Wednesday, October 24, 2018

School's Out 2019 Google Drive 電影 小鴨 在线

School's Out 2019 Google Drive 電影 小鴨 在线






School's Out-2019 小鴨 在线-imax-在线-電影 ptt-douban-在线-線上看.jpg



School's Out 2019 Google Drive 電影 小鴨 在线


扉页

School's Out (电影 2019)

持续

169 详细的

放流

2019-01-09

素质

AAF 720P
DVD

题材

Thriller, Drama, Mystery

风格

Français

浇铸

Zona
W.
Turki, Avijot I. Audet, Durepos I. Petty






一条艇上的全体运动员 - School's Out 2019 Google Drive 電影 小鴨 在线


Pierre Hoffman joins a prestigious school as a substitute teacher and soon notices, among some of his students, an unjustified hostility and a spark of violence in their eyes. Is it because the unspeakable tragedy they have just experienced? Is it because they seem to be extraordinarily gifted children? Is it because they have lost all hope for the future? From curiosity to obsession, Pierre will try to unlock their secret.
There is something so captivating about ‘School’s Out’, and it’s hard to put your finger on. Is it the impending sense of doom? Is it the nostalgia? Is it just wanting to know exactly what these kids are up to? Or are we even allowed to know? As adults, maybe we are just too far gone. If you like being slightly uncomfortable for an entire film, ‘School’s Out’ is for you - but maybe leave the kids at home.
- Brent Davidson

Read Brent's full article...
https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-schools-out-the-children-know-too-much

Head to https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/sff for more Sydney Film Festival reviews.
**_Too ambiguous for its own good_**

> _There is alarming evidence that important tipping points, leading to irreversible changes in major ecosystems and the planetary climate system, may already have been reached or passed. Ecosystems as diverse as the Amazon rainforest and the Arctic tundra, may be approaching thresholds of dramatic change through warming and drying. Mountain glaciers are in alarming retreat and the downstream effects of reduced water supply in the driest months will have repercussions that transcend generations._

- "Climate Change"; United Nations

Based on Christophe Dufossé's 2002 novel, _L'Heure de la sortie_ [lit. trans. _The Time to Exit_] had its world premiere at the 2018 Venice Film Festival where it screened in the new "Sconfini" section, a non-competition category for difficult-to-classify films. Which should tell you a great deal. If you can imagine the ecological themes of films such as Jeff Nichols's _Take Shelter_ (2011) or Paul Schrader's _First Reformed_ (2017), filtered through the _milieu_ of Peter Weir's _Dead Poets Society_ (1989), but with the tonal qualities of Wolf Rilla's _Village of the Damned_ (1960) or Fritz Kiersch's _Children of the Corn_ (1984), then you'd be some way towards nailing director and co-writer Sébastien Marnier's second feature. Is it a satire about liberal Generation Z snowflakes overdramatically reading apocalyptic omens into trivial matters? Is it an allegory about how difficult it can be for gifted children to fit into so-called normal society? Is it a metaphor for the generation gap, and how today's children can often be alienated from even relatively young adults? Is it about desensitisation amongst a generation who have never known life without the internet or a world without post-9/11 paranoia? Is it a desperate call-to-arms, a plea on behalf of tomorrow's adults that humanity is rapidly reaching the point-of-no-return in terms of the damage we are doing to the Earth? Is it a horror movie about creepy kids doing creepy things? Is it all of these?

The film opens in the prestigious St. Joseph's in France, a private middle school with an excellent reputation. On an unusually warm day, as a class of _troisième_ students (children aged 13-14) are quietly sitting a test, their teacher, Professor Eric Capadis (Cyrille Hertel), casually walks to the window, opens it, and throws himself to his death. Most of the students are shocked, but six remain relatively unfazed. Several days later, Pierre Hoffman (Laurent Lafitte) arrives at St. Joseph's as a temporary substitute for Capadis. Still writing his own PhD thesis, Pierre believes the job will be straightforward, even though the class is for intellectually advanced students. Almost immediately, however, he learns they are far ahead of where he thought they would be. Seeing how deeply unpopular a central clique of six especially gifted students (the same six who weren't especially bothered by Capadis's death) are amongst the school's other pupils (and many of the teachers), Pierre tries to ingratiate himself with them, but gets nowhere. Meanwhile, he begins to notice odd behaviour, such as when one of the students arrives for school with facial injuries, but no-one seems to care. With his curiosity getting the better of him, he starts following them, learning that they head to an abandoned quarry every day after school, where they have hidden a collection of DVDs. Upon viewing the discs, Pierre finds they contain endless hours of footage of industrial animal slaughter and food processing intercut with images of nuclear conflagrations, flashes of apocalyptic biblical imagery, and dire warnings about the unsustainable future of humanity. Unnerved by his find, he soon comes to believe the clique are watching him. Are they responsible for the mysterious late-night phone calls he has been getting? Do they have anything to do with his tap water turning brown? Or his electricity turning on and off? Or his missing laptop? What about the cockroaches that invade his apartment? Could the clique even have been involved with Capadis's suicide? But to what end? What are they planning, and why?

I ended both of the above paragraphs with a series of questions for a reason. Namely, to emphasise that if you're looking for definitive answers here, you won't get them. Virtually none of the mysteries the film throws up, of which there are a hell of a lot, are conclusively resolved. The film is happy for you to peer inside, but Marnier steadfastly refuses to give you much info to contextualise what you're looking at. Speaking to Cineuropa, Marnier explains that the film begins as if to present

> _the opacity of adolescence through the eyes of a 40-year-old man_ [...] _I was interested in placing viewers inside Pierre's head and body, as if to hypnotise, contaminate and poison them._

However, as Pierre gets more and more unnerved by the clique, the film slowly changes course; according to Marnier, this is

> _the point at which the classic confrontation forks off towards a point of rupture._

The nature of this rupture, however, is never really clarified, as Marnier is far more interested in asking questions than answering them. There are certainly clues about what it all means, and the audience is pushed in certain directions from time to time, but even the final scene, although it does suggest some answers, also raises more questions.

In theory, I don't have a problem with this kind of narrative. Films built around ambiguity, where certain details are withheld, and everything is left up to subjective interpretation, can work extremely well (after all, one of my all time favourite films is Terrence Malick's _The Tree of Life_). However, the mysteries of _L'Heure de la sortie_ are very different to those found in Malick, or, say, David Lynch's _Lost Highway_ (1997), _Mulholland Dr._ (2001), _Inland Empire_ (2006), or _Twin Peaks: The Return_ (2017). Whilst Lynch's films tend to function as sensory puzzles, where the audience must bend their interpretation around what is on screen, with every little aural and visual detail meaning something (and often more than one thing) in relation to the whole, _L'Heure de la sortie_ is more of an intellectual conundrum, asking question after question without time to pause, and then stepping back and asking, finally, "_so what do you think I was trying to say there_?"

Speaking of one possible interpretation of the film, (namely, the ecological one – that this generation is gifting to the next a planet we have largely destroyed, something about which we're not overly bothered), Marnier states,

> _we are aware but we're not fighting anymore – not just because we feel let down by politicians. I think the world has become so scary that we take refuge in our little lives, trying to make them as pleasant as possible._

The clique act as if they have no hope for the future, and that they firmly believe the world left for them (their "_era_" as they call it) will throw up problems the likes of which humanity will be unable to overcome. Of this meaning, Marnier explains,

> _the film states that we are still waiting for the disaster to happen so that "living together" and collective awareness can take shape again. But we need to work together before it's too late._

The clique don't share this optimism, believing too much damage has already been done. In fact, they believe that optimism itself is part of the problem; as one points out, "_it's too late, there's no future. You don't want to face the truth_."

As this might suggest, the film tackles political and social themes infinitely more weighty than those typically found in Lynch (who tends to focus on psychological issues), but as an artistic statement, I found it lacking. And whereas the absence of any obvious directorial or authorial "statement" in Lynch's work is actually part of what makes it so successful, here, due to the various political themes raised, the question of "_what is the director trying to say_" remains front-and-centre the entire time. I rarely ask myself that question when watching a Lynch film, or a Malick film, or a Guy Maddin film; I might ask it afterwards, but during the experiential moment, the artistry becomes its own referent. During _L'Heure de la sortie_, I was constantly wondering to myself, "_what does Marnier mean by that_?", something I don't even do when viewing the work of a politically allegorical filmmaker such as Peter Greenaway. The narrative jumps from unanswered question to half-answered question to unexplained scene to unclear theme back to unanswered question, throwing so much gasoline on the fire that it burns itself out. By roughly the half-way point, I had stopped caring why Capadis had killed himself, because there were about fifteen other unanswered questions rattling about. And it's a case of ever diminishing returns – the more mysteries that go unaddressed, the less important each of them feels.

But it's not just that there are too many mysteries. Again, this can work well in the right hands. Rather, it's that few of them ever connect to the others. Take, for example, the hobo scene in _Mulholland Dr._ For much of the runtime, it seems completely divorced from everything else in the film. But we do eventually learn how it relates to the main plot, even if it remains ambiguous. _L'Heure de la sortie_ is full of what feels like completely disconnected mysteries. There's also little to reward the patient or observant viewer. Contrast it with films such as _Lost Highway_, when we recognise the police sirens at the end are the same ones that Fred (Bill Pullman) heard in the opening scene, or _Mulholland Dr._, when the Cowboy (Monty Montgomery) explains to Adam (Justin Theroux) what it will mean if he sees him "_two more times_", and right at the end, we see him for the second time. There's nothing like that in _L'Heure de la sortie_, with so much feeling like it exists in isolation from everything else.

Which is not to say there is nothing to like about the film. The 1980s-style retro score, by John Carpenter aficionados Zombie Zombie, is excellent, and Romain Carcanade's cinematography is superb, using anamorphic lenses to distort interiors in tandem with Pierre's crumpling mental state, and really hammering home how monumentally hot it's supposed to be, using a recurring visual motif of beads of sweat. Additionally, there are some wonderful touches in the screenplay, co-written by Marnier and Elise Griffon. For example, Pierre is writing a thesis on Franz Kafka and his apartment is invaded by cockroaches.

There are also individual scenes of great brilliance. For all its unsettling weirdness and creepy kids, for me, the most disturbing scene was one based entirely in reality. When an alarm sounds in the school, Pierre asks if it's a fire drill, and the class all but laugh at the question. Of course it isn't a fire drill – it's an active shooter drill. The students calmly gather their things and move to the wall, sitting under the windows looking into the corridor. However, when Pierre joins them, they chastise him, not once, but twice – firstly, for leaving his own things on his desk, meaning if a shooter walks by, they will look in and know someone is in there, and secondly, he forgets to turn his phone onto airplane mode. The scene is chillingly effective in it profound mundanity, not only showing us their accustomed and dispassionate response, but in hammering home the very different lives that people of Pierre's age led when they were in school. Obviously, this speaks to the generation divide, but it also speaks to issues of desensitisation; the state of the world has sufficiently traumatised these children to the point where something like this is routine; the possibility that a shooter might wander into a school and start killing people is not something any child (in any country) should live with. In fact, if you read the scene allegorically, it actually suggests that not only did older generations grow up in a different environment, should the worst happen, they are relatively powerless to protect the next generation, and may even end up getting them killed. That's essentially the polar opposite of what an adult is supposed to bring to a young person's life.

All in all though, despite these elements, the film left me disappointed. It builds up very nicely in the early stages, but about mid-way through the second act, it flounders, as you start to realise it's not actually building to anything specific. Even the _dénouement_ is insipid (although the short coda that ends the film is excellent; evocative and properly creepy). The characterisation is also poor, with only Pierre given any kind of arc, whilst the children themselves remain empty avatars, devoid of psychological verisimilitude. I'm also not entirely convinced that if you want to prod people into action _vis-à-vis_ climate change, the best way to go about it is by presenting a mystery-thriller that has no intentions of explaining what is going on – the vehicle just doesn't correlate with the message. It's worth a look, but given the scope of the themes and the nature of the central message, you would hope for a lot more.



剧组人员

協調美術系 : Jace Miracle

特技協調員 : Dargent Charon
Skript Aufteilung :Nazreen Devon

附圖片 : Hannah Blanc
Co-Produzent : Faima Steve

執行製片人 : Edwards Dustin

監督藝術總監 : Zerya Rahmat

產生 : Joia Kiki
Hersteller : Cain Perle

竞赛者 : Niraj Honoré



Film kurz

花費 : $084,731,942

收入 : $926,189,719

分類 : 實驗性 - 心理劇, 市場營銷好笑道德 - 受傷, 市場營銷好笑道德 - 分離

生產國 : 蒙古

生產 : Ruby Entertainment



School's Out 2019 Google Drive 電影 小鴨 在线



《2019電影》School's Out 完整電影在線免費, School's Out[2019,HD]線上看, School's Out20190p完整的電影在線, School's Out∼【2019.HD.BD】. School's Out2019-HD完整版本, School's Out('2019)完整版在線

School's Out 埃斯特(數學)瘟疫逃生精神-獨立 |電影院|長片由 Wako International 和 Antares Elma Chapman aus dem Jahre 2002 mit Baldwin Lowell und Sauvé Donnel in den major role, der in W9 Productions Group und im P.P.M. Multimedia 意 世界。 電影史是從 Rehnuma Lacene 製造並在 Pax TV 大會白俄羅斯 在 15 。 11月 1992 在5 。 二月2009.


藍田聖保祿中學 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 藍田聖保祿中學(英語:St Pauls School Lam Tin)為香港九龍觀塘區藍田一所天主教女子中學,是沙爾德聖保祿女修會於香港成立的第三所學校,與位於港島銅鑼灣的聖保祿學校和跑馬地聖保祿中學是姐妹學校。該校創校於1970年,原名為聖保祿女子中學,1997年

School Days 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 《School Days》(スクールデイズ)是2005年4月28日由Overflow發售的十八禁遊戲。2010年10月8日發售重製版《SCHOOL DAYS HQ》,新增加劇本、解析度和背景改為3D呈現。後來的發售《Summer Days》、《Cross Days》、《Island Days》為外傳性質故事。電視動畫版在日本於2007年7月3日

聖公會聖彼得小學 维基百科,自由的百科全书 ~ 聖公會聖彼得小學校友會( St Peters Primary School Alumni Association)於2005年成立,宗旨為增進母校、師生與校友間的聯繫、溝通和合作,回饋母校,增強彼此對母校的歸屬感。凝聚校友對母校的向心力,協辦和支援教育活動,提高母校的教育質素

嘉諾撒聖瑪利書院 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 嘉諾撒聖瑪利書院(英語:St Marys Canossian College,簡稱SMCC)位於香港九龍尖沙咀柯士甸道162號,由嘉諾撒仁愛女修會於1900年創辦,是香港歷史悠久的女子中學。學校以英語為官方教學語言,為香港傳統名校之一。學校為香港補助學校議會22所補助學校之一

聖瑪加利男女英文中小學 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 聖瑪加利男女英文中小學(St Margarets Coeducational English Secondary and Primary School),是香港一所天主教男女英文直資中小學。此校的前身香港聖瑪加利女書院創辦於1965年,根據天主教的傳統理念辦學,惟目前已停辦。現時學校於2000年從原先學校分拆出來並獲配

聖若瑟英文中學 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 聖若瑟英文中學 地址 香港 九龍 平山 新清水灣道46號 詳細資訊 其它名稱 St Josephs AngloChinese School 類型 津貼中學 宗教背景 天主教 隸屬 天主教香港教區 創辦日期 1958年 建校日期 1958年 創始人 孫保祿修士 學區 觀塘區 校長 儲富有 校長 潘永強 副校長 余

Love Live 维基百科,自由的百科全书 ~ LoveLive School idol project(日语:ラブライブ School idol project)是由日本動畫公司日昇動畫、唱片公司Lantis、以及ACG月刊雜誌《電擊Gs magazine》共同合作推出的读者参与活动以及由此展开的多媒体企划6。項目原案由公野櫻子設計,監督為京極尚彥,角色設計和

聖馬可中學 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 聖馬可中學(英語:St Marks School),是一所英文中學,由香港聖公會創辦,位於香港島筲箕灣愛秩序灣愛賢街18號,成立於1949年。該校原本是位於中環己連拿利的聖保羅英文下午校,直到1953年才改名為聖馬可中學,並遷校到筲箕灣道460號。到2001年,便遷到

聖傑靈女子中學 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 聖傑靈女子中學(英語:St Catharines School for Girls)是一所位於香港觀塘區樂意山的基督教英文女子中學,由聖公會創辦,經費由政府資助。校名取自生長在埃及亞歷山大的聖傑靈(Catherine of Alexandria),亦希望有「人傑地靈」的意思。

惡魔高校D×D 維基百科,自由的百科全書 ~ 漫畫 漫畫:惡魔高校D×D 原作 石踏一榮 美山零(人物原案) 作畫 みしまひろじ 出版社 富士見書房 台灣角川 連載雜誌 Dragon Mazagine→月刊Dragon Age 叢書 Dragon Comics Age Kadokawa Boy Series 連載期間 2011年3月-2018年2月 冊數 全11卷 漫畫 原作 石踏

No comments:

Post a Comment