伊瓦尔·布罗格 — 演员 (5)
安娜贝尔 (2014) [电影] IMDb 豆瓣 TMDB 维基数据
Annabelle
5.3 (191 个评分) 导演: 约翰·R·莱昂耐迪 演员: 安娜贝拉·沃丽丝 / 瓦德·霍尔顿
其它标题: Annabelle / 诡娃安娜贝尔(港)
新婚燕尔的约翰·戈登(瓦德·霍尔顿 Ward Horton 饰)和妻子米娅(安娜贝拉·沃丽丝 Annabelle Wallis 饰)共同孕育了新的生命,对于这对未经世事的小夫妻来说,喜悦和担忧相伴而行。那个晚上,约翰找到了妻子寻觅已久的娃娃安娜贝尔,与此同时,邻居彼得家则发生了残忍血案,更为可怕的厄运也朝着戈登夫妇袭来。几名丧失人性的邪教男女闯入戈登家中,试图对他们展开屠杀。虽然戈登夫妇侥幸保住性命,但其中一名女子抱着安娜贝尔死去。在此之后,惴惴不安的米娅待在家中安胎,她试图从阴影中走出,然而接二连三的怪事相继在家中发生。
诡异而恐怖的恶魔盛宴就此拉开帷幕……
Masters of Sex (2013) [剧集] IMDb 维基数据 TMDB
Masters of Sex
8.1 (212 个评分) 导演: Michelle Ashford 演员: Michael Sheen / Lizzy Caplan
其它标题: 性爱大师 / マスターズ・オブ・セックス
故事描述了上世纪六十年代所谓的「人类性行为探索者」William Masters和Virginia Johnson的生活及对当时流行文化的影响。据称正是因为这两个人对性爱进行深入研究,才触发了当时西方社会特别是美国的「性革命」。
殉道者 (2016) [电影] 豆瓣
Martyrs
导演: 凯文·哥兹 / Michael Goetz 演员: 特罗伊安·艾夫瑞·贝利萨里奥 / 贝莉·诺布尔
其它标题: Martyrs / 剥皮血女之基督真神
电影讲述一部关于信仰扭曲的故事,为见证殉道者慷慨赴义的死后世界,一群崇尚怪奇道理的组织成员,不断绑架牺牲者,用尽残忍手法将他们虐杀,好从他们弥留的眼神里,窥见殉道者的世界。露西10岁时曾遭绑架犯监禁凌虐,即使后来幸运逃脱,阴影仍笼罩心头挥之不去,而露西在孤儿院结识的好友 安娜,则是她唯一的依靠。十年后,深受过往回忆折磨的露西,意外发现当年绑架她的绑匪一家人,便冒险展开了危机四伏的追踪,安娜担忧好友的安危与之同行,殊料两人正一步步陷入凶恶的处境,当年绑架案背后的恐怖真相也即将浮现…
圣女贞德 1993年版 [演出] 豆瓣
所属 演出: 圣女贞德
剧院: Lyceum Theatre 导演: Michael Langham
其它标题: 1993年版 编剧: George Bernard Shaw 演员: David Adkins / Ivar Brogger
Shaw characterised Saint Joan as "A Chronicle Play in 6 Scenes and an Epilogue". Joan, a simple peasant girl, hears voices which she claims to be those of Saint Margaret, Saint Catherine, and the archangel Michael, sent by God to guide her conduct.
Scene 1 begins with Robert de Baudricourt complaining about the inability of the hens on his farm to produce eggs. Joan claims that her voices are telling her to raise a siege against Orléans, and to allow her several of his men for this purpose. Joan also says that she will eventually crown the Dauphin in Rheims cathedral. de Baudricourt ridicules Joan, but his servant feels inspired by her words. de Baudricourt eventually begins to feel the same sense of inspiration, and gives his consent to Joan. The servant enters at the end of the scene to exclaim that the hens have begun to lay eggs again. de Baudricourt interprets this as a sign from God of Joan's divine inspiration.
In Scene 2 (8 March 1429), Joan talks her way into being received at the court of the weak and vain Dauphin. There, she tells him that her voices have commanded her to help him become a true king by rallying his troops to drive out the English occupiers and restore France to greatness. Joan succeeds in doing this through her excellent powers of flattery, negotiation, leadership, and skill on the battlefield.
In Scene 3 (29 April 1429), Dunois and his page are waiting for the wind to turn so that he and his forces can lay siege to Orléans. Joan and Dunois commiserate, and Dunois attempts to explain to her more pragmatic realities of an attack, without the wind at their back. Her replies eventually inspire Dunois to rally the forces, and at the scene's end, the wind turns in their favour.
Ultimately she is betrayed, and captured by the English at the siege of Compiègne. Scene 6 (30 May 1431) deals with her trial. John de Stogumber is adamant that she be executed at once. The Inquisitor, the Bishop of Beauvais, and the Church officials on both sides of the trial have a long discussion on the nature of her heresy. Joan is brought to the court, and continues to assert that her voices speak to her directly from God and that she has no need of the Church's officials. This outrages de Stogumber. She acquiesces to the pressure of torture at the hands of her oppressors, and agrees to sign a confession relinquishing the truth behind her voices, so that she can live a life in permanent confinement without hope of parole. Upon hearing this, Joan changes her mind:
Joan: "You think that life is nothing but not being dead? It is not the bread and water I fear. I can live on bread. It is no hardship to drink water if the water be clean. But to shut me from the light of the sky and the sight of the fields and flowers; to chain my feet so that I can never again climb the hills. To make me breathe foul damp darkness, without these things I cannot live. And by your wanting to take them away from me, or from any human creature, I know that your council is of the devil."
Joan accepts the ultimate punishment of death at the stake as preferable to such an imprisoned existence. de Stogumber vehemently demands that Joan then be taken to the stake for immediate execution. The Inquisitor and the Bishop of Beauvais excommunicate her and deliver her into the hands of the English. The Inquisitor asserts that Joan was fundamentally innocent, in the sense that she was sincere and had no understanding of the church and the law. de Stogumber re-enters, screaming and severely shaken emotionally after seeing Joan die in the flames, the first time that he has witnessed such a death, and realising that he has not understood what it means to burn a person at the stake until he has actually seen it happen. A soldier had given Joan two sticks tied together in a cross before the moment of her death. Bishop Martin Ladvenu also reports that when he approached with a cross to let her see the cross before she died, and he approached too close to the flames, she had warned him of the danger from the stake, which convinced him that she could not have been under the inspiration of the devil.
In the Epilogue, 25 years after Joan's execution, a new trial has cleared her of heresy. Brother Martin brings the news to the now-King Charles. Charles then has a dream in which Joan appears to him. She begins conversing cheerfully not only with Charles, but with her old enemies, who also materialise in the King's bedroom. An emissary from the present day (at the time of the play, the 1920s) brings news that the Catholic Church is to canonise her, in the year 1920. Joan says that saints can work miracles, and asks if she can be resurrected. At this, all the characters desert her one by one, asserting that the world is not prepared to receive a saint such as her. The last to leave is the English soldier, who is about to engage in a conversation with Joan before he is summoned back to hell at the end of his 24-hour respite. The play ends with Joan ultimately despairing that mankind will never accept its saints:
O God that madest this beautiful earth, when will it be ready to accept thy saints? How long, O Lord, how long?