讲述一对因疫情封城而隔离在家的夫妻,开始重新审视自己以及两人的关系。
迷幻少女遇著過氣公安老頭,未必是貓捉老鼠累鬥累,也可以是從老前輩身上學會認識自己。阿 P 為追阿初欠她的債,偶然與阿初的外公相遇,兩個生活態度南轅北轍的人,就是這樣在荒謬的處境中相互學習。阿P在當中看見年青一代的無奈:十六歲的迷途青春、愛情的無助、軟性毒品的蠶食、面對父母失敗的婚姻、自己渾噩的前途....阿初無故失蹤,又是否因抵受不了同樣殘酷的青春?世情像玻璃,有時看得透,有時不,相同的只是:兩者同樣冰冷易碎。 The second feature from Hong Kong indie director Carol Lai is about the vulnerability of youth, made even more fragile by the vulnerable world of the adults. Grandpa Wu used to be a policeman in Mainland China and has now retired to a life of seclusion on an outlying island. One day, her daughter calls him up and reports that his granddaughter Ah Cho is again missing. The old man hits the road again, in search of the young girl. Then P, Ah Cho's best friend, emerges out of nowhere and heads Wu's search, leading the old man into a series of strange encounters in the uncharted world of frustrated youth. Source: 25th HKIFF (2001)
1821年,巴西迪亚曼蒂纳山脉,奴隶贩子António回到又大又破的农庄。他的妻子死于难产,他和精神错乱的岳母与成群的黑奴被禁足于这荒无人烟的地方,他娶了死去妻子的12岁侄女Beatriz。不安分的António再次与商队一起远行,年幼的妻子Beatriz却不知如何与黑奴们相处……
象州乱世,黑金交易肆虐。韦氏兄弟以“反征粮”为名,建立起地下灰色帝国,周旋于各方势力之间。暴力收租、黑市博弈、血色火并——这场打着革命旗号的权力游戏背后,是欲望与背叛的致命清算。当枪口对准自己人,谁才是最后的赢家?
沈青怀着孕,压力很大。 她照顾着意外怀孕的学生和患有脑瘫的叔叔,后者有被赶出疗养院的危险。 成本不断增加,时间紧迫,但她和丈夫勉强承受。 当她收到自己的孩子有70%的几率先天残疾的消息时,她的婚姻陷入危机,沈青和她的丈夫为残疾胎儿的命运争论不休,而这个未出生的灵魂却同情地观察着一切。 周洲导演凭借池韵的强势主演和脑瘫患者的参与,讲述了一个女人在一个对残疾人抱有偏见的世界里遵循自己道德的悲痛故事。 ——贾森·马赫(摘自大阪亚洲电影节官网) Qing Chen is carrying a child and a lot of pressure. She is looking after a student who has had an unplanned pregnancy and an uncle with cerebral palsy who is at risk of being kicked out of a nursing home. Costs are mounting and time is short but she and her husband are getting by, just about. When she receives news that her baby has a 70% chance of being born disabled, it ignites a crisis in her marriage as Qing Chen and her husband argue over the fate of their unborn baby who is observing everything sympathetically.With a powerful leading performance by Chi Yun and the participation of people with cerebral palsy, director ZHOU Zhou gives a harrowing look at a woman following her own morality in a world where some hold prejudice against the disabled. [Jason MAHER]