2. 谁有关于电影《傲慢与偏见》的感想,要英文的,400个单词左右
很抱歉,我的英文不太好,但我非常喜欢《傲慢与偏见》,因故用中文略表一下感想,电影也看了几个版本的,记得从刚上班起就开始读了,那时的阅历尚浅,也正是情窦初开的时候,对书中描写的华丽场面以及美好的爱情向往不已,常常幻想自己就是伊丽莎白,而我的爱人就是达西,住在冠压皇宫的彭伯里庄园,驾着四轮马车徜徉在青山绿水间,也不用辛苦挣钱,天天享受吃饭、跳舞、弹钢琴、游玩的生活,爱人虽然傲慢但却心地善良,虽然傲慢但却痴心一片,虽然傲慢但却金钱多多,总之所有的好事都被我摊上了,那会是什么生活啊!所以此书深深进入我的心房,渐渐大了,心也就跟着世故了,现实了,可对此书的感受却没变,毕竟这个梦对我来说是多么的美呀!看了电影以后,书中美好的印象快消失怠尽了,本人才疏学浅理解不够深刻,可电影却让我更加迷茫了。伊丽莎白本应是个中产阶级小姐,美丽活泼有主见并小有才气,举止大方,平易近人,从不刻意装出傲慢或与人为敌的样子。而剧中的伊丽莎白却故意装出一副管你是谁我才不稀罕的样子,你伤了我的自尊就不行,依着小姐的性子任由发展,一点儿也不象我想像中的那个聪明、明理的伊丽莎白。达西是个农场主,是那种多金又英俊的王老五,家境殷富外加本性淡漠,使人觉得他很傲慢,其实他心地善良,对感情一心一意。剧中的达西过于死板,完全没有农场主那种威严的神态,表情过于冷漠,即使是对他最心爱的伊丽莎白表达爱意的时候,眼神也是空洞没有激情的,让人看了很不真实,美丽的彭伯里大厦是达西的家,也是他们两人重生的地方,这应该是本剧的高潮,一切美的东西都要出来了。可我想像的那一片一望无际的森林,典雅中看的住宅,错落有致的湖水,肆意奔跑的马车,像英国湖区那样美丽的景色在剧中表现寥寥,失望之余只好寄托结局的美好,却也只不过是清晨的早上,透着阳光的两人彼此的接吻,就像完成公式的,看不到两人眼里的深情,找不到爱情带给人的幸福,有点儿失望,本文纯属个人心得。 偶然看到一版95年英国BBC拍的六级短剧,本人感觉比较接近原著,给YOU提供个网址:http://v.youku.com/v_playlist/f1378115.html。以资共享!
3. 求傲慢与偏见100-150字英文影评。。急。。
Pride and Prejudice is a film that is stunning on several levels: the performances are excellent, the soundtrack is amazing, and the cinematography is beyond comparison.
The performances were stellar. The entire cast was great, and it's interesting to note that, among the "stars" that made up the cast, there are several lesser known actors; this was the first movie credit for both Carey Mulligan (Kitty) and Tamzin Merchant (Georgiana).
It's not a word-for-word adaptation of the book, and cannot be considered a replacement for it. Speaking as someone who loved both the book and the movie, I can honestly say that it's a very satisfying and charming film.
4. 高赏金--文学作品傲慢与偏见的英文评论与对整部作品的概述(英文)
《傲慢与偏见》英文Pride and Prejudice评论,可以参考:)~
Miss Austen never attempts to describe a scene or a class of society with which she was not herself thoroughly acquainted. The conversations of ladies with ladies, or of ladies and gentlemen together, are given, but no instance occurs of a scene in which men only are present. The uniform quality of her work is one most remarkable point to be observed in it. Let a volume be opened at any place: there is the same good English, the same refined style, the same simplicity and truth. There is never any deviation into the unnatural or exaggerated; and how worthy of all love and respect is the finely disciplined genius which rejects the forcible but transient modes of stimulating interest which can so easily be employed when desired, and which knows how to trust to the never-failing principles of human nature!
This very trust has sometimes been made an objection to Miss Austen, and she has been accused of writing ll stories about ordinary people. But her supposed ordinary people are really not such very ordinary people. Let anyone who is inclined to criticise on this score endeavor to construct one character from among the ordinary people of his own acquaintance that shall be capable of interesting any reader for ten minutes. It will then be found how great has been the discrimination of Miss Austen in the selection of her characters, and how skillful is her treatment in the management of them. It is true that the events are for the most part those of daily life, and the feelings are those connected with the usual joys and griefs of familiar existence; but these are the very events and feelings upon which the happiness or misery of most of us depends; and the field which embraces them, to the exclusion of the wonderful, the sentimental, and the historical, is surely large enough, as it certainly admits of the most profitable cultivation. In the end, too, the novel of daily real life is that of which we are least apt to weary: a round of fancy balls would tire the most vigorous admirers of variety in costume, and the return to plain clothes would be hailed with greater delight than their occasional relinquishment ever gives.
Miss Austen's personages are always in plain clothes, but no two suits are alike: all are worn with their appropriate differen AS we should expect from such a life, Jane Austen's view of the world is genial, kindly, and, we repeat, free from anything like cynicism. It is that of a clear-sighted and somewhat satirical onlooker, loving what deserves love, and amusing herself with the foibles, the self-deceptions, the affectations of humanity. Refined almost to fastidiousness, she is hard upon vulgarity; not, however, on good-natured vulgarity, such as that of Mrs. Jennings in "Sense and Sensibility," but on vulgarity like that of Miss Steele, in the same novel, combined at once with effrontery and with meanness of soul.
概述:)~
1. pride and prejudice.
2. family according to Austen family should be responsible for the intellectual and moral ecation for children.
3. class:it is not to say that people from upper class could behave better than those from middle or lower class.
4. woman and marriage:the moman should be at least as equal as man.
5. indivial and society.In the work,society always takes great interest in indivial's issues.Thus they have an intimate relationship.
6. virtue.The traditional virtue in this work is for us to see themoral funetion.
5. 2005年版电影傲慢与偏见的英文影评
2005年版电影傲慢与偏见的英文影评,见附件。
如果看不到附件,请用电脑访问。
6. 名家对傲慢与偏见英文评价
给你重新找啦~两个~你挑挑看吧~
第一个:By Goldwin Smith ——From “Life of Jane Austen,” in “Great Writers,” 1890.
AS we should expect from such a life, Jane Austen’s view of the world is genial, kindly, and, we repeat, free from anything like cynicism. It is that of a clear-sighted and somewhat satirical onlooker, loving what deserves love, and amusing herself with the foibles, the self-deceptions, the affectations of humanity. Refined almost to fastidiousness, she is hard upon vulgarity; not, however, on good-natured vulgarity, such as that of Mrs. Jennings in “Sense and Sensibility,” but on vulgarity like that of Miss Steele, in the same novel, combined at once with effrontery and with meanness of soul….
To sentimentality Jane Austen was a foe. Antipathy to it runs through her works. She had encountered it in the romances of the day, such as the works of Mrs. Radcliffe and in people who had fed on them. What she would have said if she had encountered it in the form of Rousseauism we can only guess. The solid foundation of her own character was good sense, and her type of excellence as displayed in her heroines is a woman full of feeling, but with her feelings thoroughly under control. Genuine sensibility, however, even when too little under control, she can regard as lovable. Marianne in “Sense and Sensibility” is an object of sympathy, because her emotions, though they are ungoverned and lead her into folly, are genuine, and are matched in intensity by her sisterly affection. But affected sentiment gets no quarter….
Jane Austen had, as she was sure to have, a feeling for the beauties of nature. She paints in glowing language the scenery of Lyme. She speaks almost with rapture of a view which she calls thoroughly English, though never having been out of England she could hardly judge of its scenery by contrast. She was deeply impressed by the sea, on which, she says, “all must linger and gaze, on their first return to it, who ever deserves to look on it at all.” But admiration of the picturesque had “become a mere jargon,” from which Jane Austen recoiled. One of her characters is made to say that he likes a fine prospect, but not on picturesque principles; that he prefers tall and flourishing trees to those which are crooked and blasted; neat to ruined cottages, snug farmhouses to watchtowers, and a troop of tidy, happy villagers to the finest banditti in the world….
Jane Austen held the mirror up to her time, or at least to a certain class of the people of her time; and her time was two generations and more before ours. We are reminded of this as we read her works by a number of little touches of manners and customs belonging to the early part of the century, and anterior to the rush of discovery and development which the century has brought with it. There are no railroads, and no lucifer matches. It takes you two days and a half, even when you are flying on the wings of love or remorse, to get from Somersetshire to London. A young lady who has snuffed her candle out has to go to bed in the dark. The watchman calls the hours of the night. Magnates go about in chariots and four with outriders, their coachmen wearing wigs. People dine at five, and instead of spending the evening in brilliant conversation as we do they spend it in an unintellectual rubber of whist, or a round game. Life is unelectric, untelegraphic; it is spent more quietly and it is spent at home. If you are capable of enjoying tranquillity, at least by way of occasional contrast to the stir and stress of the present age, you will find in these tales the tranquillity of a rural neighborhood and a little country town in England a century ago….
That Jane Austen held up the mirror to her time must be remembered when she is charged with want of delicacy in dealing with the relations between the sexes, and especially in speaking of the views of women with regard to matrimony. Women in those days evidently did consider a happy marriage as the best thing that destiny could have in store for them. They desired it for themselves and they sought it for their daughters. Other views had not opened out to them; they had not thought of professions or public life, nor had it entered into the mind of any of them that maternity was not the highest ty and the crown of womanhood. Apparently they also confessed their aims to themselves and to each other with a frankness which would be deemed indelicate in our time. The more worldly and ambitious of them sought in marriage rank and money, and avowed that they did, whereas they would not avow it at the present day. Gossip and speculation on these subjects were common and more unrefined than they are now, and they naturally formed a large part of the amusement of the opulent and idle class from which Jane Austen’s characters were drawn. Often, too, she is ironical; the love of irony is a feature of her mind, and for this also allowance must be made. She does not approve or reward matchmaking or husband-hunting. Mrs. Jennings, the great matchmaker in “Sense and Sensibilty,” is also a paragon of vulgarity. Mrs. Norris’s matchmaking in “Mansfield Park” leads to the most calamitous results. Charlotte Lucas in “Pride and Prejudice,” who unblushingly avows that her object is a husband with a good income, gets what she sought, but you are made to see that she has bought it dear….
The life which Jane Austen painted retains its leading features, and is recognized by the reader at the present day with little effort of the imagination. It is a life of opulent quiet and rather ll enjoyment, physically and morally healthy compared with that of a French aristocracy, though without much of the salt of ty; a life uneventful, exempt from arous struggles and devoid of heroism, a life presenting no materials for tragedy and hardly an element of pathos, a life of which matrimony is the chief incident, and the most interesting objects are the hereditary estate and the heir.
Such a life could evidently furnish no material for romance. It could furnish materials only for that class of novel which corresponds to sentimental comedy. To that class all Jane Austen’s novels belong.
第二个:By F. W. Cornish ——From “Jane Austen” in “English Men of Letters.”
JANE AUSTEN needs no testimonials; her position is at this moment established on a firmer basis than that of any of her contemporaries. She has completely distanced Miss Edgeworth, Miss Ferrier, Fanny Burney, and Hannah More, writers who eclipsed her modest reputation in her own day. The readers of “Evelina,” “Ormond,” “Marriage,” or “Caelebs” are few; but hundreds know intimately every character and every scene in “Pride and Prejudice.” She has survived Trollope and Mrs. Gaskell: one may almost say that she is less out of date than Currer Bell and George Eliot. It was not always so. In 1859 a writer in “Blackwood’s Magazine” spoke of her as “being still unfamiliar in men’s mouths” and “not even now a household word.”
The reason for this comparative obscurity in her own time, compared with her fame at the present day, may in some measure be that in writing, as in other arts, finish is now more highly prized than formerly. But conception as well as finish is in it. The miracle in Jane Austen’s writing is not only that her presentment of each character is complete and consistent, but also that every fact and particular situation is viewed in comprehensive proportion and relation to the rest. Some facts and expressions which pass almost unnoticed by the reader, and quite unnoticed by the other actors in the story, turn up later to take their proper place. She never drops a stitch. The reason is not so much that she took infinite trouble, though no doubt she did, as that everything was actual to her, as in his larger historical manner everything was actual to Macaulay.
It is easier to feel than to estimate a genius which has no parallel. Jane Austen’s faults are obvious. She has no remarkable distinction of style. Her plots, though worked out with microscopic delicacy, are neither original nor striking; incident is almost absent; she repeats situations, and to some extent even characters. She cared for story and situation only as they threw light on character. She has little idealism, little romance, tenderness. Poetry, or religion. All this may be conceded, and yet she stands by the side of Moliere, unsurpassed among writers of prose and poetry, within the limits which she imposed on herself, for clear and sympathetic vision of human character.
She sees everything in clear outline and perspective. She does not care to analyze by logic what she knows by intuition; she does not search out the grounds of motive like George Eliot, nor illumine them like Meredith by search-light flashes of insight, nor like Hardy display them by irony sardonic or pitying, nor like Henry James thread a labyrinth of indications and intimations, repulsions and attractions right and left, all pointing to the central temple, where sits the problem. She has no need to construct her characters, for there they are before her, like Mozart’s music, only waiting to be written down.
7. 傲慢与偏见英文书评200
I use some simple words to describe it:fresh,natural,simple,warm.The challenges they face,on public opinion,are in our times can not be felt.The film "Pride and Prejudice" (2003 version) in a scene very good interpretation of my thoughts.Background music is "the secret life of daydream",the sun bright and warm,everything is peaceful.Jane Austen's life want to stick to love this book as characters,but her hopes were not realized.She gives the soul of this book is her true soul.
8. 傲慢与偏见的英语影评
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9. 能不能给我一篇《傲慢与偏见》的英文影评
The feeling of 《Pride And Prejudice》
Then man treat great event in one's life with punishing, Demonstrate different attitudes to the love question of the marriage of young girl of the family origin of middle class of villages and towns, Thus reflected authors oneself's marriage view: It is wrong to get married for the property, money and position; Get married and does not consider that above-mentioned factors are unwise too . So, she objects to getting married for money , objecting to regarding the marriage as a trifling matter . She emphasizes the importance of the ideal marriage , and regard men and women's emotion as the foundation stone which concludes the ideal marriage .
The woman protagonist in the book Elizabeth comes from the little landlord's family, reaches the west to have deep love for for the rich and powerful people sons and younger brothers. Reach the disparity of ignoring family status and wealth of the west, propose to her, but is refused. Elizabeth's misunderstanding and prejudice to him are a reason, but a main one is the arrogance that she dislikes him. Reach the thes of the west in fact status' the reflections of difference, exist this kind arrogant, Not having common thoughts and feelings between he and Elizabeth, the marriage that can not have lofty ideals . Elizabeth watches concting oneself in society and a series of behavior of reaching the west personally afterwards, See he change the proud conceited expressions of passing by, dispel misunderstanding and prejudice to him, Thus concluded the happy marriage with him.