曼哈顿1979

DVD

主演:黛安·基顿,梅丽尔·斯特里普,伍迪·艾伦,迈克尔·墨菲,玛瑞儿·海明威

类型:电影地区:美国语言:英语年份:1979

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 剧照

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 剧情介绍

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  40岁的艾萨克·戴维斯(伍迪·艾伦 Woody Allen 饰)在写作上不算成功,在感情上更是一团糟。一方面,为了另一个女人而离开他的前妻吉尔(梅丽尔·斯特里普 Meryl Streep 饰)打算出版一本有关他们私密婚姻生活的书,另一方面,17岁的女孩翠西(玛瑞儿·海明 威 Mariel Hemingway 饰)对于这段他并不打算认真经营的感情投入了越来越多的热情。在这个节骨眼上,好友耶尔(迈克尔·莫菲Michael Murphy饰)的情人玛丽(黛安·基顿 Diane Keaton 饰)闯入了戴维斯的视线,风趣的谈吐,投机的话题,一切的一切都为两人的感情擦出了火花。3个男人,3个女人,在曼哈顿这个繁华又孤单的城市,这群成年人究竟该用何种方式来道德并公正的解决他们的感情问题呢?  本片荣获1980年英国电影学院最佳影片奖。茶啊二中第四季赶尽杀绝(2007)海军罪案调查处:洛杉矶第一季万界法神原始生活40天第三季因为初恋是第一次割喉市我的音乐你听吗无人问津2016新扎师兄同喜同喜深宅未醒纯乐老友记第一季苍穹浩瀚 第五季喜羊羊与灰太狼之竞技大联盟全明星娇妻秀第二季红蜘蛛3:水中花之粉红帝国与晨同光纳妾记 第三季暴走武林学园第一季危险关系1997别告诉任何人喜羊羊与灰太狼之羊年喜羊羊银河封神纪第一季第二次爱情三层楼上欢乐之城美梦成真1998上海皇帝之岁月风云欲孽之屋瓦尔哈拉连环谋杀第一季凋落仙武苍穹玛丽外宿中打击惊魂妖者为王第1季·动态漫

 长篇影评

 1 ) 豌豆

七八十年代是伍迪创作力最惊人的时段,所有讽刺和笑料皆恰中要害,区别于后期的隔靴搔痒。他的母题很固定,小布尔乔亚的烦恼,学院派知识分子的心理问题,是豌豆公主床下的豆子,衍化出现代城市的病症。不少人反感它的矫饰和忸怩作态,诟病其格局太过精致,失于朴鲁。确实,都市情人本就朝三暮四,加之文化人的多虑,连自己的心性都看不清,如何简洁深沉?但这些情绪构成了一段景致,甚至一座城市,是真诚的。男男女女在一段段话唠声里走来走去,声色犬马,天空上方浮现出小老头的脸,“我看着你们…因为,你们的德性我再了解不过了…”,他们神经质,看了十几年心理医生,永远不成熟,懦弱又鲁莽,自大却彷徨,囿于情感但不舍脱身。他们对现实不满,却不屑从政。他们有各式各样的怪癖,也许尝试自杀但并未成功过,他们谈及电影戏剧头头是道,对于“性爱”有一百种看法,遇到问题就搬出弗洛伊德…你说他为啥拍的这么好?“因为我就是你们…”。没有那颗豆子会怎么样?那么我们荒诞生活的源头就没了。“如果有可能,我不舍得拿掉它…你要知道,生活的可爱,甚至意义,不就在于这些瞎折腾吗。”

 2 ) 看完聊天

或许你们遇到过那种,认识了他/她就想和原来的男/女朋友分手的人吗?或者离婚。或者你和一个未成年少女相爱了,但她是未成年。可能这个电影是想讲这个,信守道德or蔑视戒律?追求自己的幸福,跟随自己内心的情感,还是遵守社会规则、道德规范?

人是矛盾。

你会遇到这样一个女人,你们一起讨论什么是存在主义,你们会围坐在地板上,一边喝着酒,一边吃着乳酪,一边觉得斯科特·菲茨杰拉德是垃圾,这就是你们想要的爱情。哈哈哈哈哈哈

但,爱是什么?你看到的是这个,17岁的翠西看到的是这个,“给我的感觉是,耶尔真的很喜欢她”。或许这些什么主义都不重要。

爱是什么?我们在一起很开心,我很关心你,你关心的也是我关心的,我们在床上很和谐。

你才十七岁,你还是个孩子,但谁又比谁更懂爱。

当然还有一些别的,比如,少看电视多看书。知道了知道了,别骂了……真惭愧,看了很多综艺,没读过书。

伍迪艾伦,好会拍。

我,话好多。

 3 ) The Decay of Contemporary Culture

本以为结尾时Tracy会直白地告诉woody fuck off 没想到结局如此留有温情。

the decay of contemporary culture, 知识分子眼中坠落的城市。woody充满自恋的正义感,gossip is the new pornography, 无限提升问题的层次,拒绝接受汽车、安眠药、电视、自己和女学约会的事实;Mary具有迷惑性的修辞来描述感情的坠落,不断堆砌文艺的词汇,试图剖析自己的情感状态,这样的尝试却像作秀一样。

“I came from Philadelphia, my parents have been married for 43 years, nobody is cheating on anyone”。

难道还要把一切归结于曼哈顿?

最会给自己找借口的人莫过于文字工作者:professor,editor,writer,journalist,论到胸怀和仁慈都还不及一个十七岁的高中女学生——虽然她又好像不过是一个美化了的象征:话不多,安安静静,理想得像塞尚的苹果。

 4 ) 75

电影结尾,面对前男友(伍迪艾伦饰演)的苦苦挽留,翠西一句话点破玄机:你连6个月都等不起,还谈什么爱情。在中年男人让人回味无穷的无奈苦笑中,观众恍然发现了真正懂得爱情的不是那帮虚伪、脆落又自恋的知识分子们,而是这位刚刚成年的小姑娘。

这也许是伍迪·艾伦这部电影的重点所在。如同在《甜蜜的生活》结尾,费里尼为马斯楚安尼饰演的男主角安排的那个小姑娘,为了是向这位堕落于虚伪世界中的男人指出天真的可贵之处。不知道伍迪·艾伦在《曼哈顿》中是否借鉴了此片,但两部电影的主旨是一样的。

当你长大,进入社会,只会越来越被这个社会的虚假运作所卷入。如同电影中三个知识分子间的爱情往来,看似是一种自由的恋爱行为,实则已经变成通过爱情游戏来逃避枯燥现实的借口。当他们口口声声为自己的爱情行动辩护之时,暴露的是他们为这个社会(曼哈顿)所浸染的不自觉倾向。

这位尚未成年的小女友出现在电影中,因而具有象征意义。她依然保存着对爱情的美好向往,而不是将其看作摆脱苦闷生活的游戏。不懂生活的规则,可能会失去很多乐趣;但天真的人对世界有一种直觉的理解,这是费里尼告诉我们的真理。或许从这个角度理解这部电影。

 5 ) 道德与浪漫,都是不懂爱的借口

伍迪艾伦是少数能在电影里把故事讲得好看,同时又表达深刻观点的导演。就像有人曾说过,在伍迪艾伦的电影体系,存在着好几个母题,譬如爱情关系,譬如知识分子的伪善。而围绕着母题,伍迪艾伦总能通过一部部电影,给出迥乎不同的想象和答案,《曼哈顿》正是这些回答中的一个。

《曼哈顿》讲的是发生在1979年大城市里混乱的感情生活——婚外恋、老少恋,这些感情放在今天来看,也是值得商榷的恋爱形态。剧中的男女主角,也因为这些放荡不羁的感情,有着各自的纠结和忧虑。 伍迪艾伦忧虑的是,他42岁了,不应该和一个17岁的高中生翠西谈恋爱,就算谈了,也不该许以未来。自诩为知识分子的伍迪艾伦,一直有一种强烈的道德感在背后驱使他,迫使他在行事上有着近乎绝情的冷酷:他不让翠西在自己家里过夜,千方百计劝说对方去英国深造,不厌其烦地告诉女孩,这场恋爱只是昙花一现,你将来会找到“更适合你的人”,而不是像我这样的老头。 但不能忽略的是,除了身怀严苛冷峻的道德感,伍迪艾伦也并非没有喜欢过翠西,没有曾萌生出一丝浪漫之意,否则,他干嘛要和一个少女开始恋爱呢?电影中也有几个镜头揭露他内心的浪漫:在马车上忍不住拥吻女孩、和女孩躺在床上边吃中餐边看电视,像一切热恋中的情人一样,暧昧至极。不过,道德感最终还是战胜了浪漫,在一个小餐馆里,伍迪艾伦还是选择和女孩摊了牌,结束这一段在他看来“不伦的恋情”。看着女孩泪流满脸,我都感到于心不忍,但影片中的伍迪艾伦,却也只是给予她不切实际的安抚,毕竟,“这才是真正正确的决定啊”。 而电影中的女主角玛丽,承载了爱情的另一种面目。她在影片里刚出现时的形象,是带着黑墨镜、夸夸其谈着艺术,甚至还煞有其事地批判了一通文艺圈那些大家。这无一不是在暗示,她就是典型的文艺青年。这种文艺青年最危险之处,就是对浪漫不切实际的过度追求——不出所料,她既和她的老师结了婚,然后又爱上了一个有妇之夫。虽然她一直在念叨着“我来自费城,我信仰上帝”,“我不要当别人婚姻的破坏者”,但在影片结尾,她还是暴露出了文艺青年不可撼动的本质,抛弃了伍迪艾伦这样的老实人,转过头回去找只想与她保持第三者关系的有妇之夫,真渣男耶尔。 在电影里,男女主角玛丽和伍迪艾伦的相遇相爱,看似很合拍——她们同样是一段感情里的失意者,也同样有着相似的道德感(一个不想耽误少女,一个不愿破坏别人的家庭),所以衍生出一段看似正常的恋爱。玛丽也一度以为,自己正常了,不再追求浪漫,于是才有她在床上对伍迪艾伦所说的:“你很棒。我认为你就是那种适合生儿育女的对象”。伍迪艾伦也真的信了,也才会在玛丽又一次回头去找有妇之夫耶尔的时候,表现出震惊与不解。 有人可能不禁会说:如果一切都按玛丽回过头去找耶尔之前那样进行下去,该多好?对不起,你把人性看得太简单了。就像牯岭街里那句经典的台词:“你凭什么改变我?”——人性总是难以被改变的。

伍迪艾伦和玛丽,在本质上,就是两种人。伍迪艾伦是珍惜羽毛,用道德感来塑造自己的知识分子。有人评价说,这部电影里的伍迪艾伦太自恋了。是的,他是真的自恋,自恋的本质在于,他认为他把握了道德的真理,站在了道德最高点上,他对他的所作所为,有着一种近乎固执的自信。所以在爱情中,他总是扮演“智者”,判断着这不该爱,那也不该爱,他享受的不是爱情,而是扮演智者带来的快感。但李宗盛有一句歌词写得好:“情爱里无智者”,不均势的爱情,只是一方对另一方的控制罢。

而回过来看,玛丽则像是情爱里的“失智者”,在感情上,表现得跟和三岁小孩无异。她总追求着不切实际、颠三倒四的“爱情”。她真实的内心追求,是浪漫至上,是宁为爱情故,啥都可以抛。因而,她也容易被虚构的浪漫蒙蔽双眼。她根本分不清什么是爱情,什么又是“知识分子的浪漫幻想”,她会把出轨的刺激和反叛,当成了浪漫的爱情本身,如同新时代里的包法利夫人。影片中有另一段也揭示了这一切:哪怕前夫长得丑陋不堪,还是秃顶,甚至连气质都有点猥琐(这是一种暗示),但玛丽仍然坚信他是一个很有吸引力的人——浪漫真是叫人瞎。 这两种特质,放在这样一个时代背景下,指向的其实是这个时代价值上的“无政府主义”:当我们喋喋不休地围观别人的感情生活时,总是不自觉地用了其中一种。要么是用道德评判一切——出轨就是错的,老少恋是可耻的,都该烧死;要么就用浪漫来美化一切——追求真爱是对的,婚外恋也没那么糟,follow your heart才是最重要的。

但这些只是一堆又一堆的稻草,哪怕有再多的稻草,你也种不出真正的爱情。问题的关键在于,要谈爱情,先要谈自我的独立,确保自己有能力去分辨爱,去追求爱,去享受爱。用弗洛姆的话而言,“ 如果不努力发展自己的全部人格,任何爱的试图都会失败,如果没有爱他人的能力,自己在爱情生活中也永远不会得到满足。 ”妄谈道德和浪漫,不过是不懂爱的借口罢了。 电影里唯一最正常,最自然的,是17岁的少女翠西——她敢于追求真爱,哪怕对方是一个42岁的糟老头;她绝不接受出轨,在得知伍迪艾伦另有爱人,被摊牌后,选择远走英国。在这部电影里,翠西简直是一股清流存在,该爱当爱,该断当断,大概是伍迪艾伦想借少女之口,揭穿知识分子自我塑造出来的“爱情世界”是有多么的无聊和荒诞。 当然,除了极尽讽刺,伍迪艾伦还是显示出了一点温情:在影片的最后,翠西对回头找他,担心异地相恋难以维持的伍迪艾伦,说了这么一句话(也可能是伍迪艾伦自己的观点):“在爱情的世界里,并非人人都没有原则,你应该对人性抱有信心。”是啊,在爱情的世界里,不是一切都是一板一眼的,也不是错误都不可原谅,复杂的人性总会闪耀出一些意想不到的光芒,否则,哪里来那么多不可能的爱情故事,又哪来那么多流芳千世、值得歌颂的爱情故事呢?

 6 ) 伍迪艾伦给纽约的情书

          “He adored New York City.” (Manhattan)Of course. Why else would Woody Allen title his film Manhattan? He makes it clear from the very beginning that this film is dedicated to the city. Seeing Midtown in black and white unfolding to the rhythm of “Rhapsody in Blue”, the audience romanticizes the city together with Allen and eagerly awaits what he has to say about the city. And then through the hustle bustle of daily street scenes of Manhattan, we hear it, “a metaphor for the decay of contemporary culture”(Manhattan).
          Before we proceed, we shall ask ourselves, what is the “contemporary culture” that Allen is referring to? The film was released in 1979 and the “Manhattan” he refers to is the one in the 70s. New York City in the 1970s was “dirty, dangerous and destitute”(Tannenbaum). Crimes were rampant around the city and Times Square was filled with hookers and drug dealers. The economic chaos and political upheaval brought by the war and Watergate rendered the city powerless in the face of crisis. It is not surprising that Allen was heartbroken, seeing his beloved city turning into a nest of crimes and drugs. While Manhattan is not Taxi Driver, which exposes the crimes of New York unreservedly and praises actions against them, that doesn’t mean Allen shies away from all the trouble the city and the society is in. He turns it, instead, into a celebration of New York and the people living in it. Allen, born in Brooklyn, has spent his entire life living in the city, knowing all the bits and pieces about it. Certainly it is far from perfection, but neither is anything else. Nonetheless Allen knows that New York is a great city, and the reason is written all over Manhattan, from the stunning 59th Street Bridge at dawn to the enchanting and dark Planetarium in the American Museum of Natural History.
          The film centers on four people living in Manhattan, Isaac (played by Allen himself), Mary, Yale and Tracy. These characters embody the spirit of the city. All of them are highly educated and possess rich cultural knowledge. Cultural debates take place among them throughout the film. The most heated debate happens when Isaac meets Mary at an art fair, where Mary criticizes the photography Isaac likes as derivative and witless and praises the steel cube Isaac dislikes as textual and “has a marvelous kind of negative capability”, which is clearly a reference to John Keats. These polished critiques of art clearly reflects their knowledge and insight in art. Thanks to the city’s inexhaustible amount of cultural institutions, numerous scenes in the film take place in museums, art galleries and special art exhibits, which allows these debates to happen. These characters themselves also work in television, book editing and universities. They are supposed to represent the intellect of this city that is famous for its huge international media conglomerates, Broadway and several of the greatest museums in the world, among others. Allen himself obviously takes pride in the status of New York as one of world’s greatest cultural capitals. When Mary later says that she is from Philadelphia, believes in God and does not want to have this conversation, Isaac is confused by what Mary means by that. But we know for sure that Allen himself isn’t. From these characters, we can see how the status of New York as a cultural capital affects the way they live and shape them as who they are.
          However, apart from their glamorous appearance and fanciful cultural glossary, what is truly intriguing about those characters is the problems they each have, just as in the case of New York City. A lot of their problems have to do with their relationships and emotions. For Isaac, the fact that he is involved with a teenage girl, Tracy, bothers him greatly. Upon knowing that Tracy goes to a high school, Mary wittingly remarks that “somewhere Nabakov is smiling”, referring to the devastating relationship between Lolita and Humbert in the novel Lolita. If anything, the feelings Humbert has for Lolita, a girl much younger than his age, ruins his life almost completely. After Lolita disappears all of a sudden one day, Humbert goes on a frantic search for her that lasts years. When he finally finds her at the end, he goes on a killing spree of her abductor that ends in a disaster. Though not nearly the case of Lolita, the relationship between Isaac and Tracy is equally troublesome because of the age gap. The difference here is that Isaac keeps things under control because he knows that he might wind up in a similar situation as Humbert if he lets things go freewheeling. But at the end, feelings still get the upper hand. Yet the struggle of Isaac is the battle between his ideal and his morality. The same thing can be said about Mary, who is involved in an extra-marital relationship with Yale. She constantly repeats that she is from Philadelphia and her parents are married for 43 years and “nobody cheats at all”. This indicates her repulsion towards the nature of her relationship with Yale because she knows that “this is going nowhere” and she’s merely wasting her time. She knows that she is “young, highly intelligent and got everything going for [her]” yet she is “wasting herself on a married man”. This happens to the best of us. Regardless of how much knowledge one has or how well-to-do one is, it seems inevitable that we at some point struggle to find the right places for ourselves. This is especially true for New Yorkers in the 1970s who all of a sudden find themselves in the middle of an ailing city. Allen’s film, clearly dedicated to this city and all the problems it has, rings a bell among audiences.
          Is there anyway that these problems can be solved? Allen certainly explores some of the possibilities in this film. He has an earnest appreciation for great minds, which he constantly shows in various films. Notably, Interior is written in the style of Ingmar Bergman and Stardust Memories is a remake of Federico Fellini’s 8 1/2. There are also several references to Bergman and Fellini in Manhattan itself, showing their tremendous influence on Woody Allen. When Mary includes Ingmar Bergman in her “Academy of the Overrated”, Isaac rebuts with “Bergman? Bergman is the only genius in cinema today.” Later on, after meeting Mary’s friends at MoMA, Isaac remarks that “it’s an interesting group of people, your friends. It’s like the cast of a Fellini movie”. Apart from the apparent influence, is Allen suggesting that we should rely on them to solve our own problems? Mary doubts so, harshly criticizing that “it is the dignifying of one's own psychological and sexual hangups by attaching them to these grandiose philosophical issues”. It suggests that appreciation for the great minds is merely a hypocritical dignification of one’s own problems, but not the solution to them. In the case of Manhattan, we can see that the abundance of culture institutions and marvelous exhibits still cannot save Times Square from becoming the haven for prostitutes. Maybe art merely provides us a way to recognize or discern the problems, but fails to actually prevent them from happening.
       Allen then goes on to explore other possibilities, again through Mary’s voice. At this point we can see that while Isaac clearly represents Allen himself, Mary can be considered the “other” in his mind that constantly doubts the “self” and proposes alternative ideas. In this case, in an intimate setting at the planetarium, their heads appear as silhouettes in front of a huge bright image of Saturn. The dark images of heads seem to suggest the insignificance of their appearance at this point and the importance of their ideas instead. Mary suddenly asks Isaac fondly how many satellites of Saturn he knows, and Isaac frankly admits that he doesn’t know any. As Mary boasts that she “got a million facts on [her] fingertips”, Isaac defends himself calmly with “nothing worth knowing can be understood with the mind. Everything really valuable has to enter you through a different opening”. “Where would we be without rational thought?”, asks Mary in disbelief, to which Isaac quickly responds with “You rely too much on your brain. And the brain is the most overrated organ.” What we have here is a debate between rationality and emotionality, which has certain connections with the previous discussion regarding the great minds but is one step further. Mary, critical of the importance of great minds, relies on her own instead and emphasizes on rational thought, while Isaac suggests that rational thought cannot get us anywhere. The “different opening” Isaac talks about here must be emotions, unrelated to mind and rationality, yet makes up a huge part of our lives. Isaac, thus, may appreciate the great minds precisely for their emotional capabilities, the way they stir up feelings inside us that we might not have before. But aren’t feelings the cause of all the problems in the film to begin with? Mary describes her extra-marital relationship with Yale as “a no-win situation” and the only thing that keeps them from getting out of that dreadful situation is their feelings for each other. However, when Yale rationalizes everything and finally decides to break up with her, he becomes “depressed and confused”. It seems that rational thought cannot really help them out here, and feelings only make it worse. It has come a full circle since we started.
          Isn’t it just like New York City in the 1970s? As the fiscal crisis loomed over the city, there was really little people could do. The police couldn’t do anything about the soaring crime rates since they needed money and thus were corrupted themselves. Anyone fond of rebuilding the city’s ailing infrastructure couldn’t change the situation because people have lost their faith and started leaving, which meant that bricks and broken walls of those demolished buildings in the Bronx just lay there without redevelopment. Even the federal government refused the city’s grant for bailout. Any form of rationality wouldn’t work because nobody had the strength to take actions anymore. Emotions didn’t help either as everyone was left in a hopeless and frustrated state. So what was it, as Allen may ask, that could change the fate of the city and the Isaacs and Marys living in it?
          In 1977, Ed Koch was elected the new mayor and he might have an answer to this. He did a marvelous job pulling the city out of its nadir and the most important factor for his success might be the active restoration of hope. At one of his most iconic attempts, he spent hours riding subways and asking passengers “How am I doing?”. In order to restore hope, he used his limited funds to refurbish city streets and subways. He also made a considerable effort clearing the city’s iconic parks such as Washington Square Park and Central Park from drug dealers and broken glasses. Though not the most financially profitable conducts, these acts essentially changed people’s attitude toward the city. People once again started having hopes for the city to come back to its glory. And that’s a starting point for any significant changes since you need to believe in them first. “Nothing’s perfect,” says Yale’s wife Emily calmly after acknowledging Yale’s affair with Mary. She is supposed to be the most agonized character in the film since she is the only one being cheated, while the others are just confused about their inappropriate relationships. Yet she seems to be the calmest and most understanding one. Because she, of all people, knows what a difference it makes if you just admit that nothing is perfect and prepare to make compromises along the way. She tolerates Yale’s affair with Mary and thus she still has her marriage unbroken. Just as how the Koch administration was willing to give up some financial profits in order to reconstruct the public faith in the city. If you are willing to take a look at anywhere in the city now, especially in the Bronx, you know these compromises in the name of hope and faith paid off tremendously.
           And fortunately, that is exactly what this film is trying to do, to give us hope. Just as Tracy’s final words before leaving for London, “you gotta have a little faith in people”, followed by some astounding images of Manhattan along with “Rhapsody of Blue”, as we are once again impressed by the beauty of the Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building and the 59th Street Bridge. We can almost hear Allen whispering to our ears, “you gotta have a little faith in the city too.” Tracy cannot stay with Isaac and has to leave him for the time being, just as the city disappointed its people and was in disarray back then. But that doesn’t mean changes won’t happen. “Six months isn’t that long,” says Tracy. And we know she will be back eventually. As for the city, a decade is nowhere near the end of the world. It’s exactly because of people like Woody Allen and his Manhattan that we realize how difficult it is to be free of trouble and how little that matters when we have the right attitude, and a little faith.

 短评

曼哈顿,这座城市蒸腾着你们的焦躁,狂作,空谈和欲望,幻化成毫无生气的霓虹森林,牢不可摧的海市蜃楼。

3分钟前
  • 木卫二
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“曼哈顿悖论”:凡是能看懂的这部片子的、笑得前仰后合不能自已的,有着相同恐惧和快乐的,无时无刻不在玩弄文字和女人的,都是最无可救药的酸臭知识分子,都是最有文化修养的斯文败类(“愤世嫉俗”)。当然,above all,他们都是贫蛋。

6分钟前
  • 圆圆(二次圆)
  • 力荐

Wills的攝影好。這個片子沒有Annie Hall的地位高可能是因為Woody Allen用這樣認真刻意的構圖和他的風格和在一起,就顯得有些匠氣。

7分钟前
  • 17950
  • 力荐

“不是每个人都会变,你应该对人更有信心一些”

8分钟前
  • 影志
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黛安基顿好迷人。

12分钟前
  • Touma
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伍迪艾伦的电影看得不多,目前最喜欢的还是赛末点。太文艺民工就受不了。昨晚看的时候被法国片似的喋喋不休搞得昏昏欲睡。但到最后一个场景时一下子清醒。纯靠情节,而不是情色镜头劲爆音乐把我唤醒,足以证明这是部好片。平淡生活无法言喻的错过和苦楚,提醒我时刻珍惜现在的美好。我想你啦~

16分钟前
  • 光年‖影视歌三栖民工
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越来越习惯和喜欢这老家伙儿的碎碎念了。

18分钟前
  • 如花就是小妖
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——You have to have a little faith in people.那一刻,话痨伍迪·艾伦终于安静了。

23分钟前
  • 逍遥兽
  • 还行

曼哈顿告诉我们,装逼是没有好下场的。

27分钟前
  • Minjie
  • 还行

成为话痨的人要么过于自信要么缺少安全感,成功的话痨一定兼而有之,既让你哭笑不得,又让你觉得理所应当。你可能并不热爱他,但每次听他讲完故事,尽管你真的很想找茬,但总是没胆指着他说:“喂,你够了。”

29分钟前
  • 57
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[A-]伍迪的博爱又专一、滥情又纯真、乐观又悲情的爱情悖论理论集大成者

31分钟前
  • 帕拉
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不是每个人都会变。。。你应该对人更有信心一些。。。十七岁的姑娘如是说,虚弱的中年人尴尬地无奈地迷惘地笑了

33分钟前
  • 推荐

4K修复版重看@phenomena 在所有人剑拔弩张的滔滔不绝中,只有年轻女孩看上去是超脱的,因她还没有遭受生活孤独乏味的迎头痛击,她有大把的青春,绝对的自信,尚未学会像成年人那样用苍白的言语掩盖内心的不安全感。这样的她又怎么会懂得,六个月的时间有多漫长呢?

35分钟前
  • Lycidas
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“生活在曼哈顿的人们,他们庸人自扰,时时制造出那些毫无必要的、神经兮兮的问题。因为这样,他们就不用去面对这世上更加棘手的生死攸关的大问题了。” 不是我更偏爱黑白,而是它确实完胜《Annie Hall》。从霍尔对一个人的哀悼上升到曼哈顿对一座城的抚慰,越混乱越迷人。

38分钟前
  • Obtson
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这部电影所展示的困境,是我现在以及将来都要面对、并试图超越的。影片充满着箴言警句,对人和人的关系(尤其是知识阶级、艺术从业者)有着深刻的表现,他们懦弱、善变、对未来没有信心、沉溺于自己的内心和幻想。没有能力关心更大的世界,而在自己触碰的有限范围内制造麻烦。纽约的繁忙、混乱与美。

43分钟前
  • xīn
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我默默很不要脸的觉得如果我是直男肯定是Woody Allen的类型,不停被跟我剑拔弩张的强势成熟女性吸引,不停被伤害像小狗一样“内化伤痛成一个肿瘤”,不停把年轻单纯自然的少女当成最舒适的“过去”和最完美的“归宿”。Woody Allen用自己的真实生活证明了他才是“作者电影”最准确的定义。

48分钟前
  • 牛腩羊耳朵
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他们把各种艺术挂在嘴边,用塞尚,纳博科夫,博格曼填补他们苍白的话语。他们不懂爱,脆弱又胆小,无法计划未来。在车流拥挤的夜色中,有一种令人烦躁的亲切感,不论他们多么孤独,能否找到真爱,都不会影响曼哈顿的美。

50分钟前
  • 九尾黑猫
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#SIFF#重看;果然黛安基顿是老头最佳搭档,看俩人用各种高深名词和艺术大家斗嘴,真是其乐无穷;前妻对他的评论也可视作其所有作品的总结,犀利精准;老头一辈子都在拍他自己,这一封写给曼哈顿的情书,在黑白光影映衬下,特别迷人。

53分钟前
  • 欢乐分裂
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从这部戏里17岁女生的温柔到后来Mia Farrow当道再到韩裔养女横空出世的嬗变过程,正显示着child-woman于直男知识分子界所具有的所向披靡之魅力——在这个美丽复杂的城市,在这个自恋、虚伪、脆弱、忧伤的小男人心里,最至高无上的永远是未成年少女的纯真和娇憨(我可没提肉体)

54分钟前
  • Connie
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修复放映。小资、言情、风趣、琐碎的纽约,絮絮叨叨的对白就像一出关于城市的交响乐曲,从头流淌至尾。七八十年代真的是伍迪·艾伦创作的高峰期啊,感觉之后拍的所有电影都只是衍生和变体。

57分钟前
  • 同志亦凡人中文站
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