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    塞尔玛

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    分类:剧情片英国2014

    主演:大卫·奥伊罗,卡门·艾乔戈,蒂姆·罗斯,汤姆·威尔金森,吉奥瓦尼·瑞比西,亚历桑德罗·尼沃拉,小库珀·古丁,奥普拉·温弗瑞,科曼,迪伦·贝克,勒凯斯·斯坦菲尔德,肯特·法尔考,科瑞·雷诺兹,泰莎·汤普森 

    导演:艾娃·德约列 

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     剧照

    塞尔玛 剧照 NO.1塞尔玛 剧照 NO.2塞尔玛 剧照 NO.3塞尔玛 剧照 NO.4塞尔玛 剧照 NO.5塞尔玛 剧照 NO.6塞尔玛 剧照 NO.16塞尔玛 剧照 NO.17塞尔玛 剧照 NO.18塞尔玛 剧照 NO.19塞尔玛 剧照 NO.20

    剧情介绍

      历史传记题材电影《塞尔玛》由阿娃·杜威内执导,蒂姆·罗斯、大卫·奥伊罗、小库珀·古丁、汤姆·威尔金森主演,影片聚焦美国民权斗士马丁·路德·金1965年组织的“由塞尔玛向蒙哥马利进军”行动。

     长篇影评

     1 ) 死于名望的巅峰,才能封神

    黑人的主旋律电影。美国种族问题神马的从来都不是新闻,而估计是由于某些问题的考量,马丁路德金从来也没有在中国的教科书上大书特书过。这电影,好的地方,是没有死抓马丁路德金不放,而把视觉也放在了其他普通被人身上。不过,由于是黑人主旋律电影,白人的角色就...大家懂的。反正金博士已经死了,或许也是好事,死于壮年,死于名望的巅峰,才能封神。

     2 ) 马丁路德金的个人传记以及如何推进议程的教科书

    赶上BLM于是Amazon Prime限免。本来以为是个如《林肯》一般令人昏昏欲睡的片子但是看了10分钟之后发现完全不是那么回事。

    本片没有小马丁路德金牧师(以下简称MLK)塑造成一个高大全形象,从一个胜利走向另一个胜利,反倒是化了不少时间拍MLK如何沮丧退缩徘徊艰难地向妻子坦白出轨,使得人物形象更丰富也更真实。

    本片也是一部美国黑人如何争取投票权的简史。理论上美国宪法第十三修正案赋予黑人投票权但是南方州用人头税和教育测试。片中阿拉巴马州SELMA一个黑人大妈去注册投票,注册员先是让她背宪法序言然后再问阿拉巴马总共有几个县,大妈都答上来了结果再被刁难说要把县治安官的名字一个个都报出来。

    另一方面因为黑人没有投票权州一级行政立法司法机构都被白人种族主义者把持,针对黑人的种族仇杀层出不穷,如电影里表现的伯明翰四女孩。看片的时候可能要了解一下知识背景。

    于是为了争取关注MLK组织了从SELMA到阿拉巴马首府蒙哥马利的进军以推动赋予黑人实质投票权的立法。影片展现MLK如何动员,如何协调组织内部的分歧,如何将暴行展示在媒体尤其是电视媒体前,如何同更激进的Malcolm X分进合击,如何预演可能遇到的冲突,如何争取总统林登约翰逊(LBJ),如何争取国际同情,如何在法院挑战对行军的禁令,如何唤起白人尤其是宗教人士的支持和加入,如何认怂,如何安排后勤保障,如何安排医疗救护。有勇有谋,简直如百科全书一般。

    电影里MLK问LBJ,为啥美国能派成千上万的人去越南打仗,却无法派军队去阿拉巴马保护美国人民,LBJ哑口无言。60年代民权运动之所以能取得胜利,跟美军深陷越战泥潭不无关系。

    最后要说的是MLK的演说真的是很富有感染力,比后来那位同肤色的诺贝尔和平奖得主也就强个几十倍吧。

     3 ) 休闲看,会闷,专心看,感动!

    这部电影还有一个港译名:《马丁路德金:梦想之路》,比起《塞尔玛》更直白地简括了故事内核,起码让不了解的观众提起兴趣看剧情简介。 选择看这部电影,起初因为放映排期与我的行程空档恰到合适,又在豆瓣看了评分不低才决定买票。影院只安排了60座小厅,但进场后扫视上座率足有七成,长者占一半,中学生模样的各一些。当电影开场不久,银幕画面大多停留在马丁路德与妻子日常对话又或者与同僚热烈讨论间,顿时让我萌生悔意,然而这场用85HKD买的电影票就这么睡着总觉得不甘心,看看邻座都很专注地看,尽管座位舒适都不好意思闭上眼,于是我尝试重置情绪投入观影。 马丁路德金这个响亮的名字以前在历史课本上出现过,也因翻译顺口好记,可我早已不记得在他身上发生了什么壮举或事迹,或许有人认为想查阅百度即可,但有没有想象过此效果如同昔日高考情景,出了考场,教材与知识就接丢进了垃圾桶,回过头来又能记起多少? 出社会工作后,历史知识依旧没有明显的实用价值,不过可以肯定,伴随沧桑足迹,对梦想与信念的解读会比读书时更深入,阅读历史变成了一种人格修养。我们对历史的认识,不仅限于枯燥的文字传授,还可以从易于流行的影视作品中吸收,尤其越经典越能将画面深刻地留在脑海。《塞尔玛》未必能成为经典电影,但它的还原映像与震撼事实,确信我今后会记起马丁路德金这人物。 片头交代他拿了1964年的诺贝尔和平奖,包括美国总统在内都尊称他为金博士。他拿奖前付出多大,我当时并不清楚,但拿了奖以后,也就是1965年,马丁路德金还坚持不懈地继续为黑人的人权平等而奋斗,电影情节就是展现了“从塞尔玛向蒙哥马利进军”过程及背后纪要。 我对于美国了解不多,还是记得《撞车》这部奥斯卡电影描述现今的美国社会对黑人种族歧视并未消除。又如果不是当年的马丁路德竭尽所能排除万难争取权益,情况更不堪入目。 看见有其他影评会批评这部电影的表述片面甚至史实偏差,我特意去补脑人物词条的评价,影片中的马丁路德金形象可能未必完全符合真实。就电影而论,我会欣赏它能从人物史实档案着眼细化铺开,演绎了几段振奋人心的的教堂演讲,重点又落在三场高燃的大桥群戏,结尾再用真实的黑白资料映像衔接,对观众说服力瞬间大增。最后,结尾字幕备注马丁路德金3年后被刺杀,享年39岁,他用一己一生短暂生命换来千万同胞长期平等,无需置疑是个可敬的人!这是一部能打动人心的传记电影,是值得推荐观看。 (2015.04.06 The Grand Cinema)

     4 ) 一般,我主要是来看Ihave adream的

    一部关于马丁路德金的电影。我有一段时期非常崇拜这个人,如今可是没有时间了。六年前还心血来潮翻译了一篇他的演讲《I've been to Mountain top》,花了我不少时间,但是我要说一边听录音一边看英文,然后想着怎么翻译过程很享受。说说电影,刚开始,感觉人不像,但是演讲的腔调还是有板有眼的,中规中矩。看到最后也就接受了,但是背影倒是很像的。每个国家都有一本难念的经,美国也一样,60年代外面是越南战争,国内是种种的运动,正是《阿甘正传》的时代。不过在新闻自由上,美国这一点绝对的可圈可点,警察用催泪瓦斯、棒子、鞭子、枪对付那些手无寸铁的黑人,居然电视上可以现场直播,几千万人同时可以看到。佩服佩服。这在中国完全没有可能性。一个国家不敢正视自己的历史,怕把历史的真实展现出来,会有报应的而且是现世报。而且这报应还会一代一代传下去。没有历史的国家,靠着瞒和骗的国家,不可能真正的fuxing。

     5 ) 《塞尔玛》是主旋律电影?

    《塞尔玛》真的是一部“主旋律电影”吗?
    在中国大陆的语境里,“主旋律电影”暗示该电影或多或少地有官方参与投资、制作和发行,又或者暗示该电影顺从甚至直接宣扬官方的意识形态。据我所知,美国政府并没有在前者有明显的行为,所以我将对后者的进行简单讨论。
    诚然,马丁·路德·金早已成为美国官方历史中的一个正面形象,甚至还有一个以他命名的公众假期;毫无疑问,他是家喻户晓的“非暴力抗争”德谟克拉西斗士。问题是,很多人听到更多是“非暴力”的一面,而有意无意地忽略“抗争”;于是,当人们把金理解成一位宣扬和平的好人时似乎忘记了一点:“非暴力”是抗争的手段。为何轻视“抗争”的一面?当大家通过电影知道他抗争的对象是谁的时候,便应该清楚为何有人希望淡化“抗争”了。
    稍有常识的人都知道,金并不是唯一一位非裔民权社运家;对历史有过思考的人也应该都知道,当官方不得不把这些非裔社运家写进历史的时候会作怎样的选择。
    举另一个更有名的例子。金在1963年的华盛顿游行中讲到他做了的一个梦,但正史甚少提及的是,他在同一篇演说中还提到黑人这次游行到华盛顿是来兑现一张支票的,一张关于“生存权、自由权和追求幸福权”的支票,但美国政府一直都“没有足够的经费”来兑现。于是,当我们把这篇演说放在心灵鸡汤栏目时,是否应该思考如下问题:如果我们把该文章的题目改成“没有足够的经费”,那它是否还有同等的意义?我们为何会被引导去“梦”这一块而不是“经费”这一块?官方历史会希望你去记住哪一部分?
    我们应当如何看待非裔的斗争历史?我经常会看到一种很有问题的表述:非裔能争取到权利是因为他们受到宪法保护。这样的表述在我看来是本末倒置。我们应该问:美国有宪法和修正案,为何非裔还需要作流血牺牲来争权?假设宪法和修正案真有根本解决问题的效力,那种族问题早应该在十九世纪七十年代就得到解决了;那时国会一连串地通过十三、十四和十五修正案,分别废除奴隶制、保障公民受到法律的同等保护以及不能因肤色而剥夺一名男性的投票权。正如历史所示,问题并没有得到解决。首先修正案存在很多漏洞让人钻空子,比如在投票方面,不同州可以在投票处设立各种表面上不打种族主义旗号的限制(如《塞尔玛》开始所示);其次,也是更显而易见的一个问题:法律通过了就能消除人心中的种族歧视吗(试想一下曾经被你瞧不起的商品突然和你有一样的权利)?
    另一方面,自奴隶制废除后,种族问题显得越发复杂。奴隶们被解放了,但他们没有经济基础(在佃农和城市化中继续被剥削)或政治基础(限制投票和参选的手段多的是,于是非裔难被选上,就算被选上,他/她有多大程度不受白人政治影响?)。于是在平权运动的发展过程中,人们越发认识到种族与经济和政治息息相关;歧视并不止表现在奴隶主打奴隶上,还表现在政策、就业和住房分配等的各个方面;这些复杂的关系使得种族歧视者能够打着其他的旗号(如貌似客观的统计数据)、通过貌似不分肤色的机构手段来实现(如“管理高犯罪率或低收入的社群”),并能轻易否认“种族主义者”的身份;另一方面,政府在让社区增权益能、受教育和就业等方面则是敷衍了事,官僚体制更让其效果大打折扣甚至起反作用,同时还紧抓着个别成功的例子宣称美国已进入“后种族时代”。在这样复杂的局面下要再谈论种族问题,进步社团只能冒着被贴“种族主义者”的标签来大喊“黑人生命很重要”了,又或者像费格森示威者那样通过简单直接的方法来凸显种族和经济之间的关系,又或者在主流政治内艰难地反对着投票者身份证法案(又一限制投票的手段,Wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voter_ID_laws_in_the_United_States )。当种族涉及到美国的政治和经济基础问题时,“黑”与“白”便不仅仅是肤色区别了。
    上述的大多数内容在美国主流文化输出中可能甚少被提及,于是我们只看到被“净化”过的马丁·路德·金在步出塞尔玛时的伟岸身影,并觉得那一刻正是所谓“美国德谟克拉西优越性”的重要体现,而难以察觉该逻辑的荒谬,更别提其背后的复杂历史和社会背景了。
    可惜的是,《塞尔玛》也正是美国主流文化输出的一个商品。它有着大片厂的投资和发行,制作精良,内容上走着好莱坞文艺片简单的煽情和二元对立,虽尝试表现金的人格弱点以及联邦政府的暧昧态度,但中规中矩的戏剧套路让其丧失了批判力度和联系古今的机会,成为又一部“通过诉说历史让历史成为过去”的电影。当然,在好莱坞越来越保守的今天,让一部主流叙事片去直接质疑和批判其国家的政治和经济基础并煽动普通民众走上街头未免要求过高,毕竟它要保证不引起争端,从而顺利制作、发行和提名小金人。从这方面看,如果美国的终极意识形态是资本主义的话,那《塞尔玛》还真算是一部“主旋律电影”。
    (写于“塞尔玛血腥星期天”五十周年)

    注:本文无意就马丁·路德·金本人或其1963年华盛顿游行的演说(还有所有其他演说)作任何结论或猜测,更没有试图贬低其演说中的任何信息。

    附1:
    The selection of facts from the past involves an interpretation, a sense of priorities, a sense of values as to what matters. History can be a very strong weapon for people who wish to construct a certain movement in a certain direction. - Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.

    附2:

    And we are not wrong; we are not wrong in what we are doing. (Well) If we are wrong, the Supreme Court of this nation is wrong. (Yes sir) [applause] If we are wrong, the Constitution of the United States is wrong. (Yes) [applause] If we are wrong, God Almighty is wrong. (That's right) [applause] If we are wrong, Jesus of Nazareth was merely a utopian dreamer that never came down to Earth. (Yes) [applause] If we are wrong, justice is a lie (Yes), love has no meaning. [applause] And we are determined here in Montgomery to work and fight until justice runs down like water (Yes), [applause] and righteousness like a mighty stream. (12/05/1955)

    You have a dual citizenry. You live both in time and eternity; both in heaven and earth. Therefore, your ultimate allegiance is not to the government, not to the state, not to nation, not to any man-made institution. The Christian owes his ultimate allegiance to God, and if any earthly institution conflicts with God's will it is your Christian duty to take a stand against it. You must never allow the transitory evanescent demands of man-made institutions to take precedence over the eternal demands of the Almighty God. (11/04/1956)

    First, there is need for strong, aggressive leadership from the federal government. So far, only the judicial branch of the government has evinced this quality of leadership. If the executive and legislative branches of the government were as concerned about the protection of our citizenship rights as the federal courts have been, then the transition from a segregated to an integrated society would be infinitely smoother. But we so often look to Washington in vain for this concern. In the midst of the tragic breakdown of law and order, the executive branch of the government is all too silent and apathetic. In the midst of the desperate need for civil rights legislation, the legislative branch of the government is all too stagnant and hypocritical. (05/17/1957)

    Democracy is the greatest form of government to my mind that man has ever conceived, but the weakness is that we have never touched it. Isn’t it true that we have often taken necessities from the masses to give luxuries to the classes? Isn’t it true that we have often in our democracy trampled over individuals and races with the iron feet of oppression? Isn’t it true that through our Western powers we have perpetuated colonialism and imperialism? And all of these things must be taken under consideration as we look at Russia. We must face the fact that the rhythmic beat of the deep rumblings of discontent from Asia and Africa is at bottom a revolt against the imperialism and colonialism perpetuated by Western civilization all these many years. The success of communism in the world today is due to the failure of democracy to live up to the noble ideals and principles inherent in its system. (11/17/1957)

    You express a great deal of anxiety over our willingness to break laws. This is certainly a legitimate concern. Since we so diligently urge people to obey the Supreme Court's decision of 1954 outlawing segregation in the public schools, at first glance it may seem rather paradoxical for us consciously to break laws. One may well ask: "How can you advocate breaking some laws and obeying others?" The answer lies in the fact that there are two types of laws: just and unjust. I would be the first to advocate obeying just laws. One has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. I would agree with St. Augustine that "an unjust law is no law at all." (04/16/1963)

    It is a sad fact that because of comfort, complacency, a morbid fear of communism, and our proneness to adjust to injustice, the Western nations that initiated so much of the revolutionary spirit of the modern world have now become the arch antirevolutionaries. This has driven many to feel that only Marxism has a revolutionary spirit. Therefore, communism is a judgment against our failure to make democracy real and follow through on the revolutions that we initiated. Our only hope today lies in our ability to recapture the revolutionary spirit and go out into a sometimes hostile world declaring eternal hostility to poverty, racism, and militarism. With this powerful commitment we shall boldly challenge the status quo and unjust mores, and thereby speed the day when "every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill shall be made low, and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough places plain." (04/04/1967)

    When the Constitution was written, a strange formula to determine taxes and representation declared that the Negro was sixty percent of a person. Today another curious formula seems to declare he is fifty percent of a person. Of the good things in life, the Negro has approximately one half those of whites. Of the bad things of life, he has twice those of whites. Thus, half of all Negroes live in substandard housing. And Negroes have half the income of whites. When we turn to the negative experiences of life, the Negro has a double share: There are twice as many unemployed; the rate of infant mortality among Negroes is double that of whites; and there are twice as many Negroes dying in Vietnam as whites in proportion to their size in the population. (08/16/1967)

    In 1863 the Negro was told that he was free as a result of the Emancipation Proclamation being signed by Abraham Lincoln. But he was not given any land to make that freedom meaningful. It was something like keeping a person in prison for a number of years and suddenly discovering that that person is not guilty of the crime for which he was convicted. And you just go up to him and say, "Now you are free," but you don’t give him any bus fare to get to town. You don’t give him any money to get some clothes to put on his back or to get on his feet again in life. Every court of jurisprudence would rise up against this, and yet this is the very thing that our nation did to the black man. It simply said, "You’re free," and it left him there penniless, illiterate, not knowing what to do. And the irony of it all is that at the same time the nation failed to do anything for the black man, though an act of Congress was giving away millions of acres of land in the West and the Midwest. Which meant that it was willing to undergird its white peasants from Europe with an economic floor. (03/31/1968)

    当然,还有我最喜欢的一句:Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. (04/16/1963)

    关于华盛顿游行的另一个观点:

    It’s just like when you’ve got some coffee that’s too black, which means it’s too strong. What you do? You integrate it with cream; you make it weak. If you pour too much cream in, you won’t even know you ever had coffee. It used to be hot, it becomes cool. It used to be strong, it becomes weak. It used to wake you up, now it’ll put you to sleep. This is what they (民权领袖们) did with the march on Washington. They joined it. They didn’t integrate it; they infiltrated it. They joined it, became a part of it, took it over. And as they took it over, it lost its militancy. They ceased to be angry. They ceased to be hot. They ceased to be uncompromising. Why, it even ceased to be a march. It became a picnic, a circus. Nothing but a circus, with clowns and all. You had one right here in Detroit — I saw it on television — with clowns leading it, white clowns and black clowns. I know you don’t like what I’m saying, but I’m going to tell you anyway. ’Cause I can prove what I’m saying. If you think I’m telling you wrong, you bring me Martin Luther King and A. Philip Randolph and James Farmer and those other three, and see if they’ll deny it over a microphone.

    No, it was a sellout. It was a takeover. When James Baldwin came in from Paris, they wouldn’t let him talk, ’cause they couldn’t make him go by the script. Burt Lancaster read the speech that Baldwin was supposed to make; they wouldn’t let Baldwin get up there, ’cause they know Baldwin’s liable to say anything. They controlled it so tight — they told those Negroes what time to hit town, how to come, where to stop, what signs to carry, what song to sing, what speech they could make, and what speech they couldn’t make; and then told them to get out town by sundown. And everyone of those Toms (汤姆叔叔)was out of town by sundown. Now I know you don’t like my saying this. But I can back it up. It was a circus, a performance that beat anything Hollywood could ever do, the performance of the year. Reuther and those other three devils should get a Academy Award for the best actors ’cause they acted like they really loved Negroes and fooled a whole lot of Negroes. And the six Negro leaders should get an award too, for the best supporting cast. (Malcolm X on March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, 11/10/1963. Malcolm X的思想在人生最后一年发生重大变化,故决不能就上述摘录而归纳其对民权运动的看法,就像不能用金的一篇演说来总结金一样)

    再次强调:本文无意就马丁·路德·金本人或其1963年华盛顿游行的演说(还有所有其他演说)作任何结论或猜测,更没有试图贬低其演说中的任何信息。

     6 ) 走向黑人民主的一座里程碑

    I have a dream. ——Martin Luther King

    50多年前的美国,是一个种族主义横行、内有冲突外有战争的美国。在这个公平正义开始被国家机器践踏侮辱的时代,马丁·路德·金站了出来,用一次次的游行与演讲号召黑人兄弟姐妹们将民权的声音传遍四方。50年后的美国,一部讲述黑人抗争史中插曲被搬到荧幕上,以原名《赛尔玛》讲述着那些光荣斗争的岁月。

    电影开篇是金博士身在瑞典荣获诺贝尔和平奖,而后前往白宫接受总统接见。一切看起来已经走向和平的结局。但就在平静中,一个南方小镇再度点燃了黑人们心中的怒火。教堂中做礼拜开心归家的黑人女孩们被炸弹炸死,听到号召的博士再度离开可爱孩子与温柔妻子的身边,只身卷入一场争夺黑人选举权。

    而在阿拉巴马州的赛尔玛,这座美国黑人问题最严重的南方小城,在这里,他遇到了故事的反派——乔治华莱士。这个种族主义者的坚定捍卫者此刻坐在州府一把手的位上,十分愤怒的等待与金博士的对决。说实话,如有可能华莱士先生的政治人生一样能精彩到被搬上荧幕,但可惜此刻他只是个固执的成见者,一个凶狠的刽子手,一名决心同民权运动死斗到底的“志士”。

    于是金博士将自己的愤怒和同情用言语传达给了小镇黑人同胞,告诉占绝大多数的他们起来反对不让他们投票的专制。于是人们走向街头,用非暴力的行动寻求着权利。可华莱士哪会理会这些“暴民”?对付他们,一群凶神恶煞敲敲打打还会开枪的州警就够了。于是暴力威胁和污蔑丑化这群不听话的黑人成为掌权者们的灵丹妙药。给当事人打恐吓电话、袭击领头学生,百般阻挠游行者的日常生活,华莱士为了驱赶这群被他看来是得寸进尺目无礼法的黑老粗下尽了功夫,甚至找到了FBI把金博士曾经招妓之事录下来寄给金博士之妻。面对这些,妻子的大度与谅解让金明白,自己的奋斗不坚持到成功便毫无意义,自己也将成为平凡的抗争者。

    联合学生组织第一次游行时马丁和大家在桥上被州警追着敲打,不甘示弱的金号召全国同情心爆棚的白人来到小镇开始第二次游行结果获得了深夜一位白人牧师惨死街头的报复。回到小镇,马丁陷入深深的自责与怀疑中。马尔科姆X的暴力对抗是否有用?妻子对自己的怀疑与不信任感究竟如何解决?面对游行分歧的领导者们究竟如何协调?一长串的问题萦绕脑中让马丁头疼不已,面对狡猾的总统、固执的警长,马丁感到绝望。开车回家的路上,李用马丁自己的话解开了马丁自己的疑惑:“我们会最终取胜,我们一定会取胜,因为不会有其他结果”。是啊,面对已经走过半载的民权之路早已没有后退可言,无论如何进步总会到来,暴力的威胁不是害怕的理由。

    重鼓勇气的金再一次站了起来,黑人兄弟们在白人们复杂的眼光下从塞尔玛走向蒙哥马利议会大厦,马丁路德金发表了一场震撼人心的演讲。至此影片结束,可黑人维权和民主法治的美国梦之路还要继续走下去。但赛尔玛无疑成了里程碑,让被欺压的黑人从压抑和悲观中解脱出来,呼吸到了同属他们的自由和胜利气息。

     短评

    每年金球奥斯卡都有这种主旋律八股文电影入选,当然也拍得不错,但按部就班四平八稳的没什么特色。很多地方看得犯困。电影尽量煽情,马丁自己在上面讲得热血沸腾,唾沫横飞的,但我希望更多地通过电影细节呈现,而不是煽情那些freedom民主people之类的演讲口号,否则真是看得厌倦了。最后的歌曲Glor

    9分钟前
    • 葱油饼
    • 还行

    众星捧月... 政治任务很重,黑人演员们都是在呕心沥血的演啊... 林登·约翰逊对内的政绩不错,就是越战搞得很失败。这部片也顺便把他吹捧了一遍。4星

    13分钟前
    • bugz
    • 推荐

    3.5. vs Lincoln-2012 、Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom-2013,过程都是比较流水账的,阵容和结尾动人。

    15分钟前
    • vivi
    • 推荐

    恕我直言,跟豆瓣的“主旋律”——但凡涉及与强权作斗争及民权运动的题材(比如韩国民主运动、女权运动、同性恋平权运动、去年的《华盛顿邮报》)就普遍过誉的情形相比,本片不仅分数低于IMDb还被不少人污名化为“政治正确”,这背后隐含的,是某些国人对黑人族群莫名其妙又根深蒂固的偏见与歧视。

    18分钟前
    • 私享史
    • 推荐

    非常四平八稳,但对于塞尔玛游行细致而尽量克制的刻画仍有着极为动人的力量。虽说是主旋律政治正确,但比预期要好。

    20分钟前
    • mOco
    • 推荐

    有些人天生就是演讲型人格。追求自由,永不停歇。

    23分钟前
    • 倩婧箐菁靓
    • 推荐

    尽管全片对赛尔玛大游行的再现极其生动且感人,但仍然不能掩盖角色塑造的单薄乏力,为数不多的几个配乐场景的煽情用力过猛。三星半

    25分钟前
    • 舌在足矣
    • 还行

    很不错了呢

    28分钟前
    • 一颗栗子
    • 推荐

    挺真实的

    32分钟前
    • 已注销
    • 推荐

    history professor 说 lyndon johnson 其实是 pro-civil rights

    33分钟前
    • Shuyang
    • 推荐

    在美国的电影院的观影结束后 我经历了人生中全体观众为一部电影掌声雷动 我是个愚昧的观众 不关心所谓的政治正确奥斯卡脸谱化 我只知道五十年后的今天 我可以和白人黑人共同在同一个舒适的电影院看到这部电影 这就是金博士和当时所有有良知的美国人的胜利

    34分钟前
    • 克里斯托空
    • 推荐

    这种叫做正确,不叫政治正确

    35分钟前
    • The 星星
    • 推荐

    马丁路德金坚持的是黑人和白人之间的和平,他也不讨厌白人,而本片充斥着敌对,把白人都刻画成恶,我觉得这是不对的。加上,这整部电影,从表演到配乐等等都是如此的平庸,不过大卫·奥伊罗的MLK演的不错,演讲戏是唯一的看点。

    39分钟前
    • TWY
    • 还行

    重现65年马丁路德金的“塞尔玛游行”,几十英里的路,真的由他们的鲜血铺成... 虽然为了突出King的伟人特质,其他的政客都被或多或少地脸谱化了(尤其总统林顿约翰逊),但看见那么多真实的人在为了自己的宪法权利不惜流血牺牲,实在感动!如果说这也是“主旋律”,那我愿意看更多这种的

    44分钟前
    • 米粒
    • 推荐

    出得太是时候了

    48分钟前
    • lusinthesky
    • 力荐

    又一曲只会抬头45度角仰望伟人的脸谱化主旋律赞歌

    51分钟前
    • Bill
    • 还行

    喜欢它的摄影和配乐 主人公精彩的演绎使得主旋律更加深入人心 更有震慑力和感染力

    53分钟前
    • 不侠与
    • 推荐

    每一次游行都描绘得非常安静,却透露出决心之大的壮烈。82岁的老头看着如何叫人不心酸。King的演讲爆发着力量,配上黑人的音乐,足够的冲击。

    54分钟前
    • 半城风月
    • 推荐

    拍得中规中矩,适合用来了解历史参照当下。“If anyone had a right to believe that this democracy did not work, and could not work, it was those Americans. Our ancestors. They were on the receiving end of a democracy that had fallen short all their lives. And yet, instead of giving up, they joined together and said somehow, some way, we are going to make this work.”

    58分钟前
    • Helicopter
    • 推荐

    在电影院里直接Déjà vu了,实在是太套路化的民权片啊,恍恍惚惚就像看过一样。 其实美国现在的种族问题也没改观啊,看弗格森骚乱的起因,和60年代有差吗?(烂番茄98%的“政治正确”真让人反感...)

    1小时前
    • 同志亦凡人中文站
    • 还行

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