备注:已完结
类型:喜剧片
主演:德克·博加德 西娃·科丝西娜 罗伯特·莫利 莱奥·麦凯恩 罗杰·德尔珈
导演:拉尔夫·托马斯
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:Unemployed Czech-speaking writer Nicholas Whistler thinks he's got a job visiting Prague for a bit of industrial espionage. In fact he is now in the employ of British Intelligence. His pretty chauffeuse on arrival behind the Iron Curtain, Comrade Simonova, is herself a Czech agent. Just as well she's immediately attracted to 007's unwitting replacement.
备注:已完结
类型:恐怖片
主演:托尔比约恩·哈尔 伊尔瓦·伯杜德 丽莎·卡勒希德 米克尔·布拉特·西尔
导演:帕尔·奥耶
语言:其它
年代:未知
简介:挪威是个拥有大量公路隧道的国家,但是由于隧道建设时缺少应急规划和救灾避难设施,隧道内的火灾往往是致命的。 斯坦好不容易在圣诞节前一天请了假,打算与女儿和女伴一起渡个假,但伊莉斯却因为满心都是去世的母亲,跟斯坦大吵一架,坐上了去奥斯陆的长途大巴。可就在伊莉斯坐的大巴驶入隧道后不久,大巴前面行驶的油罐车出事故导致隧道里的交通都堵塞住了,恶劣的天气让所有救援都不能及时赶到。而后油罐车还短路爆炸了,滚烫的浓烟瞬间填满了隧道。伊莉斯带着大家自救,到隧道里的检修小屋里避难。斯坦开车冲进了浓烟去寻找自己的女儿。隧道里遍布大量窒息的死者,伊莉斯他们避难的小屋里也逐渐被烟雾填满,终于,斯坦出现并救了伊莉斯和几位幸存者。返程路上,救援中心通知斯坦有两位小女孩就困在他们附近,斯坦让女儿和幸存者先走,自己独自去寻找两个姑娘。小姑娘找到了,但把所有呼吸装备都给了别人的斯坦却撑不住失去了意识,恍惚中他发现女儿伊莉斯回来了,她帮斯坦通知了队友和女伴,所有人一起从浓烟和塌方中救出了快要窒息的斯坦。 最终,虽然这场事故造成了极大的伤亡,但在救援队员拼死的行动下,还是挽救了一些宝贵的生命,而斯坦新组建的家庭也因这次生死经历而凝聚在了一起。
备注:已完结
类型:动作片
主演:克里斯汀·韦格 凯特·麦克金农 扎克·加利凡纳基斯 杰森·苏戴奇斯 欧
导演:杰瑞德·赫斯
语言:其它
年代:未知
简介:影片根据真实事件改编。扎克扮演的大卫是个简单的人,生活乏善可陈。他是一个运钞车司机,虽然每天运送数不清的钱,可那都是别人的钱。唯一让他高兴的便是见到美貌的女同事凯利(克里斯汀·韦格饰),而也正是凯利,将他卷进了一桩改变人生的大事件。 虽然合作的是一群超级不靠谱的劫匪,领头的是超级不靠谱的史蒂夫(欧文·威尔逊饰),抢劫计划也是漏洞百出,可大卫真的完成了不可能完成的任务,偷走了1700万美元现金。唯一的问题便是,他把这些钱交给了这群各怀鬼胎,互相出卖,背后捅刀的劫匪们,自己却成了指定的替罪羊。 如今成了逃犯的大卫,必须躲避追捕,从一个欢乐无比的杀手(杰森·苏戴奇斯饰)枪口逃生,并想方设法让这群陷害他的人付出应有的代价。
备注:已完结
类型:剧情片
主演:芬·阿特金斯 夏莉·墨菲 克洛伊·皮里 亚当·那加提斯 乔纳森·普雷斯
导演:萨利·温莱特
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:故事发生在1845年的英国,安妮(查利·墨菲 Charlie Murphy 饰)、夏洛特(菲恩·阿特金斯 Finn Atkins 饰)和艾米丽(克洛伊·皮里 Chloe Pirrie 饰)三姐妹和他们年迈的老父亲一起过着相依为命的生活。弟弟布兰威尔(亚当·纳盖提斯 Adam Nagaitis 饰)的屡屡骚扰让这家人本就贫困的生活雪上加霜。 三姐妹都知道,如果父亲死了,她们或许就要失去赖以生存的房子,流落街头,为了避免这一事态的发生,她们用各自的方法努力着。三姐妹天生善于幻想,热爱写作,可是当时的文坛是不可能发表女性作家所写的作品的。于是,她们使用了男性的笔名写作投稿,并且最终获得了成功。
备注:已完结
类型:爱情片
主演:弗雷德里克·马奇 伊夫琳·维纳布尔 盖伊·斯坦丁 凯瑟琳·亚历山大 吉
导演:米切尔·莱森
语言:英语
年代:未知
简介:Because I could not stop for Death, he kindly stopped for me; the carriage held but just ourselves and immortality” – Emily Dickinson If Death took a holiday, the guns would go silent in Iraq, the slaughter on our nation’s highways would cease, and the news media would be compelled to cover positive events in the humanities, arts, and sciences. Unfortunately, Death has not had a vacation in recorded history, but Mitchell Leisen’s 1934 fantasy, Death Takes a Holiday, allows us to consider the possibility. Co-written by Maxwell Anderson and Gladys Lehman and based on the play La Morte in Vacanza by Alberto Casella, Death Takes a Holiday stars Frederic March as the Grim Reaper who takes on human form in an attempt to discover why men fear him so much. Why he has waited 5,000 years to satisfy this curiosity is not explained. [Spoiler] After a brief tryout as a shadowy figure who scares the daylights out of those that cross his path, Death shows up at, of all places, an upscale party at an Italian villa, posing as the mysterious Prince Sirki. Only one person knows who he really is, the host Duke Lambert (Guy Standing), and he is sworn to secrecy. Sirki proceeds to fascinate the guests. Given to bursts of wit and poetry, he can just as quickly turn sullen and threatening, and some soon find out that it is better not to look too deeply into his eyes. During the three days in which the Prince is at the villa, however, people all over the world miraculously escape death and potential suicides are doomed to frustration. To see what’s behind all the conversation about love, the suave but naïve Prince Sirki falls for the irresistible Grazia (Evelyn Venable), the daughter of one of Duke’s friends. Grazia knows who Death is but does not fear him, much to the chagrin of her fiancé, Corrado (Kent Taylor) who has developed a strong disdain for Prince Charming. More sinister than Brad Pitt in the 1998 remake Meet Joe Black, March turns in a very convincing performance as the creepy yet strangely appealing guest. Although the ending is melodramatic, the emotions are very real and the suggestion that Death may in reality be a friend disguised as a foe is quite touching. (Howard Schumann, talkingpix.co.uk) In this wearisome and predictable plot line, Death falls in love and bores us to death talking about it. (Dennis Schwartz, homepages.sover.net) I've heard DRACULA was advertised with the tag line The Weirdest Love Story ever told! (this is probably a paraphrase), but at heart, I've never felt that you could honestly call that movie a love story. The tag line would be much more appropriate for this one, since it ultimately boils down to what amounts to a love story. This movie is very good indeed, particularly if you consider that it is built around a concept that could have easily been handled in a cute or facile manner. Instead, it is handled as seriously as possible, with some real thought put into how death would try to come to terms with a life and an outlook that was to that point totally unfamiliar to him; much of the credit does go to Fredric March in the title role. It's quite scary when it needs to be, particularly during the first twenty minutes. From then on, it deals with its themes with subtlety, a quiet wit, an enduring sadness, and an everpresent tension on how Death might react if crossed. It's not perfect; some of the dialogue is self-conscious and artificial, as if the writers knew they were dealing with weighty issues and were trying to be profound. But I am certainly glad they didn't try to turn it into a musical comedy of sorts. (Dave Sindelar, scifilm.org) See also the remake Death Takes A Holiday (1971)