在老街生活多年的华叔(任达华 饰),倍受街坊尊敬,一直以卖古董为生。“有困难,找华叔”几乎成了街坊邻居们的生活信条。因为地产生意,老街遭当地青龙帮强拆,华叔古董店墙内意外发现6具尸体、7本护照以及枪支,引发众人惊骇,而这一切被老街的流浪汉曹老头看在眼里……与此同时,华叔遭到以阿杰(安志杰 饰)为首的神秘组织追杀,华叔究竟是谁?一切变得的扑朔迷离。
The American writer Joe arrives in Paris to research and write about Proust. He meets the Polish Karl and they become friends and costumers of brothels and restaurants. When the fifteen year-old Colette arrives in Paris, they both fall in love with her. Expatriate Henry Miller indulges in a variety of sexual escapades while struggling to establish himself as a serious writer in Paris. Very nice portrait of the thirties..., 23 April 2002 Author: Oreste (oreste.sl@sympatico.ca) from Montréal, Québec Different from many other Chabrol movies that follow "Hitchock-like" patterns, _Jours tranquilles à Clichy_ relates the days a young American writer (Henry Miller) spent in the Gay Paris of the early thirties, with his polish-descent friend and their young Colette, a 14 years old-ish girl with whom they both fall in love. The story in itself doesn't send us from a surprising even to another but slowly lifts the curtain over the prostitution, pornography, libertinage and partying that seemed to oppose Paris so much to New York, in the eyes of Miller, searching for a change from the dull like he lead before. The story is a quest for Proust and his lost time, a quest for a new life, for thrills, for truth in forgetting oneself...
影片讲述在双休制和作业减少等“宽松教育”下成长起来、被称为“宽松第一代”的三位30岁男子为恋爱、工作而奋斗的模样。冈田将生饰普通上班族,松坂桃李饰小学教师,柳乐优弥饰考大学11战11败的浪人。
In July 2016, Islamic terrorists stormed a popular café in upscale Dhaka and held its patrons hostage, killing more than 20 people and sending shockwaves across the subcontinent. Faraaz is the youngest son of a rich, politically connected family. That evening, he meets his friends at the café and finds himself caught in the crossfire. How he reacts to the nightmarish situation forms the heart of the story. Offsetting nail-biting tension with unexpected humour – often at the expense of inept law-enforcement officials – Hansal Mehta (Aligarh, LFF 2015) brings his trademark sensitivity, nuance and empathy to this fictionalised retelling. It is particularly striking for the way it looks at religious extremism from the perspective of Muslims who have seen their faith questioned and demonised because of the actions of radical extremists.