《大城无小事——城市真英雄2021》是继《巡逻现场实录2018》《大城无小事——派出所的故事2019》之后,又一档全景式警务侦查纪录片。作为东方卫视的警务纪录片三部曲之一,这一季节目将视线从基层派出所事务转向了打击犯罪,集中聚焦申城的刑事、经济类案件。“城市真英雄”节目组将蹲点驻守上海市各刑侦, 经侦队伍,深入刑事科学、反侵财、反诈、便衣、重案、组毒等侦 查队伍,全程跟拍破案过程。观众可以通过镜头随民警奔赴抓捕 嫌犯的第一现场,深临其境感受紧张氛围,还原惊险抓捕一刻。
2019年11月,园子温担任导演的国民英雄漫画《筋肉人》的真人版《MUSCLEMAN》正在进行企划制作。但是,就在制作发表的前一天,制作组却遇到了麻烦。与此同时,在健身房努力训练的真荣田乡敦接到了《MUSCLEMAN》的制片人兼饰演罗宾假面的绫野刚的联络,希望他能在电影中出演战争人。乡敦对电影的出演委托感到高兴,不过,这个真人化有被隐藏的过去。乡敦和饰演米特的玉城缇娜一起开始调查与《筋肉人》真人化有关的不可思议的现象。@哦撸马
“间谍生物”又来了! 这一次,间谍相机带着当今最尖端的拍摄技术,前往海洋深处,迎接它们迄今为止最激动人心的挑战,探索地球上最神奇且最具活力的环境之一,海洋。 在全新纪录片《海洋间谍》中,观众能见到有史以来最大的“间谍生物”:间谍鲸,以及间谍龙虾、间谍鲱鱼和间谍河豚等…… 从缤纷美丽的珊瑚礁,到岩石海岸的尽头,新一代携带着摄像机的“间谍生物”将深入那些以前从未到过的地方,揭示非凡的海洋生物令人惊讶的隐秘生活,展现前所未见的动物行为与复杂关系。
《征服 14 座高峰:凡事皆可能》透过尼玛尔·普贾(“尼姆斯”)的视角,探索了尼泊尔与高海拔登山的不解之缘,尼玛尔·普贾是一位无所畏惧、热爱玩乐的尼泊尔登山者,他正在执行一项他称之为“可能性计划”的任务:在 7 个月内登顶世界上 14 座海拔 8000 米的山峰,而此前的最短纪录是 7 年。他与一群技术娴熟的夏尔巴人一起穿越了珠穆朗玛峰、乔戈里峰和其他标志性山峰,经历了极端天气、生死抉择,以及家中母亲病倒的变故。《征服 14 座高峰:凡事皆可能》是一个关于勇气、毅力和挑战人类耐力极限的惊险故事。托奎尔·琼斯担任编剧、导演和制片人。金国威和伊丽莎白·柴·瓦沙瑞莉共同担任监制。该片由 Noah Media Group 和 Little Monster Films 联合制作。
探讨千年之交日本恐怖电影的起源,这些电影以复仇鬼魂通过现代科技显现为主题,背景则是都市的疏离与社会的衰败。
Despite the minimal news coverage, sexual harassment and gender inequality against women are no less prevalent in science than they are in pop culture and corporate America.
这部近一个小时的纪录片拍于1995年,是拍完《红》因病休养的阶段。 基耶斯洛夫斯基不大喜欢被采访,他在1995年接受维日比茨基访问,整理出这部纪录片,而导演、录音等人皆是他之前的合作伙伴,使得访问更容易深入。
对于老牌泰米尔超级巨星拉金尼坎斯,铁杆粉丝对他不是简单的个人崇拜,而是一种坚定的宗教信仰。
《绝境求生》是一部表现中国企业和资本市场真实故事的纪录片,影片通过对不同当事人的采访,讲述了地处中国西北戈壁一家企业和一群职工深陷绝境后的命运之变。影片人物交织叠加,情节起伏跌宕,呈现了一个复杂多元的社会剖面,剖析了一场在中国转型时代下的生存撞击。
Future of Food In the past year, we have seen food riots on three continents, food inflation has rocketed and experts predict that by 2050, if things don't change, we will see mass starvation across the world. This film sees George Alagiah travel the world in search of solutions to the growing global food crisis. From the two women working to make their Yorkshire market town self-sufficient to the academic who claims it could be better for the environment to ship in lamb from New Zealand, George Alagiah meets the people who believe they know how we should feed the world as demand doubles by the middle of the century. 【India】 George joins a Masai chief among the skeletons of hundreds of cattle he has lost to climate change and the English farmer who tells him why food production in the UK is also hit. He spends a day eating with a family in Cuba to find out how a future oil shock could lead to dramatic adjustments to diets. He visits the breadbasket of India to meet the farmer who now struggles to irrigate his land as water tables drop, and finds out why obesity is spiralling out of control in Mexico. Back in Britain, George investigates what is wrong with people's diets, and discovers that the UK imports an average of 3000 litres of water per capita every day. He talks to top nutritionist Susan Jebb, DEFRA minister Hilary Benn and Nobel laureate Rajendra Pachauri to uncover what the future holds for our food. 【Senegal】 George heads out to India to discover how a changing diet in the developing world is putting pressure on the world's limited food resources. He finds out how using crops to produce fuel is impacting on food supplies across the continents. George then meets a farmer in Kent, who is struggling to sell his fruit at a profit, and a British farmer in Kenya who is shipping out tonnes of vegetables for our supermarket shelves. He also examines why so many people are still dying of hunger after decades of food aid. Back in the UK, George challenges the decision-makers with the facts he has uncovered - from Oxfam head of research Duncan Green to Sainsbury's boss Justin King. He finds out why British beef may offer a model for future meat production and how our appetite for fish is stripping the world's seas bare. 【Cuba】 In the final episode George Alagiah heads out to Havana to find out how they are growing half of their fruit and vegetables right in the heart of the city, investigates the 'land-grabs' trend - where rich countries lease or buy up the land used by poor farmers in Africa - and meets the Indian agriculturalists who have almost trebled their yields over the course of a decade. George finds out how we in this country are using cutting-edge science to extend the seasons recycle our food waste and even grow lettuce in fish tanks to guarantee the food on our plates. He hears the arguments about genetically modified food and examines even more futuristic schemes to get the food on to our plates.
In an intensely personal and often surprising film for BBC Two, Depression And Me, Alastair Campbell explores if radical new treatments can stop his depression. Campbell is best known for his role as Tony Blair’s formidable and often contentious spin doctor but, away from the public eye, he has been dogged by crippling bouts of depression for most of his life. Some days, just getting out of bed is too hard. Therapy and anti-depressant medication is helping him keep his head above water - but is that really the best he can hope for? Alastair Campbell says: “I’ve been on antidepressants for years and years and none of them can stop it. I want to understand my depression and find out if modern science has any better ways of treating it. I’m hoping there’s something out there that can help me lead a happier life. “I feel we are nearing a tipping point in the battle to demolish the stigma and taboo surrounding mental illness and TV is a very good medium for bringing these issues right out into the open. I have never regretted being open about my own issues but an important part of this film is also seeing my depression through the eyes of members of my family, especially my partner Fiona. I was also keen to get out there and find out what kind of progress was being made on the scientific and research front. There is a lot going on. My worry is that we are winning the battle for better awareness but losing the battle for the services we need. "I was very pleased with the reaction to the film in Sheffield [at Doc/Fest]. One film alone cannot change the world but there is finally the focus on these issues that we need and hopefully one day we will have services to match.”