1. 电子情书完整版电影
电子情书_hd.mp4
2. 求美国电影 情书 的播放地址 98年的
全名(电子情书)
98年美国爱情喜剧,
是这部吗
3. 求电影<电子情书>的英文介绍.~!
电影英文名You've Got Mail
Plot summary(剧情介绍)
Kathleen Kelly (Meg Ryan) is involved with Frank Navasky (Greg Kinnear). While Frank, a newspaper writer for the New York Observer, is devoted to his typewriter, Kathleen prefers her laptop and logging into her AOL e-mail account. There, using the avatar "Shopgirl", Kathleen communicates with "NY152". This is the avatar for Joe Fox (Tom Hanks). Joe belongs to the Fox family which runs Fox Books — a chain of "mega" bookstores like Borders or Barnes & Noble. Kathleen, on the other hand, runs the independent bookstore The Shop Around The Corner, that her mother ran before her. The central conflict of the film revolves around the ability of Kathleen and Joe to interact well in virtual reality while they are business competitors in the "real world." A persistent mode of dramatic irony appears when Kathleen and Joe read each other's emails.
The movie begins with Kathleen logging on to her AOL account to read an email from "NY152" (Joe). In her reading of the e-mail, she reveals the boundaries of the online relationship; no specifics. The two then pass themselves on their respective ways to work, unbeknownst to each other. Joe arrives at work, overseeing the opening of a new Fox Books in New York with the help of his friend and assistant Kevin (Dave Chappelle). Meanwhile, Kathleen and her three store assistants, George (Steve Zahn), Birdie (Jean Stapleton), and Christina (Heather Burns) open up shop.
Following a day on the town with his eleven-year-old aunt Annabel and four-year-old brother Matthew (the children of his grandfather and father, respectively), Joe enters Kathleen's store to let his younger relatives experience storytime. The two have a friendly conversation that reveals Kathleen's fears about the Fox Books store opening around the corner, shocking Joe. He introces himself as "Joe. Just call me Joe", omitting his last name of Fox and makes an abrupt exit with the children. However, at a publishing party later in the week, Joe and Kathleen meet again, both of them being in the "book business", where Kathleen discovers Joe's true identity.
All the while, "NY152" and "Shopgirl" continue their courtship, to the point where "NY152" asks "Shopgirl" to meet. Too embarrassed to go alone, Joe brings Kevin along for moral support. He insists that "Shopgirl" may be the love of his life. Meanwhile Kevin, looking in a cafe window at the behest of Joe, discovers the true identity of "Shopgirl". When Joe discovers that it is actually Kathleen behind the name, he confronts her as Joe (concealing his "NY152" alter ego). The two exchange words and leaves the cafe hurt.
Following invitations from Frank and Joe via "NY152", Kathleen begins a media war, including both a boycott of Fox Books and an interview on the local news. Despite all efforts, The Shop Around the Corner slowly goes under. In a somber moment Kathleen enters Fox Books to discover the true nature of the store is one of friendliness and relaxation, yet not as personal as her independent shop. Eventually, the employees move on to other jobs as Christina goes job hunting, George gets a job at the children's department at a Fox Books store (Joe later compares George's knowledge to a PhD) and a gleeful Birdie retires off the riches of her investments: "I bought Intel at six!"
Allowing time for their electronic relationship to convalesce, Joe visits Kathleen while she is sick, and for the first time makes a favorable impression. Joe discovers that Kathleen has broken up with Frank, who moved in with a talk show host that interviewed him, predated one week by Joe and his uptight girlfriend, Patricia (Parker Posey), who broke up in their apartment building while stuck in the elevator. The two develop a tentative friendship that blossoms over the course of a few weeks and they eventually fall for one another.
At the same time, "NY152" and "Shopgirl" agree to meet one more time. Joe and his dog Brinkley (the topic of numerous e-mails) meet Kathleen at Riverside Park. The two kiss as Kathleen cries and Over the Rainbow takes the movie out.
4. 哪位有美国电影《电子情书》的纯英文版的, 不要俄语、中英双语的
提供本片英文版RayFile网盘下载链接,需要安装RaySource客户端,新建任务,在下载链接(URL)这里把下面的地址粘贴上去,就可以下载了。
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5. 求电影 《电子情书》 英文观后感
Love conquers all between two bad-for-each-other indivials in the predictably saccharine but tolerably entertaining romantic comedy "You've Got Mail" that reunites writer & director Nora Ephron with her "Sleepless in Seattle" co-stars Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan as rival booksellers in the Big Apple who woo each other anonymously via the Internet when they aren't at war with each other in the real world. Sappy cinemaphiles who rhapsodized about "Sleepless in Seattle" inevitably will applaud Ephron's simple but charismatic recoupling of Ryan and Hanks. Discriminating audiences, on the other hand, may reject "Mail" for being manipulatively cute, slowly-paced, and thinly plotted fodder.
Ostensibly, Ephron's frivolous but disposable soaper updates director Ernest Lubitsch's "The Shop around the Corner." In that venerable but uneven 1940 comedy, James Stewart and Margaret Sullivan portrayed two clashing curio store clerks who exchange anonymous but endearing letters. Incidentally, not only did Miklos Laszlo's play "Parfumerie" serve as the basis for the Lubitsch comedy, but it also inspired director Robert Z. Leonard's 1949 musical "In the Good Old Summertime" that mated Judy Garland with Van Johnson.
Just for the record, "The Shop around the Corner" ranks as no great shakes itself. Maudlin and claustrophobic, with a subplot featuring infidelity and suicide, the Lubitsch comedy is still rather depressing for a film proced ring the Golden Age of Hollywood. "Michael" director Nora Ephron and sister Delia Ephron have adapted Samson Raphaelson's "Shop" screenplay, preserving its better parts and contriving a few twists of their own. In their warm and fuzzy remake, the Ephrons have changed the setting from pre-World War II Budapest to contemporary New York City. Not surprisingly, because Nora Ephron lives on the Upper West Side, "You've Got Mail" makes Manhattan look like the better side of the rainbow. The sisters Ephron have expanded the scope of the action, too, so that the principals no longer toil under the same roof with the same tyrannical boss.
As Joe Fox, Tom Hanks of "Forrest Gump" plays the son of a wealthy family that owns Fox Books, a conglomerate book store a la Barnes & Noble which swallows smaller stores. Although Joe epitomizes capitalism at its most ruthless extreme, the filmmakers go to great lengths to take the sting out of his villainy. Not only do they show him taking his father's children by a second wife out to play, but they also saddle Joe with a shaggy Irish setter. Can anybody say "Turner and Hooch?" Conversely, as Kathleen Kelly, Ryan runs a quaint little children's bookstore named The Shop Around the Corner that her mother left her. Perky as always with her hair fashionably disheveled, Ryan appears hopelessly adorable in whatever she dons, whether pajamas or pants suit. Essentially, Hanks and Ryan are the whole show, and their cinematic chemistry has not dimmed an iota since their initial coupling in the abysmal 1990 epic "Joe Versus the Volcano." "You've Got Mail" marks the third time that they have teamed up.
The conflict is pretty basic. Opening its newest superstore a block away, Fox Books poses a dire threat to Kathleen's livelihood as a longtime neighborhood staple. Unlike "Sleepless in Seattle," where the Ryan and Hanks' characters eventually met at the end of the movie, "You've Got Mail" has their paths criss-crossing from the outset. The premise is that Kathleen and Joe meet in an-over-30 chat room at America-On-Line and have kindled a cozy e-mail relationship under the aliases of 'Shopgirl' and 'NY152.' Agreeing not to divulge any personal details, they have maintained a strictly platonic relationship. Nevertheless, they're so infatuated that they cannot wait for their live-in lovers to leave (they're singles) for work each day so that they can check their e-mail. Actually, Joe and Kathleen live only a few blocks apart, and Ephron shows early on how easily it is for these New Yorkers to walk the same streets without colliding. Joe is shacking up with a neurotic, caffeine-addicted book editor, Patricia Eden (indie movie queen Parker Posey), while Kathleen shares the same bed with a pretentious, bespectacled newspaper columnist, Frank Navasky (Greg Kinnear of "As Good As It Gets." Eventually, Joe and Kathleen run afoul of each other at a publisher's party where she learns about Joe's notoriety. Dislike turns to hate when Fox Books lures Kathleen's customers away with its discounted books, cappuccino bar, and chairs to relax in and read. Faced with competition that will likely sink her small business, 'Shopgirl' seeks advice from 'NY152.' He suggests that she go to war. Rationalizing everything in terms of the movie "The Godfather," he refers to the mafia epic as "the sum of all wisdom" and charts his life by it. Meanwhile, she interprets life through the pages of Jane Austin's classic weepie "Pride and Prejudice." Despite the widespread protest that she generates in the media, Kathleen cannot compete with Fox, and she locks her doors after 42 years of business. Indeed, hostile takeovers of this kind raise few eyebrows in today's rabid business climate, but jarring realism of this sort seems distinctly out of place in an otherwise fluffy love story.
Although "You've Got Mail" is a tale perfectly suited for today's technology, several obvious consequences have been overlooked. Never mind that "Mail" depicts women as passive and inexorably overwhelmed, makes breaking up appear like a picnic, and condones Republican style capitalism where big company gobble up small stores without a moral hiccup. Presumably, the sisters Ephron figured that audiences will dismiss these uneasy questions without a thought as they purr over the on-screen chemistry between Ryan and Hanks. Formulaic, flighty, flirtatious, and feel-good-all-around, "You've Got Mail" emerges also as a shameless infomercial for AOL, Macintosh computers, and Starbucks Coffee. However, another rather unsettling question lurks in the background. What if that significant other who shares this cinematic experience with you is cavorting on-line with somebody else?
6. 求电子情书 you've got mail 中英字幕版 电影
你网络搜You've Got Mail 1998 720p 有很多 推荐迅雷快传那个 没字幕的话去射手网下载
7. 电子情书高清完整版电影
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《电子情书》是由诺拉·艾芙隆执导,汤姆·汉克斯、梅格·瑞恩等主演的美国爱情片,于1998年12月18日在美国上映。影片讲述的是乔·福克斯和凯瑟琳·凯莉在现实中互不相让,在网络上却成了最佳笔友,历经一波三折终成眷侣的故事。
8. 汤姆汉克斯和梅格瑞恩主演的《电子情书》或者《网上情缘》的中英文字幕,英文原声的下载地址
不知道TLF的MiniSD版本是否符合楼主要求:
◎片 名 You've Got Mail
◎译 名 电子情书
◎年 代 1998
◎影片类型 喜剧/爱情
◎片 长 114 Mins
◎国 家 美国
◎对白语言 英语
◎字 幕 中/英文
◎编 码 x264 + AAC
◎视频码率 1198 kbps
◎音频码率 64 kbps
◎视频尺寸 1024 x 576 (704 x 576 DAR: 16:9)
◎文件大小 1036 MiB
◎帧 率 25.000 fps
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9. 跪求“阿甘正传”、“电子情书 ”、“肖申克的救赎”、“海上钢琴师”等适合学英语的纯英文电影
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