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《你真棒插曲快来救救我在线观看免》电影全集在线观看完整版 - 在线影院


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    你真棒插曲快来救救我在线观看免

    • 纪录片 
    • 克里斯汀·史 张政 
    • Voice 1 (male "professional announcer" type): This n eighborho od(1) was made for the wretched d ignity of th e petty bourg eoisie, for re spectable occup ations and int ellectual tourism. The sedentary population of the upper fl oors was shelte red from the in fluences of th e street. This neighborhood has remained th e same. It was the s trange setting of our s tory, where a systemati c question ing of all t he dive rsions and works of a society, a total critique of its idea of happine ss, was expr essed in a cts. The se people also scorned &am p;quot;s ubjective profundity&am p;quot;. Th ey were interested in noth ing but an ade quate an d concrete expr ession of th emselves. Voice 2 (Debord, monotone): Human being s are not f ully co nscious of t heir real li fe - us ually g roping in the dar k; overw helmed by t he consequ ences of th eir acts; at e very moment gr oups and in dividua ls find themselve s confronted w ith res ults th ey have not wished. Voice 1: They said that obli vion was their ruling passio n. They wanted to reinvent everythin g each day; to become the masters an d possessors o f their own lives. Jus t as one does not judge a ma n accor ding to t he conc eption he has of himse lf, one canno t judge such p eriods o f transi tion according to their o wn consciousnes s; on th e contrar y, one mus t explain the consci ousness th rough the contradic tions of m aterial l ife, t hrough the con flict between s ocial condi tions and t he forces of social pro duction. The progress achieved in th e domination of nature was not ye t matched by a corres ponding libe ration of everyday li fe. Yout h passed away a mong the vario us contr ols of resi gnation. Our ca mera has capture d for you a f ew aspects of a provisi onal microsoc iety. Th e knowl edge of empir ical fa cts remains a bstract and su perficia l as long as it is not concretiz ed by its integra tion into the whole &am p;quot;” which alone per mits the s uperses sion of p artial and abs tract proble ms so as to arrive at their concrete essence, an d implicitly at their m eaning. This group was on the ma rgins of the e conomy. It ten ded toward a role of pur e consum ption, and first of al l the free cons umption of its time . It thus f ound itself di rectly e ngaged in qualitati ve vari ations of everyday life but dep rived of an y means to intervene in them. The group ranged over a very small area. The same times brough t them back to the same pla ces. No one went to bed ea rly. Di scussion on the meaning of all this continued. .. Voice 2: &qu ot;Our l ife is a journe y &quo t;” In the winte r and the ni ght. &a mp;quot;” We seek our pas sage...& amp;quot ;� Voice 1 : The abando ned literatu re neverthe less ex erted a del aying ac tion on new affective for mulations. Voic e 2: There wa s the fatigue and the cold of the morning in this much-tra versed labyrin th, like an en igma that w e had to r esolve. I t was a looki ng-glass r eality through which we had to discove r the potent ial richness o f reali ty. On the b ank of the river eve ning beg an once ag ain; an d caresses; and the impor tance of a world with out importanc e. Just as the eyes h ave a blur red vision of m any thin gs and can see only one c learly, so t he will ca n strive onl y incomplet ely toward d iverse ob jects and can complete ly love only one at a time. Voice 3 (y oung gir l): No on e count ed on the fu ture. I t would neve r be possib le to be tog ether late r, or an ywhere el se. The re would never be a g reater freedom. Vo ice 1: The refusal of t ime and of grow ing old automat ically limite d encounter s in this narro w, conting ent zone, wh ere what was lacking was fe lt as irrepara ble. The extreme preca riousness of the means of getting by without working was at the ro ot of t his imp atience which made exc esses ne cessary and breaks definitive. Vo ice 2: O ne never r eally contest s an orga nization of exist ence witho ut contesti ng all of that o rganization ' s forms o f language . Voice 1: Whe n freedom i s practice d in a clo sed circle, it fades into a dream, beco mes a mere re presenta tion of i tself. The ambiance of play is by nature unst able. At any mo ment &q uot;ordinary li fe" � can preva il once aga in. The geograp hical l imitation o f play is eve n more striki ng than its te mporal limitati on. Any game ta kes place withi n the con tours of its spatia l domain. Aro und the neighborh ood, arou nd its fleeting and th reatened immobi lity, st retched a half-know n city where people met only b y chance, losing their wa y forever. Th e girls w ho found their way the re, because they wer e legally unde r the control of their families unt il the age of eighteen, were o ften recapt ured by the defenders of t hat detes table institu tion. Th ey were g enerally c onfined under the gua rd of tho se creatu res who among all the bad products o f a bad soci ety are the most ugly an d repugn ant: nuns. What usually makes do cumentaries s o easy to under stand is the arbitrary limitatio n of their su bject matter. T hey describ e the atomizati on of socia l function s and the isolat ion of the ir products. O ne can, in contra st, envisag e the entire co mplexity of a moment whic h is not resolved into a work, a moment w hose movement indissolubly c ontains facts and values an d whose mean ing doe s not yet a ppear. The sub ject matter of the doc umentary would then be thi s confused t otality. Voi ce 2: Th e era had arrived at a level of knowled ge and te chnical mean s that made p ossible, and increasing ly necessary, a direct cons truction of all aspects o f a libera ted affective and practic al existence. The appe arance o f these su perior means o f actio n, sti ll unused because of the dela ys in the pro ject of liquid ating the commodity eco nomy, had al ready con demned aesth etic acti vity, whose am bitions and po wers were both out dated. The de cay of art and of all th e values of former mores had formed our soci ological ba ckgroun d. The ru ling class& amp;#39;s m onopoly over the inst ruments we needed to contro l in order to realize t he collect ive art of our time ha d exclud ed us f rom a cult ural pro duction of ficially de voted to il lustrating and repeating the past. A n art film on thi s generatio n can only be a film on its absenc e of re al creations. Everyone unthinki ngly followed the paths lea rned onc e and fo r all, t o their work and their home, t o their predic table future. F or them duty h ad already bec ome a habit, a nd habi t a duty. They did not s ee the defi ciency of their city. T hey thought t he deficiency o f their life was natura l. We wanted t o break out of this conditioni ng, in qu est of another use of the urban l andscape, in ques t of new passio ns. The atmo sphere of a few pla ces gave us intimations of the futur e powers of an architecture it would be nece ssary to creat e to be the support a nd frame work for l ess mediocre games. We could expe ct nothing of anyt hing we had no t ourselv es altered. T he urban envi ronment proc laimed the orde rs and tastes of the rul ing society just as viole ntly as the n ewspapers . It is m an who m akes th e unity of the world, but man has extend ed himsel f everywher e. People can see not hing around them tha t is not t heir ow n image; ever ything speaks to them of themselves. Their v ery lands cape is alive. There were obs tacles everywh ere. There was a cohe sion in the obst acles of all ty pes. They maintaine d the coher ent rei gn of pov erty. Everyth ing being c onnected, it was necess ary to ch ange ev erything b y a unit ary stru ggle, or nothi ng. It w as necessary t o link up with the m asses, but we were sur rounded by sleep. Voice 3: The dictatorsh ip of the prol etariat is a desperate struggle, bloody and b loodless, violent an d peaceful, military and economic, e ducational and ad ministra tive, agains t the for ces and tra ditions o f the ol d world. Voice 1: In thi s country it is once again t he men o f order who have rebe lled. They have rei nforced their power. T hey have be en able to aggravat e the grotesque ness of the ruli ng condi tions acco rding to their will. They have embelli shed thei r system with t he fune real cerem onies of the pas t. Voice 2: Ye ars, like a single instant prolonge d to this poin t, come to a n end. Voice 1 : What was di rectly li ved reappea rs frozen in the dist ance, fit into the tas tes and illusions of an era , carried awa y with it. Voice 2: The ap pearance of events t hat we have no t made, that others have made ag ainst us, now obli ges us to be aware of t he passage o f time, its re sults, the tra nsformati on of ou r own de sires into eve nts. What diffe rentiates t he past from th e present is prec isely i ts out-of- reach obj ectivity; the re is no more should-be; being is so c onsumed that it ha s ceased to exist. T he details are already lo st in the du st of time. Wh o was af raid of life, afraid of the night, afraid of bei ng take n, afraid of being kep t? Voice 3: Wha t should be ab olished co ntinues, an d we continue t o wear away w ith it. We are engulfed. W e are separat ed. The year s pass and w e haven& #39;t chan ged anythin g. Voice 2: Once ag ain morning in the sa me streets. Onc e again t he fatig ue of s o many simil arly passed nig hts. It i s a walk t hat has l asted a long t ime. Voic e 1: Really hard to dri nk more . Voice 2: Of course one might m ake a fil m of it. But even if s uch a film succeeds i n being as fundamentall y disconnec ted and unsati sfying a s the re ality it deals with, it will never be more than a re-creat ion &q uot;” po or and false like this botched trave ling shot. Voic e 3: There a re now people who prid e themselves on being authors of films, as ot hers were auth ors of novel s. They a re even more backwar d than the novelists because they are unawa re of the dec omposit ion and exhaus tion of indiv idual e xpression in our time, ignor ant of the end of the arts of pa ssivity. They are praise d for t heir sincerity since they dramatize , with mo re perso nal depth, the conventions of which thei r life consist s. There is t alk of the liberati on of th e cinema. But what doe s it matter t o us if on e more a rt is liber ated throu gh which Tom, Di ck or H arry can joyously expre ss their slavis h sentim ents? The only interest ing venture is the libe ration o f everyday life, not only in the perspecti ves of history but for us and right a way. This en tails t he witheri ng away of alienated forms of co mmunication . The cine ma, too, has to be destroy ed. Voice 2: In the f inal analy sis, st ars are cr eated b y the n eed we have for th em, and no t by their ta lent or lack of t alent or e ven by the film industry or advertisi ng. Miserabl e need, dismal, anonymous lif e that wou ld like to expa nd itse lf to the dimensions of cinema life. The imaginary life on the screen is t he produc t of this real need. The star is the projec tion of this need. The images of the adver tisements durin g the interm issions are more suited than any others for evoking an interm ission of l ife. To really describe this er a it woul d no doubt be necessary to sho w many other th ings. B ut what w ould be the point? Better to grasp the totalit y of wh at has bee n done and w hat remai ns to be d one than to add more ruins to the old world o f the spectacl e and o f memorie s. 1. This fi lm, which evok es the le ttrist experi ences at the origin of th e situationis t movement , opens with shots of the Paris dis trict frequ ented b y the lettrists in the early 1950s.

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