《四個女人的故事》是由雅克·里維特執(zhí)導,帕斯卡爾·博尼策爾編劇,布魯·歐吉爾,貝努特·里格恩特,Fe等明星主演的劇情,電影。
這部影片以四位女大學生的日常生活為背景展開,她們分別是安娜、莉莉、艾米和莎拉。每個人都有著不同的性格和背景。安娜是一個理性而獨立的女孩,她對愛情持懷疑態(tài)度,更注重事業(yè)的發(fā)展。莉莉是一個活潑開朗的女孩,她對愛情充滿幻想,但常常陷入復(fù)雜的關(guān)系中。艾米是一個內(nèi)向而敏感的女孩,她對愛情充滿渴望,但卻害怕受傷。莎拉是一個勇敢而堅強的女孩,她對愛情和事業(yè)都充滿自信。當她們開始學習《雙重不忠》的劇本時,她們漸漸發(fā)現(xiàn)劇中的情節(jié)與她們的真實生活有著神奇的聯(lián)系。劇中的角色和情節(jié)開始在她們的生活中出現(xiàn),她們不得不面對自己內(nèi)心深處的欲望和挑戰(zhàn)。安娜發(fā)現(xiàn)自己被一個有婦之夫吸引,她在愛情和事業(yè)之間做出了艱難的選擇。莉莉陷入了一個三角戀愛中,她不知道如何抉擇,最終她選擇了她真正愛的人。艾米面臨著一個心儀已久的男孩和一個忠誠的朋友之間的選擇,她最終選擇了勇敢地追求自己的愛情。莎拉則面臨著一個藝術(shù)家與道德之間的抉擇,她決定堅守自己的原則并為自己的夢想而戰(zhàn)斗。在這個過程中,四位女大學生逐漸成長并學會了如何處理愛情、性欲、信任、背叛、犯罪和藝術(shù)等人生課題。她們通過劇本中的故事和角色,找到了自己內(nèi)心的答案,并在面對人生的各種挑戰(zhàn)時變得更加堅強和成熟?!端奈慌缘墓适隆肥且徊砍錆M情感和智慧的影片,通過四位女大學生的成長故事,探討了愛情、性欲、信任、背叛、犯罪和藝術(shù)等人生課題,展現(xiàn)了女性在面對挑戰(zhàn)時的勇敢和堅強。這部影片不僅僅是一部娛樂作品,更是一部引人深思的作品,給觀眾帶來了對人生和愛情的思考和啟發(fā)。
《四個女人的故事》別名:TheGangofFour,于1989-02上映,制片國家/地區(qū)為法國。時長共160分鐘,語言對白法語,最新狀態(tài)四個女人的故事。該電影評分7.5分,評分人數(shù)293人。
伊娃·朗格利亞,艾斯·庫珀,奧利維婭·德勞倫蒂斯,邁克爾·奧尼爾,喬納森·丹尼爾·布朗,伊曼·本森,馬特·科博伊,伊戈·米基塔斯,Nicole,Pulliam,Henry,Hunter,Hall,Jake,Reiner,Harvey,B.,Jackson,Sydney,Heller
《四個女人的故事》是一部充滿懸疑和冒險元素的電影。故事發(fā)生在一個宿舍里,住著四個學習表演的女大學生。她們的作業(yè)是學習一部名為《雙重不忠》的劇本。然而,劇中的情節(jié)竟然對她們的真實生活產(chǎn)生了奇妙的影響。這部電影探討了愛情、性欲、信任、背叛、犯罪和藝術(shù)等人生課題。四個女人在面對這些課題時,展現(xiàn)出了各自獨特的處理方式。她們的決策和行動引發(fā)了一系列令人驚嘆的事件和轉(zhuǎn)折。影片中的懸疑元素讓觀眾屏息凝神。每個女人都有著自己的秘密和隱藏的動機,觀眾將不斷猜測她們真實的意圖和行為。同時,劇情的發(fā)展也充滿了緊張和不可預(yù)測的情節(jié),讓人難以預(yù)測接下來會發(fā)生什么。冒險的元素也貫穿于整個故事。女主角們在面對困境和挑戰(zhàn)時展現(xiàn)出了勇氣和決心。她們不斷嘗試新的方式來解決問題,同時也面臨著風險和危險。觀眾將與她們一同經(jīng)歷這段冒險旅程,體會到她們的成長和變化?!端膫€女人的故事》通過精彩的劇情和扣人心弦的情節(jié)展現(xiàn)了人性的復(fù)雜性和多樣性。電影不僅僅是一部娛樂作品,更是一部引人深思的作品。觀眾將在觀影過程中思考愛情、性欲、信任、背叛、犯罪和藝術(shù)等人生課題,并對自己的生活和選擇進行反思??偟膩碚f,《四個女人的故事》是一部引人入勝的電影。它將觀眾帶入了一個充滿懸疑和冒險的世界,同時也引發(fā)了觀眾對于人生課題的思考。這部電影將給觀眾帶來一次難忘的觀影體驗。
這篇影評可能有劇透
原文鏈接: http://www.dvdbeaver.com/rivette/OK/threecircles.html
A first circle appears (or a segment of one). Let's call it A, since it is first to appear, though it never ceases throughout the film. This circle is an old theater, which serves as a school where some young women are rehearsing the roles they will play (Marivaux, Corneille, Racine) under the direction of Constance (Bulle Ogier). The difficult thing here is for the girls to express authentic feeling -- anger, love, despair -- with words that are not their own, but those of an author. This is the first sense of play: Roles. One of the girls, Cecile, has left a house in the suburbs to four other girls. She has gone to live elsewhere with the man she loves. The four girls will live together in the house, where they will experience the repercussions of their roles, as well as end-of the-day moods and personal postures, the effects of their private love affairs (to which they only allude), and their various attitudes toward one another. It is almost as if the girls had bounced off the wall of the theater to lead a life which they vaguely share in the house, where bits of their roles are carried over, but spread out in their own lives, with each girl minding her own business. You no longer have a succession of roles governed by a program, but rather a haphazard chain of attitudes and postures following several simultaneous stories that do not intersect. This is the second sense of play: the Attitudes and Postures in their interconnected day-to-day lives. What ceaselessly inspires Rivette is both the group of four girls and their individuation: comic and tragic types, melancholy and sanguine types, graceful and clumsy types, and above all. Lunar and Solar types. This is the second circle, B, inside the first, since it partly depends on the first, by receiving its effects. But circle B distributes these effects in its own way, moving away from the theater only to return to it endlessly.
The four girls are pursued by a man whose identity is unclear -- a con-artist, a spy, a cop -- looking for Cecile's lover (probably a criminal). What's it all about? Stolen IDs, stolen art, arms trafficking, a judiciary scandal? The man is looking for the keys to a locked chest. He tries to seduce each of them in turn, and succeeds with one. The three other girls will try to kill him: the first will try theatrically; the second, coldly; and the third, impulsively. The third girl will in fact beat him to death with a cane. These three scenes are Rivette's greatest moments: absolutely beautiful. This is the third sense of play: Masks, in a political or police conspiracy that goes beyond us, which no one can escape, a kind of global conspiracy. This is the third circle, C, which has a complex relationship to the other two. It prolongs the second circle and is intimately intertwined with it, since it increasingly polarizes the girls' attitudes, providing them with a common measure as it casts its spell on them. But it also spreads out over the whole theater, covering it, perhaps uniting all the disparate pieces of an infinite repertoire. Constance, the director, seems to be an essential element in the conspiracy from the beginning. (Is there not a blank period in her life spanning several years? Does she ever leave the theater, where she hides Cecile's naughty boy, who is probably Constance's lover?) And what about the girls themselves? One girl has an American boyfriend with the same name as the cop; the other girl has the same name as her mysteriously missing sister; and the Portuguese girl, Lucia, who is the epitome of the Lunar type, all of a sudden finds the keys and possesses a painting which is probably real... In short, the three circles are interwoven, acting on one another, progressing through one another, and organizing one another without ever losing their mystery.
We are all rehearsing parts of which we are as yet unaware (our roles). We slip into characters which we do nor master (our attitudes and postures). We serve a conspiracy of which we are completely oblivious (our masks). This is Rivette's vision of the world, it is uniquely his own. Rivette needs theater for cinema to exist: the young girls' attitudes and postures constitute a theatricality of cinema which, measured against the theatricality of theater, contrasts with it and emerges as perfectly distinct from it. And if the political, judicial, and police conspiracies weighing on us are enough to show that the real world has become a bad movie, then it is cinema's job to give us a piece of reality, a piece of the world. Rivette's project -- a cinema that opposes its theatricality to that of theater, its reality to that of the world, which has become unreal -- rescues cinema from the theater and the conspiracies threatening to destroy it. If the three circles communicate, they do so in places which are Rivette's own, like the back of the theater, or the house in the suburbs. These are places where Nature does not live, bur has survived with a strange grace: the undeveloped parts of a suburb, a rural stretch of city street, or secluded corners and alleyways. Fashion magazines have managed to make perfect, frozen pictures of these places, but everyone forgot that these places came from Rivette, having been impregnated with his dream. In these places conspiracies are hatched, young girls live together, and schools are established. But it is also in these places that the dreamer can still seize the day and the night, the sun and the moon, like a great external Circle governing the other circles, dividing up their light and their shadow.
In a certain way, Rivette has never filmed anything else bur light and its lunar (Lucia) and solar (Constance) transformations. Lucia and Constance are not persons, but forces. Bur this duality cannot be divided into good and evil. Hence Rivette ventures into those places where Nature has survived to verify the state in which the lunar and the solar subsist. Rivette's cinema has always been close to the poetry of Gerard Nerval, as though Rivette were possessed by him. Like Nerval, Rivette tours the remains of a hallucinatory Ile-de-France, tells the story of his own Daughters of Fire, and vaguely feels the conspiracy of an indeterminable madness approaching. It is not a question of influence. Bur this encounter makes Rivette one of the most inspired auteurs in cinema, and one of its great poets.
Originally appeared in Cahiers du Cinema, no. 416, February 1989. Reprinted in Two Regimes of Madness (MIT Press, 2006): p. 355-8.
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