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英文影片赏析影评模板

英文影片赏析影评模板
英文影片赏析影评模板

经典英文影片赏析

题目: 加粗,居中;英语题目中每个实词的首字母须大写;四个字母以上的介词首字母大写

学院(直属系): 外国语学院

年级、专业: 2013级英语

学生姓名:

学号:

完成时间: 2015年 12 月 25 日

从美观大方角度,注意文字居

中,横线右边上下对齐。(打印前

论文写作要求

1 封面( Cover )

英语标题(副标题)

姓名

学号

2 标题(Title)及副标题 (subtitle)

标题需反映出影评的主要观点,不宜过长

副标题需说明对哪部影片的评论

3 摘要(Abstract)及关键词( Key words )

摘要需对文章的主题进行简要阐述(也可包括从哪些方面对电影进行分析)摘要在50个字以内

关键词:3-5个

4. Commentary text

Introduction:提出自己的观点

Body:

对电影进行详细分析以充分论证自己的观点

各部分句首应有主题句(topic sentence)

注意段落之间的自然过渡(过渡词或过渡句的运用)

Conclusion:对全文进行总结

5. 范围:在下列影片中任选一部,写一篇不少于1500字的英语评论。

Braveheart

Mona Lisa’s Smile

Life is Beautiful

I — Robot

Crash

注意事项:

严禁抄袭或电脑翻译,否则以零分计算!

英文字体一律用Times New Roman

行距为倍

用A4纸打印

Journey to the Center of the Earth(地心游记)2008经典电影英文影评

Journey to the Center of the Earth(地心游记)2008 There is a part of me that will always have affection for a movie like "Journey to the Center of the Earth." It is a small part and steadily shrinking, but once I put on the 3-D glasses and settled in my seat, it started perking up. This is a fairly bad movie, and yet at the same time maybe about as good as it could be. There may not be an 8-year-old alive who would not love it. If I had seen it when I was 8, I would have remembered it with deep affection for all these years, until I saw it again and realized how little I really knew at that age. You are already familiar with the premise, that there is another land inside of our globe. You are familiar because the Jules Verne novel has inspired more than a dozen movies and countless TV productions, including a series, and has been ripped off by such as Edgar Rice Burroughs, who called it Pellucidar, and imagined that the Earth was hollow and there was another world on the inside surface. (You didn't ask, but yes, I own a copy of Tarzan at the Earth's Core with the original dust jacket.) In this version, Brendan Fraser stars as a geologist named Trevor, who defends the memory of his late brother, Max, who believed the center of the Earth could be reached through "volcanic tubes." Max disappeared on a mysterious expedition, which, if it involved volcanic tubes, should have been no surprise to him. Now Trevor has been asked to spend some time with his nephew, Max's son, who is named Sean (Josh Hutcherson). What with one thing and another, wouldn't you know they find themselves in Iceland, and peering down a volcanic tube. They are joined in this enterprise by Hannah (Anita Briem), who they find living in Max's former research headquarters near the volcano he was investigating. Now begins a series of adventures, in which the operative principle is: No matter how frequently or how far they fall, they will land without injury. They fall very frequently, and very far. The first drop lands them at the bottom of a deep cave, from which they cannot possibly climb, but they remain remarkably optimistic: "There must be a way out of here!" Sure enough, they find an abandoned mine shaft and climb aboard three cars of its miniature railway for a scene that will make you swear the filmmakers must have seen "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom." Just like in that movie, they hurtle down the tracks at breakneck speeds; they're in three cars, on three more or less parallel tracks, leading you to wonder why three parallel tracks were constructed at great expense and bother, but just when such questions are forming, they have to (1) leap a chasm, (2) jump from one car to another, and (3) crash. It's a funny thing about that little railway: After all these years, it still has lamps hanging over the rails, and the electricity is still on. The problem of lighting an unlit world is solved in the next cave they enter, which is inhabited by cute little birds that glow in the dark. One of them makes friends with Sean, and leads them on to the big attraction -- a world bounded by a great interior sea. This world must be a terrible place to inhabit; it has man-eating and man-strangling plants, its waters harbor giant-fanged fish and fearsome sea snakes that eat them, and on the further shore is a Tyrannosaurus rex. So do the characters despair? Would you despair, if you were trapped miles below the surface in a cave and being chased by its hungry inhabitants? Of course not. There isn't a moment in the movie when anyone seems frightened, not even during a fall straight down for thousands of feet, during which they link hands like sky-divers and carry on a conversation. Trevor gets the ball rolling: "We're still falling!" I mentioned 3-D glasses earlier in the review. Yes, the movie is available in 3-D in "selected theaters." Select those theaters to avoid. With a few exceptions (such as the authentic IMAX process), 3-D remains underwhelming to me -- a distraction, a disappointment and more often than not offering a dingy picture. I guess setting your story inside the Earth is one way to explain why it always seems to need more lighting. The movie is being shown in 2-D in most theaters, and that's how I wish I had seen it. Since there's that part of me with a certain weakness for movies like this, it's possible I would have liked it more. It would have looked brighter and clearer, and the photography wouldn't have been cluttered up with all the leaping and gnashing of teeth. Then I could have appreciated the work of the plucky actors, who do a lot of things right in this movie, of which the most heroic is keeping a straight face. 1

当幸福来敲门观后感英语

Director: Gabriele Muccino Title: The Pursuit of Happiness Press: Columbia Pictures Year: 2006.12.15 Shining words or sentences: 1. You got a dream, you gotta protect it. People can't do something themselves, they wanna tell you you can't do it. If you want something, go get it. 2. I'm the type of person, if you ask me a question, and I don't know the answer, I'm gonna to tell you that I don't know. But I bet you what: I know how to find the answer, and I'll find the answer. 3. There is an I in "happiness", There is no Y in "happiness", It's an I 4. Martin Frohm: What would you say if man walked in here with no shirt, and I hired him? What would you say? Chris Gardner: He must have had on some really nice pants. 5. You want something. Go get it! Summary: The film "The Pursuit of Happiness" is based on a true story. Chris Gardner, the lead of this story, is on the edge of bankruptcy. As the result of poor, his wife leaves him. In order to raise his son, he works hard and becomes a stock trader. In the end, he becomes a famous financial investor. Comment: Today is cruel, tomorrow is crueler, the day after tomorrow is beautiful, but most people have died in tomorrow night. The reason why they die is that they give up. So, they can't see the beautiful sunshine in the day after tomorrow morning. Never give up, and you will succeed. In the film, we can see the leading man work hard and he never abandon any chance to get a good job. And because of his good quality-optimistic, he gets the chance to practice for a job. Even he faces so many difficulties, he does not give up. As the result, he succeeds. "Anything is possible". We all know that this sentence is the slogan of Lining. Nothing is difficult to a man who wills. If people give up, he will lose all opportunities. But if he doesn't give up, everything will become better. There will be no worse. So, never give up and just do it.

当幸福来敲门观后感范文8篇

当幸福来敲门观后感范文8篇 当幸福来敲门观后感范文8篇 看完一部影视作品以后,一定有不少感悟吧,不妨坐下来好好写写观后感吧。快来参考观后感是怎么写的吧,以下是小编整理的当幸福来敲门观后感范文,仅供参考,希望能够帮助到大家。 当幸福来敲门观后感范文篇1前几天看了一部电影,叫《当幸福来敲门》。这是一部温暖、励志的影片,在这一个多小时里,我与主角克里斯一起感受什么是绝望,什么是短暂的幸福,什么是坚持和努力…… 克里斯是一名普通的扫描仪推销员,但几乎没有人愿意买,只有一些微薄的薪水,使他不但孩子上不了好的幼儿园,还经常交不上房租。克里斯也只能默默忍受这种生活。直到他偶然看到一个招聘证券经纪人的信息,于是,他决定为更好的生活奋力一试。 但要得到这份工作并不容易,一次次的失败,使他的妻子忍无可忍离开了他,房东也因为欠房租将他赶了出去。他一次次面对人生的低谷,但他从未放弃。终于他的面试通过,

但他将面临没有薪水的实习期,和一场决定成败的考试。因为没有交税,银行的钱被冻结。他和儿子只好到地铁站的洗手间睡了一夜。面对这些,克里斯流下了心酸的泪水。此后,为了追寻幸福,他白天努力工作,下午还要早早到收容所排队。他付出了令人无法想象的艰辛,他一直相信幸福总会落到自己的身上。最终,凭借过人的智慧与勤恳的努力,克里斯终于得到了工作,迎来了那幸福的时刻…… 这部电影令我十分感动,其中一些台词也使我深有感触。 "如果你提问,如果我回答不上来,我就会回答你'我不知道',而且我保证,我能找到答案,我会找到答案!"这是克里斯面试时说的一句话,这反映了他的探索精神与诚实。不懂并不可怕,但不能不懂装懂。要诚实地回答,并要找到答案。如果能把每个不懂的问题弄懂,成功就离你更进了一步。" 打多少电话就有多少潜在顾客,有多少潜在顾客就有多少实际顾客,有多少实际顾客就有多少公司的收入",这是证券公司的一句话,讲的是积小成大的道理。打电话是一件小事,但做得多了,就能得到巨大的收入。做任何大事都要从每一件小事做起,做好每一件小事,就能成就大业。 《当幸福来敲门》让我学到了很多:要树立明确的目标;要有认真、执着的精神;要懂得抓住每一次机会,还要有责

Seven(七宗罪)1995经典电影英文影评

Seven(七宗罪)1995 David Fincher's classic tale of inventive serial killing and urban degredation, with Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman on excellent form Who'd have thought? An absurd-sounding tale of a serial killer basing his crimes around the seven deadly sins, directed by the man behind the mess that was Alien3, turning out to be one of the most chilling and original thrillers of the 1990s. From the outset, through the film's brilliantly designed deliberate under-lighting - we see very little blood and guts - and muffled sound, the audience is encouraged to lean towards the screen, immerse itself in the film's unbearably grim world. Pitt is in career-making form as Mills, a simple cop moving with his sweet young wife (Paltrow) to a grim, anonymous city, determined to make a difference, to do some good. He is assigned to track down a vengeful killer, and works alongside Somerset (Freeman), a jaded, wise policeman on the verge of retirement. The two are that modern movie cliché -the mismatched pair thrown together by circumstance, who gradually learn mutual respect. But Fincher and Walker take these hackneyed ingredients, play with them in the context of a brilliantly cohesive plot, and present something consistently fresh - the police finding themselves with too much evidence, the premature unmasking of the killer - and very, very dark. 1

The Pursuit of Happiness(当幸福来敲门)经典电影英文影评

The Pursuit of Happiness(当幸福来敲门)2006 With a title like The Pursuit of Happiness, you expect the characters to get to the promised land. They do, but if the journey matters more than the destination, this is a movie to skip. The Pursuit of Happyness is long, dull, and depressing. It expands into two hours a story that could have been told more effectively in one. This is not the feel-good movie of the season unless you believe that a few moments of good cheer can redeem 110 minutes of gloom. Sitting through The Pursuit of Happiness is a chore. Downbeat movies aren't inherently bad (in fact, many are powerful), but this one provides artificial characters in contrived circumstances. How is it that movies "inspired by a real story" often feel more fake than those fully embedded in the realm of fiction? Will Smith has generated Oscar buzz for his portrayal of Chris Gardner, the real-life guy whose rags-to-riches story forms the basis of the movie. (Impoverished guy becomes capitalist poster boy.) While it's fair to say that this is one of the best straight performances of Smith's career, it didn't blow me away. In and of itself, the acting, while effective, is not Best Actor material, but it wouldn't surprise me if the movie's prestige factor and Smith's popularity earn him a nod. Meanwhile, his female co-star, Thandie Newton, isn't going to be considered for any award. Newton spends about 90% of her screen time doing an impersonation of a harpy: screeching, bitching, and contorting her face into unpleasant expressions. Smith's son, Jaden, is okay as the movie's child protagonist; it's unclear whether his occasional deficiencies are the result of his acting, Steven Conrad's writing, or Gabriele Muccino's direction, but there's not much personality behind the cute features and curly hair. Chris Gardner (Will Smith) is down on his luck. It's 1981 San Francisco and his self-employed business of selling portable bone density scanners isn't doing well. His wife, Linda (Thandie Newton), does nothing but yell at him and give him a cold shoulder, and the lack of domestic harmony is impacting the disposition of his beloved son, Christopher (Jaden Christopher Syre Smith). That's when Chris' life turns into a country song. His wife leaves. He is evicted from his home. He goes to jail, neither passing GO nor collecting a much-needed $200. He gets hit by a car. He is robbed. He makes his son cry. He alienates a friend over $14. He gets to spend a night in the cleanest public restroom in the history of public restrooms. But there's a bright spot, although you need a dark-adapted eye to find it. Despite having no experience, Chris applies to enter an internship program at Dean Witter. He would appear to have no chance to get in until he amazes the head of the program (Brian Howe) by solving the Rubik's Cube puzzle in the back of a taxi cab. It's a blessing that the movie doesn't use a stock villain to impede Chris' herky-jerky trip to the top, because that would have tipped the movie into the empire of the unwatchable. However, the lack of a strong conflict makes the two-hour running length seem very long. Thankfully, there's also not much in the way of overt melodrama, but that could be a byproduct of having characters who are not deeply realized and have narrow emotional ranges. It's tough to connect with Chris and his son. Although they are played by a real-life father and son, there's no chemistry between them. We're constantly told how desperately Chris loves Christopher, but it takes a long time before we begin to buy it. Most of the time, Christopher seems like an annoying piece of baggage that Chris drops off at daycare when he has other things to do. The film's most compelling scenes are those that show Chris struggling to enter the rat race. Granted, this is no Glengarry Glen Ross, but it shows the pressure these salesmen are under and how important the contact lists are. In the overall scheme of things, however, these sequences are background noise. They are neither plentiful nor lengthy. The movie spends more time following Chris on his futile sales rounds for the bone density scanner than it does accompanying him during his broker training. The moral of the story is as trite as they come: don't let anyone convince you to give up on your dreams. Disney animated films have been doing this better for decades. The Pursuit of Happyness concludes with a caption that tells us what happens to Chris after the end of the movie; it promises a better story than the one we have just watched. The film is also marred by a persistent (although not verbose) voiceover that adds nothing to the story while frequently jerking us out of the experience of watching it. I don't need Will Smith telling me: "This part of the story is called 'riding the bus.'" This is the English-language debut of Gabriele Muccino, who has made a name for himself in Italian cinema. The Pursuit of Happiness has the kind of slow, drab tone one occasionally associates with a director raised outside of the Hollywood system. What can be an asset in some circumstances is a detriment in this one. The Pursuit of Happiness isn't enjoyable, and its meager pleasures, including the eventual "payoff," aren't enough to justify the unrelenting misery. The Pursuit of Happiness is competently made and gets lots of the details right, but when it comes to the emotional core of the story, it loses the pursuit and misses the "happiness."

《当幸福来敲门》电影观后感

坚守梦想,善待苦难,等幸福来敲门 ―――《当幸福来敲门》观后感《当幸福来敲门》,听名字,我以为又是一块荒诞的馅饼,不偏不倚地砸在那里。可是看完了之后,我才发现,克里斯的成就里面写满了奋斗,那种精神带给我们的却不仅仅是悸动,那种震撼是一种力量。 这部电影主要讲述了一位濒临破产、老婆离家的落魄推销员,刻苦耐劳的善尽单亲责任,奋发向上成为股市交易员,最后成为知名的金融投资家的励志故事。然而,这部电影带给我们的真实感远远大于艺术感,所以心中那份感动和所给予的震撼与鼓舞也是沉甸甸的。影片的几个镜头让人感喟不已,不禁湿了眼眶。克里斯为了改变生活窘境而每天提着他那举全部家当购置的扫描仪奔波于各大医院去销售,尽情“享受”着医生的拒绝和揶揄,而回家后却还要小心地安抚妻儿,心里不禁一阵阵心疼。终于,妻子再也无法忍受这样贫寒而又毫无起色的生活,愤然离开。他的忧伤与无助又一次刺疼了我,生活在煎熬着他,看着房东愤然将他和儿子的东西丢在房外,而他只能带着疲惫的心,拖着心爱儿子,开始流浪,四处找寻住所。当父子两人在公共卫生间的角落依偎着,有人想近来方便之时,而他用脚抵着反锁了门,不敢出声,痛苦伤心的泪水顺腮而下时。。。。。。 他的自信,出色的人际交往能力,很难相信这样的他不会有更多的机会;拎着重物满大街飞奔,冒着生命危险在车流中穿梭,追讨被偷的仪器;被妻子抛弃,独力抚养儿子;被追讨房租,进而扫地出门;会因为18元的的士费而夺门而逃,大喊“sorry”;会为了进入宗教收容所,而撒谎插队;会为了赶时间去排队,坐公车时而枉顾“女士优先”的绅士礼仪;会在无处住宿时,与儿子玩着幻想的游戏;会为了给儿子一个安定的环境,走投无路时,去卖血缓解困难。凭借着坚韧的毅力,追求幸福的执着,对儿子深深的爱,最后他成功了。 还记得他第二次流泪,是在被接纳进入公司时,他在老板面前已经热泪盈眶,表示感谢,但离去时,他显得很平静;走在人潮中,他激动万分,不知该怎样表达、宣泄自己的激动与喜悦,最后他跑到儿子所在的幼儿园,一把抱住儿子,紧紧的,流下了热泪。不知道,他那段经历是困难,还是幸福。他在追求幸福,其实幸福早就在他身边,他拥有儿子对他的信任,他对儿子深深的爱。这是伟大

Tess(苔丝)1979经典电影英文影评

Tess(苔丝)1979 Thomas Hardy's Tess of the D'Urbervilles, which Roman Polanski has turned into a lovely, lyrical, unexpectedly delicate movie, might at first seem to be the wrong project for Mr. Polanski in every way. As a new biography of the director reports, when Tess was shown at the Cannes Film Festival, the press pointed nastily and repeatedly to the coincidence of Mr. Polanski's having made a film about a young girl's seduction by an older man, while he himself faced criminal charges for a similar offense. This would certainly seem to cast a pall over the project. So would the fact that Hardy's novel is so very deeply rooted in English landscapes, geographical and sociological, while Mr. Polanski was brought up in Poland. Finally, Tess of the D'Urbervilles is so quintessentially Victorian a story that a believable version might seem well out of any contemporary director's reach. But if an elegant, plausible, affecting Tess sounds like more than might have been expected of Mr. Polanski, let's just say he has achieved the impossible. In fact, in the process of adapting his style to suit such a sweeping and vivid novel, he has achieved something very unlike his other work. Without Mr. Polanski's name in the credits, this lush and scenic Tess could even be mistaken for the work of David Lean. In a preface to the later editions of Tess of the D'Urbervilles, Mr. Hardy described the work as "an impression, not an argument." Mr. Polanski has taken a similar approach, removing the sting from both the story's morality and its melodrama. Tess Durbeyfield, the hearty country lass whose downfall begins when her father learns he had noble forebears, is sent to charm her rich D'Urberville relations. She learns that they aren't D'Urbervilles after all; instead, they have used their new money to purchase an old name. Tess charms them anyhow, so much that Alec D'Urberville, her imposter cousin, seduces and impregnates her. The seduction, like many of the film's key scenes, is presented in a manner both earthy and discreet. In this case, the action is set in a forest, where a gentle mist arises from the ground and envelops Tess just around the time when she is enveloped by Alec. Alec, as played by Leigh Lawson, is a slightly wooden character, unlike Angel Clare, Tess's later and truer lover, played with supreme radiance by Peter Firth. Long after Tess has borne and buried her illegitimate child, she finds and falls in love with this spirited soul mate. But when she marries Angel Clare and is at last ready to reveal the secret of her past, the story begins hurtling toward its final tragedy. When Tess becomes a murderer, the film offers its one distinctly Polanski-like moment—but even that scene has its fidelity to the novel. A housemaid listening at a door hears a "drip, drip, drip" sound, according to Hardy. Mr. Polanski has simply interpreted this with a typically mischievous flourish. Of all the unlikely strong points of Tess, which opens today for a weeklong engagement at the Baronet and which will reopen next year, the unlikeliest is Nastassja Kinski, who plays the title role. Miss Kinski powerfully resembles the young Ingrid Bergman, and she is altogether ravishing. But she's an odd choice for Tess: not quite vigorous enough, and maybe even too beautiful. She's an actress who can lose her magnetism and mystery if she's given a great deal to do (that was the case in an earlier film called Stay As You Are). But here, Mr. Polanski makes perfect use of her. Instead of a driving force, she becomes an echo of the land and the society around her, more passive than Hardy's Tess but linked just as unmistakably with natural forces. Miss Kinski's Tess has no inner life to speak of. But Mr. Polanski makes her surroundings so expressive that her placidity and reserve work very beautifully. Even at its nearly three-hour running time, Mr. Polanski's Tess cannot hope for anything approaching the range of the novel. But the deletions have been made wisely, and though the story loses some of its resonance it maintains its momentum. There are episodes—like one involving Tess's shabby boots and Mercy Chant, the more respectable girl who expects to marry Angel—that don't make the sense they should, and the action is fragmented at times. That's a small price to pay for the movie's essential rightness, for its congruence with the mood and manner of the novel. Mr. Polanski had to go to Normandy and rebuild Stonehenge to stage his last scene, according to this same biography. As is the case throughout his Tess, the results were worth the trouble. 1

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