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09.02.05.Roztomily.clovek.1941.DVD.XviD-KiNOBOX
[php]ftp3/DVD/09.02.05.Roztomily.clovek.1941.DVD.XviD-KiNOBOX/[/php]
◎译 名 暂无
◎片 名 Roztomily clovek
◎年 代 1941
◎国 家 捷克斯洛伐克
◎类 别 喜剧
◎语 言 捷克语
◎字 幕 中文/英文
◎IMDB评分 7.5/10 (11 votes)
◎IMDB链接 http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0152238
◎文件格式 XviD + MP3
◎视频尺寸 512 x 384
◎文件大小 1CD 50 x 15MB
◎片 长 86 Min
◎导 演 Martin Fric
◎主 演 Oldrich Novy .... Viktor Bláha
Ladislav Pesek
Natasa Gollová .... Polda Krusinová
Lída Chválová .... Karla Hasková
Theodor Pistek .... Vitalis Hasek
Ella Nollová .... Gradmother Hasková
Raoul Schránil .... Ing. Ivan Molenda
Jaroslav Marvan .... JUDr. Kouril
Frantisek Filipovsky .... Jaroslav Stárek
Antonín Zacpal .... Prof. Matousek
Svetla Svozilová .... Matousek's wife
Zdenka Baldová .... Mrs. Malá, widow
Blazena Slavícková .... Emilka
Ferenc Futurista .... Mr. Fretka
Marie Blazková .... Woman
◎简 介
Anyone who has ever been involved in community theater — as actor, crew, or audience — will want to run and see "A Man of No Importance," the sweet new musical at the Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater of Lincoln Center.
The show, based on a small but lovely 1994 movie that starred Albert Finney, opened at the Newhouse last night. It has the irresistible appeal of backstage comedy, with something profound to say just underneath.
It's about a Dublin bus conductor who devotes his life, along with all his unexpressed passions, to the amateur theater company he directs. The time is 1964, that pre-revolutionary era when the most shocking thing going in the British (and Irish) Isles was the Profumo sex scandal.
"You may play royalty," says the lyric of an early, anthem-like song called "Going Up," one of several winners here. "Or just spear-bearer number three. But you're going up! You've got scenes to play! You've got lines to say! You've got fans who want to get carried away! We're going up!"
The accessible music and lyrics are by the team of Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty ("Ragtime"), and the book is by that hugely prolific wit, Terrence McNally ("The Full Monty"). The direction is by Joe Mantello ("Take Me Out" and McNally's "Frankie and Johnny …" this season alone). So the creative team is a blue-ribbon assemblage, and the show they give us is fresh, funny and, ultimately, deeply affecting.
The deeply ordinary, though finally not at all unimportant, man of the title is Roger Rees (still best known for the Broadway epic "icholas Nickleby"), who is usually a fairly cool customer. Here, Rees' somewhat frosty exterior
Here, Rees' somewhat frosty exterior works as the shell of a lifetime of repressed feelings. Bus-conductor Alfie Byrne entertains the passengers on his bus with readings from arty plays, and spends his evenings whipping the St. Imelda's Players into shape.
He still lives with his devoted sister Lily, played with a new low-key grace by Faith Prince of Hastings-on-Hudson, who has been wisely encouraged to tone down the brassier notes she showed in "Guys and Dolls" and "Little Me." Seemingly wearing no makeup, she gives a breathtaking performance here.
The show gets a lot of mileage from its hilarious evocations of inflated show-biz egos — marvelously personified by the actor Charles Keating, for one, as the prima-donna butcher-thespian Carney. He intends to reprise his role in Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest." "I know we've had our differences — personal and artistic," he informs Alfie solemnly. "But this time I will give you an Algernon for the ages."
Well, the problem is that this time Alfie has set his sights — and those of the St. Imelda's Players — even higher, artistically speaking.
This time the play he wants to put on is Wilde's "Salome."
The florid play, though technically about John the Baptist, includes a dance of the seven veils and is sure to shock the religious community, and rattle the community theater group itself.
What Alfie doesn't expect is that his second collaboration with the ghost of the man he calls Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Will Wilde — his proper, if spurned, Irish name — will lead him to a coming out, of sorts, of himself.
But Alfie gradually does come to realize that he is in love with the impossibly handsome — and resolutely straight — bus driver named Robbie Fay, superbly played by Steven Pasquale ("The Spitfire Grill"). Though this love will inevitably stay unrequited, it will lead to another, more valuable anthem for Alfie: "Love Who You Love."
As the all-important virgin in his play, Alfie casts Sally Murphy, not seen here since she played Julie Jordan in the epochal 1994 production of "Carousel." Murphy is exactly right for the part of Adele Rice, that of a fragile, wounded being whom Alfie tries bring into the momentary footlights of the theater.
Though it gets pretty dark, this is a show with a frankly happy — if pretty teary — ending. Director Mantello keeps all the elements in exquisite balance, and he has all the right instincts. The show is just exquisitely directed, even creating the perfect illusion of a city bus in motion — with no props except an arrangement of chairs on a turntable stage.
In the end Alfie realizes that "I'm so blessed in my friends. Nothing else matters."
The sets, dominated by the St. Imelda's stage, are by Loy Arcenas. The perfect period costumes are by Jane Greenwood. And the moody lighting is by Donald Holder.
What is especially fun is to watch is first-rate actors play fifth-rate actors without a trace of condescension or meanness.
The same bug, they seem to know instinctively, has bitten them all.
Charming Man - Roztomily clovek (1941)
Supplier : ??? Video Bitrate: 1031kbps avg.
Ripper : !!! Video Codec : XviD-1.0.3-20122004
Packager : ;;; Frame Size : 512x384, 25fps
DivX Release: 02.09.2005 Audio Bitrate: 96kbps VBR 48kHz
DVD Release : August 2005 Audio Codec : MP3 (mono)
Genre : Comedy Aspect Ratio : 4:3
Playtime : 1h 26m 10s Rating [IMDb]: 7.5/10; votes 11
Language : Czech Screens : Limited
Subtitles : Cs, En Discs : 49x15MB
Vobsubs : Cs, En
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0152238
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