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    国产精品扒开腿做爽爽爽日本无码

    • 剧情片 
    • 陈豪 小修 村上幸平 
    • Voice 1 (male "professional announcer" type): This nei ghborho od(1) was mad e for the wretch ed dignity of the petty b ourgeoi sie, for respectabl e occupati ons and i ntellec tual to urism. The s edentar y population of the upper flo ors was sheltered f rom the influen ces of the street. This ne ighborhood has remaine d the same. It was the strange setti ng of our story , where a s ystematic ques tioning of al l the diver sions a nd works of a soc iety, a tot al critiqu e of it s idea of happi ness, was expr essed in acts. These people also s corned &quo t;subje ctive profund ity&qu ot;. They were interes ted in nothing but an adeq uate and concrete expr ession of the mselves. Voice 2 (Debor d, mono tone): Hu man beings are not fully c onscious of their re al life - usua lly gropi ng in the da rk; overwhelme d by the conseq uences of their acts ; at ever y momen t groups and in dividuals fin d themse lves co nfronted with r esults they have not wished . Voice 1 : They said th at oblivion was their ru ling pa ssion. The y wante d to re invent e verything each day; to becom e the mas ters and possessors of their own lives. J ust as one d oes not judge a man accordin g to the conc eption he has of himself, one cannot judge such pe riods o f trans ition according to their own consciou sness; on the c ontrary , one mus t explain the co nsciousn ess throug h the contradi ctions of material life, throu gh the conflict between s ocial cond itions and th e forces of social pr oduction. Th e progr ess ach ieved in the dominatio n of natu re was not yet matche d by a co rresponding liberatio n of everyday l ife. Yout h passed away among the var ious controls of resig nation. Our camera ha s captured fo r you a few asp ects of a pr ovisional microsociety . The know ledge of e mpirical facts remains abstract and s uperficial as l ong as it i s not concret ized by its i ntegratio n into the whol e "” w hich alone pe rmits the su persessio n of pa rtial and abstract problems so as to ar rive at their concrete essence, a nd implici tly at th eir meaning. This gr oup was on the margins of the econ omy. It tended toward a role of pure consump tion, and first of all the free con sumption of its time. It t hus fou nd itself direc tly engag ed in quali tative variat ions of eve ryday li fe but depr ived of any means to in tervene in them. The group rang ed over a ver y small ar ea. The same times bro ught them bac k to the same places. N o one went to bed ear ly. Discussion on the meanin g of all this conti nued... Voice 2: &q uot;Our life i s a journe y "” In the winter an d the night. & amp;quot;” We seek our pas sage...&amp ;quot;� Voi ce 1: The abandone d literatur e neverthele ss exerted a delaying ac tion on new af fective for mulations. V oice 2: There w as the fati gue and the cold of the morning in this mu ch-traversed l abyrinth, like an enigma t hat we had t o resolve. It was a looking -glass reali ty through w hich we had to discover the potential richness of reality. On the bank of the ri ver evenin g began once ag ain; an d caresses; and the impor tance of a w orld witho ut impor tance. Jus t as the eyes have a blurred vision of m any things and can se e only one clearl y, so the will can st rive only in completely toward diverse objects and can comple tely love onl y one at a time. Vo ice 3 (yo ung girl): No one counte d on the fut ure. It would never be p ossible to be toget her late r, or an ywhere el se. There would never b e a gre ater freedom. Voice 1: T he refus al of time an d of growing o ld autom atically limited encounters in this n arrow, con tingent zone, where wha t was lack ing was fe lt as irr eparable . The extrem e precariousne ss of the means of getting by without worki ng was at the root of this i mpatience which made excesses necessary and break s definitive. V oice 2: One never really con tests an organizatio n of existence without con testing all of that organ ization&# 39;s forms of lang uage. Voic e 1: When freedom is p racticed in a clos ed circle, it fades into a dream, beco mes a mer e represent ation of it self. The ambiance of p lay is by na ture uns table. At any moment &quot ;ordinary life&q uot;� can prevail o nce aga in. The geog raphical limitat ion of play i s even more st riking than it s temporal l imitation. A ny game takes place w ithin th e contours of its spatia l domain. Around th e neighborhoo d, around its fleeting a nd threatened immobility, stretche d a half-known city wh ere people met only by chance, losing their way forev er. The girls who found the ir way there, b ecause they were l egally u nder the control of the ir families until the a ge of eighte en, we re often recap tured by the def enders of that detestab le instituti on. They wer e generall y confi ned under t he guard of th ose creatures who among all the bad pr oducts of a bad soc iety are the mos t ugly and rep ugnant: nuns . What usual ly makes docume ntaries so easy to understa nd is the arbitrary l imitation o f their subj ect matter . They describe the atom ization of social f unctions and th e isolation of their produ cts. One can, in c ontrast, envisage the entire co mplexit y of a moment which is not resolved i nto a wor k, a m oment who se move ment indissolub ly cont ains facts a nd values and w hose meani ng does n ot yet a ppear. The subj ect matter o f the documen tary would th en be this c onfused totality. Voic e 2: The er a had arrive d at a lev el of knowledge and technica l means that ma de poss ible, and incre asingly nec essary, a direct constru ction of all aspect s of a lib erated aff ective and pr actical existence . The appea rance of these superior means of action, still unused because of the delays in t he project of liquidati ng the com modity e conomy, had alr eady condem ned aesthetic activity, whose ambi tions an d powers were both out dated. The d ecay of art a nd of all the valu es of former mores had formed our socio logical ba ckground. T he ruling class 's mono poly over th e instruments we neede d to control in orde r to realize t he colle ctive a rt of our ti me had exclud ed us fr om a cultural p roduction of ficially devot ed to illustrat ing and re peating the past. A n art fil m on this ge neration can onl y be a film on its absenc e of re al crea tions. Everyo ne unthinkingly followed the paths learned once a nd for all , to their work and the ir home, t o their predict able futur e. For the m duty had already be come a hab it, and habit a duty. The y did not see t he deficiency of their city. They th ought the deficienc y of their li fe was na tural. We w anted to break out of this c onditioning , in qu est of anoth er use of the u rban lands cape, in qu est of new pas sions. T he atmosph ere of a few places gave us intima tions of the future powers of an arc hitecture it w ould be necess ary to create to be the support and framework for less medi ocre game s. We cou ld expect nothing of anyt hing we had not ourselves altered. T he urban enviro nment proclaim ed the or ders and t astes of the ruling socie ty just as viol ently as the newspapers . It is ma n who mak es the unity of the world, but man has ex tended himself everywh ere. People can see nothing ar ound them that is not th eir own image; everything sp eaks to th em of thems elves. T heir very landscape is alive. Th ere were obstac les everywher e. There wa s a cohe sion in the ob stacles of all types. T hey maintai ned the coh erent reign of poverty. E verything bei ng connected, it was necessa ry to chan ge everyth ing by a un itary s truggle, or nothing . It was necessar y to link up with the masses , but we were surroun ded by sleep. Voice 3: The d ictatorship of the proletariat is a desperate struggle, blo ody and bloodle ss, violent and peace ful, milita ry and economic , educat ional and admin istrative, again st the f orces and tra ditions of th e old world. V oice 1: In th is country it is once aga in the m en of order wh o have rebelle d. They have r einforced their power. They have be en able to aggrava te the grotesq ueness of the ruling con ditions according to t heir will . They have emb ellishe d their sy stem with t he fune real cer emonies of the p ast. Voice 2 : Years , like a single instant prolonged t o this po int, come to an en d. Voice 1: Wh at was dir ectly lived re appears froze n in the di stance, fit in to the ta stes and illus ions of an era, carri ed away wi th it. Voic e 2: The a ppearance of events that w e have no t made, that o thers hav e made agains t us, now obliges us to be aware of the passage of time, its re sults, the trans formation of our own desires into e vents. What dif ferentiat es the pa st from the present is precis ely its out-o f-reach o bjectivity; there is no more should-be ; being is s o consumed that it has ceased to exist. Th e detai ls are already l ost in the dust of t ime. Who was af raid of life, afraid of the night, af raid of being t aken, afraid o f being kep t? Voice 3: What should be abolishe d continues, and we co ntinue to wear away wit h it. We are en gulfed. We are separa ted. The ye ars pass an d we hav en' t changed any thing. Voi ce 2: Once ag ain morning in the same streets . Once again the fatigue o f so many si milarly passed ni ghts. It is a walk th at has lasted a long tim e. Voice 1 : Really hard to drink more. Vo ice 2: Of cours e one migh t make a film of it. But even if such a fil m succeeds in being as fundamenta lly disconnecte d and unsatisfy ing as the reality it deals wit h, it will ne ver be more than a re -creation & quot;” poor and fal se like this bo tched travelin g shot. Voice 3: There are now p eople who prid e themse lves on b eing auth ors of films, as others wer e authors of n ovels. The y are even more backward than the no velists bec ause they ar e unawar e of the de composition a nd exhaustion of individu al expres sion in our ti me, igno rant of the end o f the arts of passivity. T hey are praised for their si ncerity si nce they dram atize, wit h more persona l depth, the conven tions of whic h their life cons ists. The re is talk of the liberation of t he cine ma. But what do es it matter to us if one m ore art is libera ted through w hich To m, Dick or Harry c an joyous ly express the ir slavis h sentiments? T he only inter esting vent ure is the liberation o f every day life, not onl y in the per spectives of history bu t for us and r ight awa y. This entails the w ithering away of alienat ed forms of communi cation. The cinema, too, h as to be de stroyed . Voice 2 : In the f inal analysis, stars a re create d by the need we h ave for them, and not by their ta lent or lack o f talent or even by the film i ndustry or a dvertis ing. Miserable need, dismal, anonym ous life that w ould like to expand itself to the dimensions of cinema life. The imaginary l ife on t he screen is t he product of this real need. T he star is the project ion of this ne ed. The imag es of t he advert isements during th e intermission s are mo re suit ed than any other s for evoking an intermi ssion o f life. To re ally descri be this era i t would no d oubt be nec essary to show many other things. B ut what w ould be the point? Be tter to g rasp the totality of what has been done and wha t remai ns to be done than to add more ru ins to th e old w orld of the spectac le and of mem ories. 1. This film, which evokes t he lettrist ex perienc es at the or igin of the situatio nist mo vement, op ens with sho ts of t he Paris dis trict frequente d by the le ttrists in t he earl y 1950s.

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