决战中途岛英语
998
7.0
HD
决战中途岛英语
7.0
更新时间:2025年11月21日
主演:艾德·斯克林,帕特里克·威尔森,伍迪·哈里森,卢克·伊万斯,丹尼斯·奎德,曼迪·摩尔,亚历山大·路德韦格,艾伦·艾克哈特,达伦·克里斯,尼克·乔纳斯,卢克·克莱恩坦克,杰克·韦伯,基恩·约翰逊,浅野忠信,大卫·休莱特,马克·罗斯顿,布雷南·布朗,詹姆斯·卡佩内罗,马修·麦考尔,格雷格·霍瓦尼西安,杰克·曼利,杰弗里·布莱克,瑞秋·佩雷尔·佛斯基特,卡梅伦·布罗德,杰克博·布莱尔,克里斯蒂·布鲁克,国村隼,泰勒·艾略特·伯克,丰川悦司,艾梅伯·瓦尔斯,莫妮卡·比卡罗娃,托尼·克里斯托弗,加雷特·佐藤,罗伯特
简介:

  电影讲述的是第二次世界大战太平洋战争重要转折点——中途岛海战:经此一役,日本海军受到“降维打击”,美日海上实力反转,从而扭转了整个太平洋战场的局势。影片通过参战士兵和飞行员一个个鲜活的故事,带领观众逐步进入1942年6月初发生在太平洋中途岛附近那场令人难以置信的战争……

3080
2019
决战中途岛英语
主演:艾德·斯克林,帕特里克·威尔森,伍迪·哈里森,卢克·伊万斯,丹尼斯·奎德,曼迪·摩尔,亚历山大·路德韦格,艾伦·艾克哈特,达伦·克里斯,尼克·乔纳斯,卢克·克莱恩坦克,杰克·韦伯,基恩·约翰逊,浅野忠信,大卫·休莱特,马克·罗斯顿,布雷南·布朗,詹姆斯·卡佩内罗,马修·麦考尔,格雷格·霍瓦尼西安,杰克·曼利,杰弗里·布莱克,瑞秋·佩雷尔·佛斯基特,卡梅伦·布罗德,杰克博·布莱尔,克里斯蒂·布鲁克,国村隼,泰勒·艾略特·伯克,丰川悦司,艾梅伯·瓦尔斯,莫妮卡·比卡罗娃,托尼·克里斯托弗,加雷特·佐藤,罗伯特
遥远的桥国语
992
8.0
HD
遥远的桥国语
8.0
更新时间:2025年11月21日
主演:德克·博加德,爱德华·福克斯,肖恩·康纳利,沃尔夫冈·普莱斯,保罗·马克斯韦尔,瑞安·奥尼尔,吉恩·哈克曼,杰拉尔·德西姆,哈特穆特·贝克尔,杰瑞米·坎普,唐纳德·皮克林,史蒂芬·摩尔,迈克尔·凯恩,迈克尔·伯恩,安东尼·霍普金斯,尼古拉斯·坎贝尔,詹姆斯·肯恩,科林·法雷尔,艾伦·阿姆斯特朗,勒克斯·范·德尔登,马克西米连·谢尔,哈迪·克鲁格,西恩·马提亚斯,丽芙·乌曼,埃利奥特·古尔德,Michael Wolf,Tim Beekman,Tom van Beek,Bertus Botterman,Hen
简介:

  欧战尾声,盟军上下逐渐弥漫着乐观的情绪。为了提前结束战争,各地盟军将领认为只要一番猛攻,便可提早直捣柏林结束战争。于是轻率地将大批伞兵空投在德军营地背后,去攻占阿纳姆的那座横跨莱茵河的大桥。不料遭遇德军的顽强抵抗,盟军付出了伤亡惨重的代价。这场堪称二战中最具戏剧性的战役,终以盟军的惨痛失败而告终。
  由奥斯卡金像奖得奖导演理查德·阿滕伯勒执导的战争巨片《遥远的桥》,根据科尼利厄斯·瑞恩的同名小说改编而成。影片表现和讴歌了盟军在二战中浴血奋战的斗争精神,被誉为电影史上的超级战争巨片。本片的明星阵容空前强大,聚集了诸如詹姆斯·卡恩、迈克尔·凯恩、肖恩·康纳利、罗伯特·雷德福、安东尼·霍普金斯等数国的数十位明星。本片荣获1978年第31届英国电影和电视艺术学院奖最佳摄影、最佳男配角、最佳原声等多项大奖与提名。

3048
1977
遥远的桥国语
主演:德克·博加德,爱德华·福克斯,肖恩·康纳利,沃尔夫冈·普莱斯,保罗·马克斯韦尔,瑞安·奥尼尔,吉恩·哈克曼,杰拉尔·德西姆,哈特穆特·贝克尔,杰瑞米·坎普,唐纳德·皮克林,史蒂芬·摩尔,迈克尔·凯恩,迈克尔·伯恩,安东尼·霍普金斯,尼古拉斯·坎贝尔,詹姆斯·肯恩,科林·法雷尔,艾伦·阿姆斯特朗,勒克斯·范·德尔登,马克西米连·谢尔,哈迪·克鲁格,西恩·马提亚斯,丽芙·乌曼,埃利奥特·古尔德,Michael Wolf,Tim Beekman,Tom van Beek,Bertus Botterman,Hen
烽火母女泪
991
1.0
HD
烽火母女泪
1.0
更新时间:2025年11月21日
主演:索菲娅·罗兰,让-保罗·贝尔蒙多,艾伦诺拉·布朗,卡尔洛·尼奇,安德烈·切齐,普佩拉·玛奇奥,艾玛巴伦,安东內拉·德拉·博尔塔,佛朗哥·巴尔杜奇,科特·罗文斯,卢西亚诺·皮格齐,雷夫·瓦朗,温琴佐·穆索利诺,雷纳托·萨尔瓦托雷,Ettore Mattia
简介:

  故事发生在第二次世界大战期间,为了躲避战火,坚强的母亲塞西拉(索菲娅·罗兰 Sophia Loren 饰)带着13岁的女儿罗塞塔(艾伦诺拉·布朗 Eleonora Brown 饰)离开了他们的故乡罗马,暂时来到地处偏远的小镇西赛罗定居。在这里,塞西拉结识了准备成为医生的小伙子米凯尔(让-保罗·贝尔蒙多 Jean Paul Belmondo 饰)。
  米凯尔是一个生性浪漫的男人,热爱文学,他教罗塞塔识字读诗,久而久之,罗塞塔爱上了他,可是很显然,米凯尔的目光始终锁定在塞西拉的身上。为了帮助塞西拉搞到食物填饱肚子,米凯尔来到了父亲的朋友家,哪知道在那里遇见了一个德国军官,德国军官强烈谴责米凯尔不上战场的行为,并且打算强行把他带走。

16
1960
烽火母女泪
主演:索菲娅·罗兰,让-保罗·贝尔蒙多,艾伦诺拉·布朗,卡尔洛·尼奇,安德烈·切齐,普佩拉·玛奇奥,艾玛巴伦,安东內拉·德拉·博尔塔,佛朗哥·巴尔杜奇,科特·罗文斯,卢西亚诺·皮格齐,雷夫·瓦朗,温琴佐·穆索利诺,雷纳托·萨尔瓦托雷,Ettore Mattia
永远的0
975
9.0
HD
永远的0
9.0
更新时间:2025年11月21日
主演:冈田准一,三浦春马,井上真央,滨田岳,染谷将太,三浦贵大,上田龙也,新井浩文,夏八木勋,桥爪功,田中泯,山本学,平干二朗,风吹淳,吹石一惠,古川雄辉
简介:

  2004年的一天,司法浪人佐伯健太郎(三浦春马 饰)在外婆的葬礼上得知,他和外公贤一郎(夏八木勋 饰)没有任何血缘关系,其真正的外公宫部久藏(冈田准一 饰)早已在二战末期死于神风特攻行动中。此后不久,健太郎被姐姐庆子(吹石一惠 饰)叫上去调查宫部的事迹,他们走访了宫部当年的战友,谁知许多人都将外公斥为“帝国海军第一懦夫”,其执行任务时即使看着战友牺牲也绝不卷入战局。老兵们的评价让姐弟俩颇受打击,但随着调查的深入,他们发现宫部拥有最高超的飞行技巧,他深爱着妻子(井上真央 饰)及女儿,并发誓无论如何要回到家人身边。坚定着这一信念,宫部不惜放弃帝国男儿的尊严,而他的处事方式也不知不觉影响着各期的战友们。伴随着老兵们的讲述,健太郎注视着外公迎来了最后的时刻……
  本片根据百田尚树的同名小说改编。

441
2013
永远的0
主演:冈田准一,三浦春马,井上真央,滨田岳,染谷将太,三浦贵大,上田龙也,新井浩文,夏八木勋,桥爪功,田中泯,山本学,平干二朗,风吹淳,吹石一惠,古川雄辉
出生证明
974
9.0
HD
出生证明
9.0
更新时间:2025年11月21日
主演:Andrzej Banaszewski,Beata Barszczewska,马里乌什·德莫霍夫斯基
简介:

  In 1961, Stanislaw Rozewicz created the novella film "Birth Certificate" in cooperation with his brother, Taduesz Rozewicz as screenwriter. Such brother tandems are rare in the history of film but aside from family ties, Stanislaw (born in 1924) and Taduesz (born in 1921) were mutually bound by their love for the cinema. They were born and grew up in Radomsk, a small town which had "its madmen and its saints" and most importanly, the "Kinema" cinema, as Stanislaw recalls: for him cinema is "heaven, the whole world, enchantment". Tadeusz says he considers cinema both a charming market stall and a mysterious temple. "All this savage land has always attracted and fascinated me," he says. "I am devoured by cinema and I devour cinema I'm a cinema eater." But Taduesz Rozewicz, an eminent writer, admits this unique form of cooperation was a problem to him: "It is the presence of the other person not only in the process of writing, but at its very core, which is inserperable for me from absolute solitude." Some scenes the brothers wrote together others were created by the writer himself, following discussions with the director. But from the perspective of time, it is "Birth Certificate", rather than "Echo" or "The Wicked Gate", that Taduesz describes as his most intimate film. This is understandable. The tradgey from September 1939 in Poland was for the Rozewicz brothers their personal "birth certificate". When working on the film, the director said "This time it is all about shaking off, getting rid of the psychological burden which the war was for all of us. ... Cooperation with my brother was in this case easier, as we share many war memories. We wanted to show to adult viewers a picture of war as seen by a child. ... In reality, it is the adults who created the real world of massacres. Children beheld the horrors coming back to life, exhumed from underneath the ground, overwhelming the earth."
  The principle of composition of "Birth Certificate" is not obvious. When watching a novella film, we tend to think in terms of traditional theatre. We expect that a miniature story will finish with a sharp point the three film novellas in Rozewicz's work lack this feature. We do not know what will be happen to the boy making his alone through the forest towards the end of "On the Road". We do not know whether in "Letter from the Camp", the help offered by the small heroes to a Soviet prisoner will rescue him from the unknown fate of his compatriots. The fate of the Jewish girl from "Drop of Blood" is also unclear. Will she keep her new impersonation as "Marysia Malinowska"? Or will the Nazis make her into a representative of the "Nordic race"? Those questions were asked by the director for a reason. He preceived war as chaos and perdition, and not as linear history that could be reflected in a plot. Although "Birth Certificate" is saturated with moral content, it does not aim to be a morality play. But with the immense pressure of reality, no varient of fate should be excluded. This approached can be compared wth Krzysztof Kieslowski's "Blind Chance" 25 years later, which pictured dramatic choices of a different era.
  The film novella "On the Road" has a very sparing plot, but it drew special attention of the reviewers. The ominating overtone of the war films created by the Polish Film School at that time should be kept in mind. Mainly owing to Wajda, those films dealt with romantic heritage. They were permeated with pathos, bitterness, and irony. Rozewicz is an extraordinary artist. When narrating a story about a boy lost in a war zone, carrying some documents from the regiment office as if they were a treasure, the narrator in "On the Road" discovers rough prose where one should find poetry. And suddenly, the irrational touches this rather tame world. The boy, who until that moment resembled a Polish version of the Good Soldier Schweik, sets off, like Don Quixote, for his first and last battle. A critic described it as "an absurd gesture and someone else could surely use it to criticise the Polish style of dying. ... But the Rozewicz brothers do no accuse: they only compose an elegy for the picturesque peasant-soldier, probably the most important veteran of the Polish war of 1939-1945." "Birth Certificate" is not a lofty statement about national imponderabilia. The film reveals a plebeian perspective which Aleksander Jackieqicz once contrasted with those "lyrical lamentations" inherent in the Kordian tradition. However, a historical overview of Rozewicz's work shows that the distinctive style does not signify a fundamental difference in illustrating the Polish September. Just as the memorable scene from Wajda's "Lotna" was in fact an expression of desperation and distress, the same emotions permeate the final scene of "Birth Certificate". These are not ideological concepts, though once described as such and fervently debated, but rather psychological creations. In this specific case, observes Witold Zalewski, it is not about manifesting knightly pride, but about a gesture of a simple man who does not agree to be enslaved.
  The novella "Drop of Blood" is, with Aleksander Ford's "Border Street", one of the first narrations of the fate of the Polish Jews during the Nazi occupation. The story about a girl literally looking for her place on earth has a dramatic dimension. Especially in the age of today's journalistic disputes, often manipulative, lacking in empathy and imbued with bad will, Rozewicz's story from the past shocks with its authenticity. The small herione of the story is the only one who survives a German raid on her family home. Physical survial does not, however, mean a return to normality. Her frightened departure from the rubbish dump that was her hideout lead her to a ruined apartment. Her walk around it is painful because still fresh signs of life are mixed with evidence of annihilation. Help is needed, but Mirka does not know anyone in the outside world. Her subsequent attempts express the state of the fugitive's spirits - from hope and faith, moving to doubt, a sense of oppression, and thickening fear, and finally to despair.
  At the same time, the Jewish girl's search for refuge resembles the state of Polish society. The appearance of Mirka results in confusion, and later, trouble. This was already signalled by Rozewicz in an exceptional scene from "Letter from the Camp" in which the boy's neighbour, seeing a fugitive Russian soldier, retreats immediately, admitting that "Now, people worry only about themselves." Such embarassing excuses mask fear. During the occupation, no one feels safe. Neither social status not the aegis of a charity organisation protects against repression. We see the potential guardians of Mirka passing her back and forth among themselves. These are friendly hands but they cannot offer strong support. The story takes place on that thin line between solidarity and heroism. Solidarity arises spontaneously, but only some are capable of heroism. Help for the girl does not always result from compassion sometimes it is based on past relations and personal ties (a neighbour of the doctor takes in the fugitive for a few days because of past friendship). Rozewicz portrays all of this in a subtle way even the smallest gesture has significance. Take, for example, the conversation with a stranger on the train: short, as if jotted down on the margin, but so full of tension. And earlier, a peculiar examination of Polishness: the "Holy Father" prayer forced on Mirka by the village boys to check that she is not a Jew. Would not rising to the challenge mean a death sentance?
  Viewed after many years, "Birth Certificate" discloses yet another quality that is not present in the works of the Polish School, but is prominent in later B-class war films. This is the picture of everyday life during the war and occupation outlined in the three novellas. It harmonises with the logic of speaking about "life after life". Small heroes of Rozewicz suddenly enter the reality of war, with no experience or scale with which to compare it. For them, the present is a natural extension of and at the same time a complete negation of the past. Consider the sleey small-town marketplace, through which armoured columns will shortly pass. Or meet the German motorcyclists, who look like aliens from outer space - a picture taken from an autopsy because this is how Stanislaw and Taduesz perceived the first Germans they ever met. Note the blurred silhouettes of people against a white wall who are being shot - at first they are shocking, but soon they will probably become a part of the grim landscape. In the city centre stands a prisoner camp on a sodden bog ("People perish likes flies the bodies are transported during the night") in the street the childern are running after a coal wagon to collect some precious pieces of fuel. There's a bustle around some food (a boy reproaches his younger brother's actions by singing: "The warrant officer's son is begging in front of the church? I'm going to tell mother!") and the kitchen, which one evening becomes the proscenium of a real drama. And there are the symbols: a bar of chocolate forced upon a boy by a Wehrmacht soldier ("On the Road") a pair of shoes belonging to Zbyszek's father which the boy spontaneously gives to a Russian fugitive a priceless slice of bread, ground under the heel of a policeman in the guter ("Letters from the Camp"). As the director put it: "In every film, I communicate my own vision of the world and of the people. Only then the style follows, the defined way of experiencing things." In Birth Certificate, he adds, his approach was driven by the subject: "I attempted to create not only the texture of the document but also to add some poetic element. I know it is risky but as for the merger of documentation and poety, often hidden very deep, if only it manages to make its way onto the screen, it results in what can referred to as 'art'."
  After 1945, there were numerous films created in Europe that dealt with war and children, including "Somewhere in Europe" ("Valahol Europaban", 1947 by Geza Radvanyi), "Shoeshine" ("Sciescia", 1946 by Vittorio de Sica), and "Childhood of Ivan" ("Iwanowo dietstwo" by Andriej Tarkowski). Yet there were fewer than one would expect. Pursuing a subject so imbued with sentimentalism requires stylistic disipline and a special ability to manage child actors. The author of "Birth Certificate" mastered both - and it was not by chance. Stanislaw Rozewicz was always the beneficent spirit of the film milieu he could unite people around a common goal. He emanated peace and sensitivity, which flowed to his co-workers and pupils. A film, being a group work, necessitates some form of empathy - tuning in with others.
  In a biographical documentary about Stanislaw Rozewicz entitled "Walking, Meeting" (1999 by Antoni Krauze), there is a beautiful scene when the director, after a few decades, meets Beata Barszczewska, who plays Mireczka in the novella "Drops of Blood". The woman falls into the arms of the elderly man. They are both moved. He wonders how many years have passed. She answers: "A few years. Not too many." And Rozewicz, with his characteristic smile says: "It is true. We spent this entire time together."

2574
1961
出生证明
主演:Andrzej Banaszewski,Beata Barszczewska,马里乌什·德莫霍夫斯基