原作曾在2011年5月至2015年3月在《月刊少年MAGAJIN》上连载,美日码单行本全11卷累计发行部数超过400万册的人气作品,美日码曾获得了第37届讲谈社漫画奖大奖。2014年漫画被改编成电视动画,讲述因母亲的去世而开始无法弹钢琴的天才钢琴少年有马公生遇见了任性奔放的小提琴手宫园薰,钢琴与母亲的回忆涌现,同时宫园薰身上的秘密也让二人的青春生活发生了变化。
原作曾在2011年5月至2015年3月在《月刊少年MAGAJIN》上连载,美日码单行本全11卷累计发行部数超过400万册的人气作品,美日码曾获得了第37届讲谈社漫画奖大奖。2014年漫画被改编成电视动画,讲述因母亲的去世而开始无法弹钢琴的天才钢琴少年有马公生遇见了任性奔放的小提琴手宫园薰,钢琴与母亲的回忆涌现,同时宫园薰身上的秘密也让二人的青春生活发生了变化。
回复 :A great spanish cult movie!!This is one of the most astonishing films ever made. It has some scenes that it should be in the history of cinema. Like the filming by Fernando Fernan Gomez of the militias using a big roll of paper to win a positions. Or the begging of the film based on real events. The birth of the director inside the carp where the first cinematographer was showing "the train arriving to the station". Being shoot in really simple way it's amazing the proper use of the audiovisual language. The late Guillermo Cabrera Infante showed this film in a Canadian film festival in Spanish without subtitles when the projection finish the audience didn't move and they ask for seen the film again. The effect of this film in the audience is unbelievable. None a single person that has seen this rare Spanish movie could forget it. Except the main actor Fernando Fernan Gomez who never remember work on it.
回复 :骨灰盒推销员小康(李康生)结束心力交瘁的一日后,悄悄潜入一幢公寓里的一间房,没想这间房里,还会潜入一个会是其欲望(投射)对象的地摊小贩(陈昭荣)。房子的暂时主人是一个售楼小姐(杨贵媚),她和小康性向虽然有异,却同样是没有爱情(情感)温暖心灵的人。小康和地摊小贩一开始时时提防(售楼小姐和彼此),待他们认识了解到各自的生活后,提防心理消除,却也没有自此成为朋友(懦弱的小康也鼓不起勇气示爱)。售楼小姐和地摊小贩发生过几次性关系,清楚地明白彼此都是为了满足身体的长久饥渴,爱情(感情)并没有什么万岁之处,身体上的快感可以暂时满足,精神上的安慰却无法获得(即使有,也是短暂如烟花)。
回复 :An alarmingly disproportionate number of Black women are failed every year by the U.S. maternal health system. Shamony Gibson and Amber Rose Isaac were vibrant, excited mothers-to-be whose deaths due to childbirth complications were preventable. Now, their partners and families are determined to sound a rallying cry around this chilling yet largely ignored crisis.Directors Paula Eiselt and Tonya Lewis Lee follow Gibson’s and Isaac’s bereaved partners, Omari Maynard and Bruce McIntyre, as they fight for justice and build communities of support, bonding especially with other surviving Black fathers. Their tragic, individual experiences are punctuated with condemning historical context, showing that gynecology has a long-standing history of exploiting and neglecting Black women in America. In the arresting words of mother-to-be Felicia Ellis, “A Black woman having a baby is like a Black man at a traffic stop with the police.” She emphasizes that paying attention is paramount. Aftershock brings an unsettling reality to the forefront while uplifting the families, activists, and birth workers who are striving to bring institutional change and legislative reform. These mothers will not be forgotten.