现场直播影评

13884749
  • 阿布霖
    2022/5/15 4:24:07
    我是土狗我爱看

    这是一部以前泰剧没有拍过的剧情,bl娃娃亲,虽然剧情是俗套的玛丽苏剧情,但就是这种俗套的玛丽苏剧情放在bl上却独特的稀奇,如果放在bg上可能就没那么吸引人了。这部剧算是nunew林景云弟弟的出道之作吧,不得不说,李海海自己选的lp真的很???!!!而且剧中ep8那两次事前询问真的是很多泰剧没有的细节,“你没喝醉对吧,你知道我们在干什么吧!”“如果有哪里不O

    这是一部以前泰剧没有拍过的剧情,bl娃娃亲,虽然剧情是俗套的玛丽苏剧情,但就是这种俗套的玛丽苏剧情放在bl上却独特的稀奇,如果放在bg上可能就没那么吸引人了。这部剧算是nunew林景云弟弟的出道之作吧,不得不说,李海海自己选的lp真的很???!!!而且剧中ep8那两次事前询问真的是很多泰剧没有的细节,“你没喝醉对吧,你知道我们在干什么吧!”“如果有哪里不OK的话,要告诉hia!”这两次询问真的是体现到对对方的极致尊重了!最后一集,虽然没有nc,但是大量jubjub,真的sa狗啊!!!!!结尾有一幕我很喜欢-支持婚姻平等!而且这部剧的ost真的都很不错!!!景云弟弟的歌声我真的甘拜下风,弟弟,姐姐放心把你交给李海了!!,但这部剧还是有泰剧会有的缺点,那就是又土又尬!可是这有什么关系呢!!我看剧图的就是开心啊,而且看泰剧不能带正常的逻辑看!我是土狗我爱看!

    【详细】
    14397406
  • 哈哈哈
    2021/7/27 18:52:13
    花好月圆

    《花好月圆》是由香港寰亚电影公司出品的一部喜剧电影,叶锦鸿执导,杨千嬅、任贤齐及钟镇涛等领衔主演。影片于2004年2月5日于香港上映。

    影片讲述了皇帝悬赏“招驸马”以治疗公主天生的体臭,“花痴”沈梦溪寻觅体臭之人做试验以制灵药,在鱼肆结识了含香等人。他们在大江南北找寻草药,提炼“冷香丸”,其间经历了种种风险和

    《花好月圆》是由香港寰亚电影公司出品的一部喜剧电影,叶锦鸿执导,杨千嬅、任贤齐及钟镇涛等领衔主演。影片于2004年2月5日于香港上映。

    影片讲述了皇帝悬赏“招驸马”以治疗公主天生的体臭,“花痴”沈梦溪寻觅体臭之人做试验以制灵药,在鱼肆结识了含香等人。他们在大江南北找寻草药,提炼“冷香丸”,其间经历了种种风险和温馨。灵药制成之后,沈梦溪却面临着在含香和公主之间的抉择。

    【详细】
    13707233
  • 余子酱的鱼
    2018/2/17 15:55:53
    《西游记女儿国》中唐僧与女儿国国王的爱情打动你了吗?
    这篇影评可能有剧透 情人节那天去看完电影,今天跑来豆瓣看影评,恩,清一水的差评很是整齐,也不意外,一般西游题材的电影除了大话没有什么好评的,大家都觉得是玷污了经典86版无敌,对于作品,我向来不喜欢抱着最大的恶意去看。 进电影院的时候,其实也是有点紧张,怕自己看见一个看不下去,去电...
    这篇影评可能有剧透 情人节那天去看完电影,今天跑来豆瓣看影评,恩,清一水的差评很是整齐,也不意外,一般西游题材的电影除了大话没有什么好评的,大家都觉得是玷污了经典86版无敌,对于作品,我向来不喜欢抱着最大的恶意去看。 进电影院的时候,其实也是有点紧张,怕自己看见一个看不下去,去电...  (展开)
    【详细】
    9157254
  • 吃查3000
    2020/4/20 19:25:43
    超字数了,写这里吧
    再多说一些吧,相对Natasha,这部其实相对是对电影的回归,有旁白有空镜有配乐,每一幕的结束都让人惊叹悠长。尤其是最后的结局,你知道演员在现实中不会真的死掉,(我还真的去看了最后演员表有多少框。。。)放映结束你就知道这样是电影艺术化的呈现。 很多电影都会说based on ...  (
    再多说一些吧,相对Natasha,这部其实相对是对电影的回归,有旁白有空镜有配乐,每一幕的结束都让人惊叹悠长。尤其是最后的结局,你知道演员在现实中不会真的死掉,(我还真的去看了最后演员表有多少框。。。)放映结束你就知道这样是电影艺术化的呈现。 很多电影都会说based on ...  (展开)
    【详细】
    12526224
  • 小二狼
    2015/11/4 23:29:39
    还是忍不住吐槽
    1.因为讨厌双鱼座,就反对弟弟的婚姻。姐姐你是外星族群吗?

    2.明明说好的联盟,为什么要单打独斗去勾引?那是你的盟友,OK?女主才是传说中猪一样的队友。

    3.陈学冬念台词像被人捏了嗓子,全程替他捉急。

    4.走,还是不走?结,还是不结?对弟弟来说,都是问题。

    5.爱上弟弟的未来岳父,哈哈,好多内涵。如果,弟弟真的爱惨了大叔的女儿,故事该如何收场
    1.因为讨厌双鱼座,就反对弟弟的婚姻。姐姐你是外星族群吗?

    2.明明说好的联盟,为什么要单打独斗去勾引?那是你的盟友,OK?女主才是传说中猪一样的队友。

    3.陈学冬念台词像被人捏了嗓子,全程替他捉急。

    4.走,还是不走?结,还是不结?对弟弟来说,都是问题。

    5.爱上弟弟的未来岳父,哈哈,好多内涵。如果,弟弟真的爱惨了大叔的女儿,故事该如何收场?所以,弟弟之所以走,是为了给姐姐机会吗?好大一盘棋。

    6.行李箱一撞就散,该考虑换一个了。

    7.理智的天文学家最后会变成星座专家,爱情的力量真伟大。

    8.男主到底爱女主哪一点?除了觉得她惨。

    9.最后,回到第一个问题,明明女主最讨厌双鱼座,为何最后还要黑一把处女座?显然是编剧在跪舔观众。
    【详细】
    7649373
  • 黑化侠
    2019/2/28 0:41:13
    我希望 再会是我们的未来

    1999年TV版充斥着我的童年2015年—2018年tri系列伴随着我的大学01 没关系 是情怀啊!人总觉得自己这一代看过的东西是最好的,上一代不如我们,下一代也不如我们,数码宝贝在我心里就是如此。当数码宝贝tri系列出来后,即使剧情上有着无数bug,依然坚守着看完了最终篇章,每一次bgm响起来的瞬间仍然会不自觉的泪目。02 那些关于徽章与进化的故事多亏了TV版的人物形象塑造,tri系列真的

    1999年TV版充斥着我的童年2015年—2018年tri系列伴随着我的大学01 没关系 是情怀啊!人总觉得自己这一代看过的东西是最好的,上一代不如我们,下一代也不如我们,数码宝贝在我心里就是如此。当数码宝贝tri系列出来后,即使剧情上有着无数bug,依然坚守着看完了最终篇章,每一次bgm响起来的瞬间仍然会不自觉的泪目。02 那些关于徽章与进化的故事多亏了TV版的人物形象塑造,tri系列真的是怎么作幺蛾子也都看的开了。数码宝贝们每一次的进化,成熟体、完全体、究极体,都是经过正义与友情的冒险与泪水完成进化的,那些徽章不仅是他们的个人成长历练,是我或许还有很多人在不认识这个世界前的憧憬。

    拥有一个与自己无话不谈的数码宝贝与之成为一生的伙伴拥有自己的数码进化器自由自在的穿梭在现实与数码的世界里拥有一个属于自己的徽章,会更加有勇气 友情 爱心 纯真 希望 光明 诚实 知识03 被选召的孩子至今记得当太一拿到勇气徽章后的热血,总会暗自许下誓言如果自己成为了“被选召的孩子”,一定要能像他们一样结识一群朋友去拯救世界以及一定是八个人,一定是。04 tri.抛开让人瞠目结舌的剧情逻辑,现实是二十年过后的他们,长大以后的我们看到了他们的太多不成熟,矫情背后是不抛弃身边的数码宝贝,紧紧拉住陪伴的伙伴,是依然会感动的瞬间。

    是在数码宝贝世界重启遗忘掉的对方再见面是现实世界里找回彼此记忆那一刻的在身边是二年级的美美挥别数码世界后再一次告别是一束光后几十秒静音世界里再出现的太一是被吐糟讨厌的缅码兽离开世界的一句“当当”是奇装异服的数码宝贝旁边站在一起的八人这些都是关于我们的回忆,是一首bgm就能让人无比自豪的回忆;是无论何时如何形式都能够夹杂着十多年前小美好的回忆;是萌发无畏冒险等待着的进化的回忆。

    “希望什么时候再一起去数码宝贝世界?” “在那之前,请多保重。”

    【详细】
    10010808
  • Joan
    2018/11/21 16:01:20
    Who am I?斯皮尔伯格的人生轨迹

    16岁时看了阿拉伯的劳伦斯几乎要放弃拍电影

    And when the film was over, I wanted to not be a director anymore because the bar was too high.

    It was the first time, seeing a movie, I realized that there are th

    16岁时看了阿拉伯的劳伦斯几乎要放弃拍电影

    And when the film was over, I wanted to not be a director anymore because the bar was too high.

    It was the first time, seeing a movie, I realized that there are themes that aren't narrative story themes. There are themes that are character themes, that are personal themes. That David Lean created a portraiture, surrounded the portrait with a mural of scope and epic action, but at the heart and core of "Lawrence of Arabia" is "Who am I"?

    I started making movies when I was a young kid, but I remember the time I almost gave up my dream of being a movie director. I must have been 16.

    越对什么事情感到自信或确定无疑,成果就越少

    The more I'm feeling confident and secure about something, the less I'm gonna put out. The more I'm feeling, "Uh-oh, this could be a major problem in getting the story told," I'm gonna work overtime to meet the challenge and get the job done. All right, that's done. I don't know if it's worth it.

    Spielberg:And so, I hate the feeling of being nervous, but I need to feel in this moment I'm really not sure what I'm doing. And when that verges on panic, I get great ideas. The more I feel backed into a corner, the more rewarding it becomes when I figure my way out of the corner.

    Just before I went off to make "Jaws," I got to meet Henry Hathaway. He was kind of a tough-guy director, and he said, "There's gonna be moments where you're gonna get to the set and you're not gonna know what the hell you're doing. It happens to all of us. You've gotta guard that secret with your life. Let no one see when you're unsure of yourself. Hide that from everybody, or you'll lose the respect of everyone."

    未见到的潜在危险更让人恐惧,细腻的心理层面

    I knew that it's gonna take three or four weeks to rebuild the shark, and so we'd have to make up something else that didn't exactly show the shark but gave the sense the shark was near.

    The barrels were a godsend, because I didn't need to show the shark as long as those barrels were around. What you don't see is generally scarier than what you do see, and the script was filled with "shark." Shark here, shark there, shark everywhere. The movie doesn't have very much shark in it.

    John Williams:If the shark had been available visually, it might have changed the whole psychology of the experience.

    青少年时期的自我认知,摄像机就是笔

    I didn't have a lot of high esteem for myself, you know, growing up. I just was a lonely guy.

    The camera was my pen. I wrote my stories through the lens. And when I was able to say "action" and "cut," I wrested control of my life.

    But I didn't know anything about whether I was gonna have a career or where this was gonna go. I just knew that it filled up the time and it gave me a tremendous amount of satisfaction. And the second I finished a movie, I wanted to start a new one because I felt good about myself when I was making a film. But when I had too much time to think, all those scary whispers would start-- start up. It was not fun to be me in between ideas or projects.

    遇到伯乐

    "If you sign with us, I will support you as strongly in failure as I will in success."

    对镜头语言的掌控

    Steven Bochco:Steven had a gear in his brain that automatically translated words into pictures almost without it being a conscious process for him. There was a unique visual voice there that you had to not only pay attention to, but you had to give somewhat of a free rein to.

    Edelstein:Right off the bat, it was clear that no one moved the camera like Steven Spielberg. Other directors had a fantastic sense of space. Orson Welles, you name it, people who understood composition. But the way that Spielberg's camera moved through a shot and then ended up somewhere that completely shifted or intensified the emotion of the scene, that was just a natural gift he had. Who knows where that came from. Who-- but it was his own technique.没人象斯皮尔伯格一样移动摄像机。其他导演有很出色的空间感。随便说一个Orson Welles非常理解构图。但是斯皮尔伯格在一个镜头中对摄像机的移动,以及在某一处停下来,完全改变或强化了场景的情感,那是他的天分。

    George Eckstein called me and said, "Network's really upset that the truck didn't blow up, so they're ordering us to go back to that cliff and blow the truck up." And I said, "I'm not gonna do it." The death of the truck is so agonizing. I said, "I made that truck die slowly." The oil, like blood, dripping off the steering wheel. The wheel slowly rolling to a stop. The fan still going, but the truck's dying. I mean, it's the death of the truck. That's what the audience wants to see. This criminal element paying-- you know, paying the price for what it did to this man. I wouldn't do it. I wouldn't blow up the truck.

    表达媒介的熟悉

    Bochco:For Steven, the little screen was an interesting canvas, and obviously he painted on it very well, but he knew that this screen simply wasn't a large enough canvas.

    Spielberg:For me, directing is camerawork, and so I'm very on the front line of that. I've gotta set up the shot, I've gotta block the actors, choreograph the movement of the scene, bring the camera into the choreography, figure out when the camera stops, how it moves, how far it moves, what the composition is, so I've always got my eye on the lens, and that's what I do. I even pick the lens I want.对我来说,导演就是摄像技术,因此我总是在摄像的前线。我需要设定镜头,隔离演员的因素,为镜头设计动作,将镜头带入到动作中,确定摄像机什么时候停止,怎样移动,移动多远,构图是什么样的,因此我的眼睛总是关注在镜头上,那就是我所做的。我甚至会自己挑选想要的镜头。

    Scorsese:His strength is really the ability to be able to tell a story in pictures instinctively. I sometimes watch his pictures on TV without the sound just to see the pictures.

    Edelstein:Pauline Kael, one of the most influential film critics of all time, wrote in "The New Yorker" that Steven Spielberg had made one of the most phenomenal debuts in the history of film. She compared him to Howard Hawks in terms of how natural his feel for the medium was. What Kael saw in Spielberg was someone with a real movie sense, but she also said she wasn't necessarily sure there was great depth to go with it. She didn't see a sign of an emerging film artist like Martin Scorsese. What she saw instead was the birth of a new generation Hollywood hand.

    幸运的处于一个活跃的文化氛围中

    Spielberg:We were very, very fortunate to be part of that time. The culture was converging. It was filmmakers, it was artists, musicians, performers. It was an incredible, fertile time.

    未曾有意追求电影的精神内核,自己的精神层面会通过工作渗透到作品中

    I don't search for films consciously that have a spiritual core. There's a spiritual part of myself that happens to bleed over into the work, and so I subconsciously, which is the only choice that's important, will find things that inherently have something of a belief system that's beyond our understanding, that's a little bit out there.

    人与人之间的联结

    Coyote:For many years I wondered about the universal appeal of this movie, and one day, it hit me. There are no two humans on Earth that are father apart than those humans and that alien creature. And if Elliott, and the mother, and the little girl, and the scientist, could all love and empathize and make a rapprochement and a rapport with this creature, so, too, can any two humans on Earth, and I think that was a subtext that bubbled up through the film and must have touched something, because you don't get many films that are universally loved and appreciated 40 years later. And it spoke to something. Some desire to be able to reach across boundaries and touch other people.

    对儿童演员的特别关照

    Spielberg:I think all of my movies that have dealt with young people and their stories are about the importance of empowering these children to take control of the story, at least take control of their lives.我所有的电影都与年轻人和他们的故事有关,使这些孩子们更强大,控制故事的呈现很重要,至少他们可以控制自己的生活。

    二战喜剧片带来的失败与挫折

    But it was like I committed a war crime by making "1941." Everyone was eviscerating it. I was really devastated. Just that feeling of failure, that cold emptiness, where every reminder of the movie, you get that sick feeling in the center of your stomach, and you just want to go dig a hole and stick your head in it. I mean, for the next year, I put my head in a lot of holes. And my friend George Lucas came to the rescue.

    自身的成熟,期待电影在更本质更人性方面的变化

    Spielberg:I was looking for a different perception of myself. And if I didn't want to consciously make a departure and prove something, not just to myself but to everyone else, I might not have chosen "Color Purple" as my next movie. But it was my first really mature film, which took on, you know, substantive, humanistic subject matter. I was turning 40 and I was looking at life perhaps less optimistically.

    紫色中本可以有更深入的表达

    Spielberg:I got in trouble with several critics who didn't like that I shied away from the love story between Shug and Celie. And the scene where Shug Avery shows Celie, with a mirror, her vagina, that that did not go into the movie, which would've really changed the entire nature and tone of the film. I just didn't go for the full monty the way the book did. I might've done that had I made the movie 10 years later. I was just timid. I was just a little embarrassed. I just wasn't the right guy to do that.

    对自己犹太人身份从拒绝到接受

    I certainly experienced being excluded and being picked on and discriminated against. All I wanted to do was fit in. And by being Jewish, there was no way I could fit into anything.

    I began to deny my Jewishness, you know, began to deny everything that I had accepted as a child and was not willing to accept if it was going to make me a pariah. I was ashamed of myself. I still feel ashamed of myself even remembering that long stretch of my life where I didn't want to be Jewish anymore.

    辛德勒名单的基调

    I tried to do it with no fancy tricks, no fancy lenses, no big Hollywood sweeping cranes. I tried to take all the tools with which I made so many of my films and just chuck them out the window. I never handheld anything, but I wanted to handhold as much of "Schindler's List" as I possibly could. I just wanted to create for all of us the feeling that we were absolutely there at the time.

    光影的隐喻

    Neeson:Oskar Schindler was a gregarious man. He was a second-rate businessman. Bit of a shady character, you know? A man about town, loved the women, loved his booze. A bon vivant, that's what he was.

    Spielberg:Everything we do in this medium is about light and shadow, how the cinematographer lights the actors, lights the set. If you look at "Schindler's List," Amon Goeth was always lit beautifully. He always had that beautiful front light. You know, the guy was very clear. There was no mystery in him. You don't have to enhance his evilness, if you may say, by lighting. Now, if you look at Oskar Schindler, that was a confused individual. He came to Poland to make money, so it's always glamorous, but always shadowy. And then as the movie's progressing, he gets more frontal light. The shadows disappear.身为导演的情感投入,以及电影之外的社会互动

    It was, emotionally, the hardest movie I've ever made.

    Kennedy:That was a pivotal moment in Steven's life. He recognized he couldn't take any of the profits from the film. He wanted to give something back, so he started what became the Shoah Foundation, documenting that oral history and capturing history in a way that allowed people not to forget.

    多面手

    Robert Zemeckis:For a filmmaker, you can't have a better producer than one of the greatest directors in the world. He really nurtures young talent coming up. It's a pretty amazing roster. He's also a major figure in the television business. He started a restaurant. Dive! Submarine sandwiches. The man was, like, doing 27 things at once and being perfectly unselfconscious about it.

    Geffen:I don't think Steven really fears anything. He's always ready to go and do something new.

    拯救大兵瑞恩中镜头距离与观众心理感觉的关系,声效,应变能力

    Spielberg:I tried very, very hard to put the audience as close to the experience as I possibly knew how to do so there wouldn't ever be a safe feeling in the audience. And when you narrow that distance-- if you're successful in narrowing the distance, then the audience really becomes those characters.

    Edelstein:In "Saving Private Ryan," Spielberg understood the expressionistic possibilities of sound.

    And if you're not Steven, if you don't have this lifetime of cinematic language in your head, that's a different kind of day. But because his eye is so connected to his brain and every movie that he's ever seen and every movie that he's ever made, he just went out and said, "Here's how we're gonna do this, and that's it." Incredible.

    自身的情感挫折与电影作为治疗方法

    It was complex for me for a long time, but at least I had a art form that I could filter it through. At least I had that. If movies did anything for me, it-- I've avoided therapy because movies are my therapy.

    “无论怎样都要争取自由”的电影主题,爱国主义与理想主义

    Insdorf:There are people struggling in one way or another for freedom in these movies. Give... us free. He doesn't take freedom for granted.

    Spielberg:I really believe in this country, and I always have. And it just resonated throughout my work-- wanting to tell American stories, wanting to tell stories about principled, ethical people who, against all advice and against most everyone else's better judgment, just proceed to do the right thing. I'm sure that sounds like I'm this kind of, you know, idealist or some sort of a patriot, but I am a patriot. And I'm somewhat of an idealist, too.

    讲故事的方法

    Steven worked a long time to find where the story was to tell it.斯蒂芬会花很长时间去找在哪里讲故事。

    保持中立

    Spielberg:I felt I could not make this one-sided. And so, I knew it would be controversial from the very get-go.

    Daniel Craig:This movie was trying to affect and turn on a debate. Is vengeance the answer? Does it actually solve anything? If you continue the cycle of violence and cycle of blood, then... that's what they'll be and nothing else. Steven was very keen to tell a human story, that these were men and not superheroes. Their indecision and their mistakes and their-- is the reality of what happened, you know? Life isn't a "James Bond" movie.复仇是否就是答案

    叙事的方法

    Kushner:You're in the hands of somebody who will always show you what you need to see in order to understand, on a narrative level, what's happening. And you'll also see a lot of things that will help you understand on deeper levels as well. And that sort of narrative device

    电影带出的不确定性

    Hoberman:The movie was perceived to be suffering from a sense of moral equivalence, which is really the bravest thing about the movie. It's looking for aspects of humanity on both sides of this conflict. Ambiguity is something that you don't normally associate with Spielberg's films, and "Munich" is the film where he went the furthest in the bluntness and the ferocity with which he approached that subject.

    家庭,分离与重聚

    Spielberg:Family is a big element in my life, which is why so many of my stories are about separation and then reunification. Even "Lincoln" is about separation and reunification.

    工作团队的稳定,与他人合作,激励同伴

    Williams:He understands that people and can serve him and how to synchronize his wishes with your own. He would've made a great general.

    在看电影中不断学习

    Kennedy:Steven looks at movies constantly and over and over and over again, referencing shots and framing and ideas. That's something Steven does all the time.Spielberg:Great filmmakers' works live on to create tremendous moments of inspiration. And so, one of the films I still see every year is "Lawrence of Arabia." The shots, the sheer vistas, and the portrait of such a complex character, it's pure moviemaking. 伟大的电影导演的工作是创造巨大的启发性时刻。自我审视中的过去,成长

    Spielberg:Many years ago, Pauline Kael gave me a really great review on "Sugarland Express," but she said, "Whatever's on the surface might be all that is there. There may be nothing behind that." And she was absolutely right. I hadn't grown up yet through the movies. That was going to come in time.

    到现在为止的评论

    Maslin:Take a look at what he's done over close to 50 years. There's certainly a lot of variety. There are some things he's done that haven't worked, but there is absolutely nobody like him and no film career trajectory that is anything like his in the history of film. He speaks cinema as if it's his native language. He is so fluent in it that he does things that nobody else would dare to do and they are instantly recognizable as things that are purely his.

    Scorsese:He has a dynamic sense of real filmmaking. I'm talking about filmmaking of--in the great narrative tradition of American cinema. 真正的电影制作的动态感

    Coppola:Steven was blessed in that he could be commercial and he could do art.That's why I always compare him to a kind of George Gershwin, because Gershwin could write a Broadway show or he could write "Concerto in F." He could both, and very few people can do both. And Steven can do both. And that's a talent you have to be born with. 商业与艺术

    【详细】
    977517943
  • 木十二
    2020/4/5 15:19:43
    所爱隔山海,这隔得可不是山海,是次元壁啊

    前几集还是不错的,设定新奇,何花的颜还有声音都很优秀。男主的演技十分有待提高,但是可以看的下去。后面肖宁进来之后就开始乱套了,不是说肖宁这个人很乱,是女主乱了。本来看起来励志向上的女青年变成了恋爱脑,因为爱上一堆代码,去逃避回到现实,肖宁劝女主的话我觉得还是很有道理的,奈何女主认定了这个虚拟人物。所爱隔山海,这隔得可不是山海,是次元壁啊!!!历夏,你清醒一点!后面还有其他人物逻辑的乱,剧情走

    前几集还是不错的,设定新奇,何花的颜还有声音都很优秀。男主的演技十分有待提高,但是可以看的下去。后面肖宁进来之后就开始乱套了,不是说肖宁这个人很乱,是女主乱了。本来看起来励志向上的女青年变成了恋爱脑,因为爱上一堆代码,去逃避回到现实,肖宁劝女主的话我觉得还是很有道理的,奈何女主认定了这个虚拟人物。所爱隔山海,这隔得可不是山海,是次元壁啊!!!历夏,你清醒一点!后面还有其他人物逻辑的乱,剧情走向的乱,很魔幻的走向。

    看完以后来看剧评,好多都深得我心,“各种人设前后矛盾”啊,“肖宁到底是利用今夏还是喜欢今夏”啊……话说,我觉得把肖宁塑造成一个完全利用今夏的人也可以,最后肖宁进去救今夏可以解释成为了让游戏成功上市,避免游戏牵扯到人命,把他塑造的更无情一点。

    另外,男主真的是演技太稚嫩了,作为一个皇帝,气势不足,有时候甚至感觉像个未成年装大人的样子。后来想了想W两个世界也是破次元壁的故事,但是那里面男主气势很强,而且后面也给了足够多的铺垫,作者渐渐发现主人公越来越不受自己控制了,自主意识非常强大,观众真的相信这样一个男主能够破次元壁和女主相爱。而这里的皇帝从头到尾只是在游戏中演绎,按照剧情走向生活,所有的改变都是历夏带来的。男主还是代码塑造的样子,代码让他当了皇帝,代码让他爱上历夏……所以历夏爱的不还是一堆代码吗……

    【详细】
    12475582
  • 晴夜聆枫
    2015/10/29 23:01:55
    爱不需等待
    看《驯龙高手1》的时候,曾经奇怪为什么高大魁梧勇往直前的酋长会有个纤细脆生手无缚鸡之力的儿子,体型差异太大,遗传基因也不靠谱。《驯龙高手2》里小嗝嗝妈妈的出现让一切合理化,小嗝嗝的个性、聪明、长相、对于驯龙的天赋都像足了妈妈沃尔卡,反而显得老爸斯多戈壮硕而笨拙,难怪留不住老婆。

    可是当小嗝嗝爸妈久别重逢,我对这个胡子比头发长、一堵墙一样的酋长刮目相看。

    看见沃尔卡,他明
    看《驯龙高手1》的时候,曾经奇怪为什么高大魁梧勇往直前的酋长会有个纤细脆生手无缚鸡之力的儿子,体型差异太大,遗传基因也不靠谱。《驯龙高手2》里小嗝嗝妈妈的出现让一切合理化,小嗝嗝的个性、聪明、长相、对于驯龙的天赋都像足了妈妈沃尔卡,反而显得老爸斯多戈壮硕而笨拙,难怪留不住老婆。

    可是当小嗝嗝爸妈久别重逢,我对这个胡子比头发长、一堵墙一样的酋长刮目相看。

    看见沃尔卡,他明显眼前一亮,防御的剑脱手滑落,摘掉帽子整理了头发,缓步走向她,不顾她的喋喋不休,第一句话就是:“你还和当初离开我时一样漂亮!”轻松化解了沃尔卡的不安和手足无措。

    沃尔卡手忙脚乱做的鱼肉串掉到地上,抱歉的解释自己厨艺不精,斯多戈安抚地说:“我也不是娶你来做饭的。”

    提到小嗝嗝,斯多戈骄傲地说:“我们的儿子是我们两个最好的作品!”
    想劝说沃尔卡和他回家的时候,斯多戈吹着口哨唱了一首当初的歌,与她共舞,末了单膝跪下说:“为了你亲爱的,怎么都行,愿意跟我回家么?还愿意做我的妻子么?”终于大获全胜,赢回芳心。

    原来这个粗犷范儿的斯多戈是个情场高手,原来动不动吹胡子瞪眼的酋长面对爱人是这样深情款款。

    有人说,儿子都这么大了,又亲又唱又搂又抱的太肉麻。的确,这不符合中国人的抒情方式,我们讲究含蓄稳重,喜欢隐藏内敛,与西方人直白外露的表达方式大相径庭,可是这段重逢的戏码过后,就是群龙混战,斯多戈为了保护儿子而死,没留一句遗言。如果想做的事顾虑太多,想说的话没有出口,当斯人已逝,一切都太迟。斯多戈会带着无法言喻的遗憾而去,沃尔卡会以为自己不被原谅一生心伤。

    小时候看《成长的烦恼》,已有三个孩子的杰森和麦琪动不动就拥抱热吻,夫妻之间爱意绵绵,家庭氛围其乐融融,他们驾轻就熟地表达爱,时时刻刻地收获爱。很是幻想拥有这样一家人,就这么爱着暖着嬉笑着老去。

    时光如水拨动心弦,流淌出的旋律如刻刀,雕刻性情、雕琢容颜。平淡简单的爱虽不轰轰烈烈,在长久的陪伴中也需要情真意切的表达,爱说出来是浪漫,不说出来就是浪费。真心觉得爱不需等待,爱要坦荡荡说明白。
    【详细】
    7642915
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