小孩与鹰

剧情片英国1969

主演:大卫·布拉德利,Freddie Fletcher,琳内·佩里,科林·韦兰,布莱恩·格洛弗,Bob Bowes,Bernard Atha,Laurence Bould,Joey Kaye,Ted Carroll,Robert Naylor,Agnes Drumgoon,George Speed,Desmond Guthrie,Zoe Sunderland,比尔迪安,杜吉·布朗,Julie Goodyear

导演:肯·洛奇

播放地址

 剧照

小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.1小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.2小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.3小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.4小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.5小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.6小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.13小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.14小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.15小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.16小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.17小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.18小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.19小孩与鹰 剧照 NO.20
更新时间:2024-04-11 05:44

详细剧情

  英国男孩比利•卡士柏(David Bradley 饰)生活在一个破碎的工人阶级家庭里,父亲离家出走,除母亲和哥哥外,比利也要打工贴补家用。在学校里比利捣蛋或者逃课看漫画书,从中找寻这个年龄应有的快乐。  某天他在农场高墙上发现一个鹰巢,于是从书店偷回训练猎鹰的教材,按照书本所写养了一只名为凯斯的小鹰……  本片荣获1971年BAFTA电影奖最佳导演、最佳电影提名、最佳男配角、最佳新人、最佳编剧以及1970年卡洛维法利国际电影节水晶球奖。

 长篇影评

 1 ) [Repost] Comments on <Kes>

What gives a touch of realness to Kes (1969) is that the actors used, including the extras were all locals coming from Barnsley, a town in South Yorkshire, England. Not to mention, the film was also shot on location. Kes was actually a 1968 novel A Kestrel for a Knave, turned to a film. The author of the book is also Barnsley-born, Barry Hines. Both the film and the book captured the reality of the mining areas of Yorkshire at that time where the people in the area lived a tough life, a result of wage restraints and pit closures because of the blooming of oil and gas industry. The children, too, lived a rough childhood. Most of them were already thinking of having a job or like Billy Casper, whose already working as a paperboy, distributing newspapers from houses to houses. Kes has the elements of Italian Neorealism with that of using non-professional actors and having a sad ending. The film is about Billy Capser, finding solace with a kestrel which he named Kes, in the midst of lack of hope. In this analysis, the mise-en-scène, cinematography, and sound will be discussed.

Despite the film used non-professional actors, the acting came out naturally and effortlessly. This natural acting may come from the fact that the actors were the locals themselves and were conversing in Yorkshire accent which would be the most they were comfortable with. The overall colour tone of this film is rather cold and the lighting is of hard light. This sets off the right mood for the film since it portrays the tough life of the Barnsley locals where the people were always mad, harsh, lacking of love and hope. Billy Casper had a broken family with him constantly fighting with his older half-brother, Jud, having no father figure, and his mother who just didn’t expect much from her children and spoke of them in a regretful manner to her friends. The teachers at school never cared about the students and neither had hope in them. The students were always deemed as worthless and rubbish especially by the headmaster.

This kind of toxic environment is hostile to children because they would grow up believing they are rubbish and in the end, they become one. But to spark hope amidst the darkness, Billy’s English teacher did show a sign of change and for the betterment of Barnsley’s children. Billy was never the kind to show interest in class and always gets himself into trouble but since he took a kestrel from a nest on a farm, ever since then he for once, love what he’s doing. One day, Billy did an impromptu talk about his kestrel and received positive feedback from the class and for the first time in the film, Billy felt appreciated. All of this thanks to his English teacher who encouraged and supported him to talk about the kestrel. The English teacher believed in Billy and didn’t just perceived him as a delinquent and thus, resulting in Billy having confidence in himself; what can be taken as a lesson.

The cinematography in this film consists of wide shots of Barnsley town with the starting scene of Billy running down the town establishing the condition of the town as dirty and worn-out. Chris Menges managed to beautifully portray the essence of Yorkshire by giving a perfect balance by showing wide shots of the sombre look of the mining industry and also the greener part of Yorkshire where Billy trained Kes. Other than that, The emotions of the actors were successfully delivered with medium close ups and shallow depth of field. This kind of shots are excellent to create an intimate moment with the characters as we delve deep down in their emotions. Plus, the harsh shadows surrounding the faces of the characters and also the surroundings further accentuate the whole essence of the film. Despite of Kes being a sad movie, the film still has the beauty of its own with the aesthetic value of the colour tone and also the camera work, which just adds a beautiful melancholic and nostalgic feeling and it will stay with you for as long as it will.

The film is shot in Barnsley and contains broad local dialects and even the actors themselves conversing in thick Yorkshire accent. There are some scenes in the DVD version that were dubbed with fewer dialect. In a 2013 interview, Ken Loach, the director of this film, said that during a screening by United Artists, the American executives that were watching it said that they could understand Hungarian better than the dialect in the film. This shows that Americans and the English people are not the same though they speak in English but because of the dialects. Kes’ audio compared to nowadays movie is that the audio feels distant from the characters as it’s not attached but that could be explained by the dubbing or it could just be the differences in audio recording technology.

Kes is a film that beautifully encapsulates melancholy with ending scene that shows Kes the kestrel died in the hands of revenge of Billy’s step brother, Jud. The death of Kes is felt dearly because Billy was at his happiest and most liberated that he would ever feel when he trained Kes and let him flew across the vast green field. When Kes died, it somehow showed that Billy would have to return back to the depressing reality of the abusive world. Though the sound is not as grand as today’s film, it didn’t budge the fact that Kes is indeed a work of art and is beautiful in its own way supported by the smooth narrative and stunning cinematography that enhances the whole mood of the film.

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For me Ken Loach's "Kes" bookended the decade of British "kitchen-sink" social-realism dramas starting with "Saturday Night And Sunday Morning" in 1960, although two more different films you probably couldn't find.

We see the whole film from the perspective of the young Yorkshire school boy Billy, played by the waif-like David Bradley, who, although in the film he's meant to be fifteen or sixteen looks more like eleven or twelve. Bullied at school for having a single parent, his mum, a much older, overbearing, miner half-brother and probably just being so small and quiet, his outlook on life changes when he happens upon a kestrels' nest in an old building nearby.

He then takes one of the birds from the nest, steals a book on falconry from a second-hand bookstore and sets to building a relationship with the bird while training it. It's clear that the lad has no other meaningful relationship in his life, certainly not with his mum or his loutish brother and no close school friends either. At one point he tells an interested school-friend that the bird can never be tamed and it's clear that we are meant to relate his own individuality to that of the bird.

So, he finds consolation with the kestrel, but when he effectively gambles on his brother's gambling habit, the sibling wreaks a terrible revenge which makes for a suitably downbeat finish.

Loach literally drops the viewer in and out of these episodes in Billy's life as scenes seem to end if not abruptly, certainly sometimes scruffily, adding to the natural realism for which he's obviously striving. That said, a few of the scenes such as the super-competitive exercise master's football-match, seem somewhat contrived and the dialogue is sometimes unnatural, although I must admit I had no problem at all picking up the strong local dialect used throughout, but then again I am Scottish and we know a thing or two about heavy accents.

Young Bradley is remarkable throughout, unlike so many other child actors he's just completely natural, unlike a few of his classmates it has to be said. The school teachers are a bit of a motley bunch, but weren't they always I guess, some of them never happier it seems than when dishing out corporal punishment, others, like the Colin Welland example here, genuinely sympathetic, fair-minded and interested in their pupils' educational and emotional welfare.

I'm roughly of the generation depicted here and so could relate to much of the content, even if some of the characters seem exaggerated and the closest I ever came to bringing up a kestrel was probably fending off a stray seagull or two but even in making this the point of difference for the film, Loach still convinces the viewer that this series of minor episodes in a young lad's life really could have happened.

Nostalgic but unsentimental, the dirty streets and industrial landscapes beautifully shot as if it was a Hovis advert, Loach here reminds us to sometimes remove our rose-tinted glasses when recalling our cherished childhoods.

by Lejink

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Saturday Night Sunday Morning with small raptors? Because the main character's older brother Jud (Fletcher) is Arthur Seaton in a picture nine years later. Unlike Reisz's 1960 kitchen sink realism, Loach's focuses on the younger brother of the estate's cock of the walk, Casper (Bradley). He's a diffident and odd and self-reliant tween loner who muddles through with a paper job while enduring the manifold indignities of school. Petty theft and hustle occupy his narrowing horizons. And then life takes a turn for the interesting when he spies some kestrels in a field. He steals a book on falconry when he can't get a library card quick enough, and teaches himself how to keep a falcon whom he names Kes. This labor of love gives Casper a dreamy sense of dignity and worth that helps propel him through the casual sadism of school mates and masters alike. There is one sympathetic teacher who by chance draws Casper out one day in class about Kes, and a vista of understanding glimmers for a time. The teacher visits Casper and his bird and sees the boy fully, as no one else has done, for the first time. Naturally things can't go especially well thereafter because, well, this is kitchen sink realism and its the north and nowt ever goes well. Loach implies without insisting too much on the connections between Kes and Casper, two wild things that with nurture can be trained but probably not finally tamed. The metaphor doesn't work fully, but we are probably not too far off in seeing Casper's future as little less grim than that of poor Kes in the end. David Bradley in the lead role is all kinds of wonderful. That performance helps carry the freight of Loach's seething indictment of English education—had that performance been less nuanced or robust, the film could easily have been crushed by the weight of Loach's anger at the outrages of the 11-plus.

by ocontrarian

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A beautiful film with a brilliant central performance, stunning photography, poignant themes of freedom and flight, ambition, and the shattering of dreams. It paints a revealing picture of contemporary working-class living in the North of England and tells a story that is both sobering and magical. Kes is surely one of the most influential British films of all time.

by Uberunit

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laceratingly true, beautiful

Easily can relate to this kind of bullying environment. I am one of the Keses of this sad, genocidal world...Still traumatized decades later and only now coming to understand it somehow. Nick Cave’s song sez it best— People just ain’t no good. Trust no one but yourself... hard to grasp for us, much abused empaths, but trye.

by giuseppe2

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One of those understated films involving a troubled child who bonds with an animal (in this case, a kestrel). Meditative and touching but also very slow so make sure you're in the mood before diving in.

by hellaguru

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Ken Loach's enduring coming-of-age film Kes follows a fifteen year old boy living in Northern England who struggles to find his place in the world. At home, Billy Casper is treated abusively by his ruthless older brother Jud, and with indifference by his mostly absent mother. At school, he is tormented by stern instructors and a gym teacher who gets on him for his lack of athletic ability. Billy finds that little in the way of school or work are capable of holding his attention, and his sole interest comes in training a kestrel which he discovers one day while wandering on a farm. Although he rejects referring to the bird as his pet, Billy develops a strong bond with it and nicknames her "Kes." He uses instructions from a book on falconry (which he takes from a book store because his mother is not available to authorize a library card) and in learning to train Kes, he discovers a sense of passion, duty, and responsibility that all the adults in his life fail to instill. At the heart of Kes is the central performance by David Bradley, which is surely one of the most convincing and impressive performances by a child actor set to film. The movie itself succeeds in the rare task of being emotionally moving without relying much on sentimentality. Kes is often a brutal film to witness, particularly the sequence in which Billy and three of his classmates are subjected to corporal punishment in their principal's office after he suspects them of smoking. He then takes the opportunity to rail against the entirety of the younger generation, and his speech displays one of the film's primary themes: that at the root of limited social, economic, and educational opportunities for young people is the failure of their role models to effectively nourish them. Harshness, in the world of Kes is commonplace, but it results in the lack of ambition for children who are then pushed into miserable mining jobs en masse as a result. With the subject matter it works with, it easily could have been either too brutal or too sentimental to be effective, but the precise and realistic direction of Ken Loach, along with a charming score by John Cameron, make Kes a unique and memorable film experience.

by adressbook

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My first Loach film is his hallmark - it's more of a slice of time than a coherent narrative though. The gritty textures of late sixties Barnsley, the greasy quiffs and chips. The fuckin' Dandy. The smoky factoryscapes and grubby green fields. The stuttering stumbling incoherent locals and the lurchingly uneven tone of it all is massively charming. It is reality awkwardly stuffed into a film and all messily busting out at the edges. Like - why was there a running score on the screen for the football game?! Why did it end so suddenly?! I genuinely can't wait to watch it again. My Loachquest begins here.

by CrazyFoxMachine

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More of a movie about a boy bonding with a bird he randomly finds while dealing with bullies at school. Everyone's accents are very heavy and can be tough to understand, but the movie is sort of minimalistic. To be honest, I saw the point the movie was trying to make, but it just felt a bit too vague and it focuses way too much on certain things while not focusing enough on others. Some characters barely get any screen time and there really isn't much plot. I've just seen many better movies with a similar idea to this done better.

by jweber14

 2 ) 铭刻悲伤

影片主要讲述了英国男孩比利•卡士柏(David Bradley 饰)生活在一个破碎的工人阶级家庭里,父亲离家出走,除母亲和哥哥外,比利也要打工贴补家用。在学校里比利捣蛋或者逃课看漫画书,从中找寻这个年龄应有的快乐。 某天他在农场高墙上发现一个鹰巢,于是从书店偷回训练猎鹰的教材,按照书本所写养了一只名为凯斯的小鹰……

《小孩与鹰》就是这么一部朴实无华的电影,却被公认为60年代以来最重要的英国电影。肯•洛奇用他坦诚的镜头语言超越了与绝望相伴的痛苦,却铭刻了那整整一代人的悲伤。

本片荣获1971年BAFTA电影奖最佳导演、最佳电影提名、最佳男配角、最佳新人、最佳编剧以及1970年卡洛维法利国际电影节水晶球奖。

 3 ) 卡士柏这类男孩

8.7 好扎实沉稳的现实主义作品,摄影极讲究,那大片的绿草地小树林拍得好绿意盎然,自然清新,叙事克制平静,没有大起大落,然而对于普通人来说可能是一个大闷片,没啥新奇的,新奇的只是这个男孩养了只鹰(而他养鹰过程也一略带过),是万千的我们在童年没有做过的事,我们养蚕养鸟养鱼(但基本养死,也没任何愧疚感),乃至养猫养狗(又喂过几过食?但死了会伤心),这些都是很稀松平常,但确实没有养过鹰🦅,别说养,抓都抓不到。

卡士柏这样的男孩在我们的童年总会遇到,他们手脚不干净但又不是特贪婪狡猾,一偷就是大数目。他们调皮捣蛋但又软弱好欺,他们软弱好欺但又很嘴倔性强。这样的男孩他们的家庭一般很穷或有问题,不是离异家庭就是父母也很怂,或者是被村民嫌恶的。而且他们在家里也经常被指来喝去,所以到了学校也改变不了这样的命运。尽管他们常常逆来顺受,而内心却是倔强不服的。他们也很想改变,但他们知道无法改变。我脑海里就想到这样一个男孩,少年时一个小我两三岁的男孩,一般情况下我不会持强凌弱,但有次他偷我东西被我追了两条街并揍趴在地,夺回了我的东西后,我警告他再偷我的东西会揍得更惨。

像他们这样的男孩想获得尊重常常要等到成年后凭借自己的聪明机智和努力把荷包赚得满满的,并且要学会很多接人待物的风俗习惯,就是说要符合社会主流的价值观。那个被我追两条街的男孩话说也长大了,并且比我还高大了,前两年回老家在他家喝茶,看样子他混得还可以,在县城花了几十万买了套房。说真的,他的整个精神气质跟他小时候完全不一样,讲话很有底气,很大声,说话都是抬头与别人对视说,要知道他小时候跟卡士柏就完全一样。

当然,《小孩与🦅》并不只是简简单单讲一个小孩与鹰的故事,导演更多的是用纪实的手法去反映那个时代矿工(底层)阶级的贫困生活(生存状态),阶级差异你可以在学校从卡士柏与别人的打扮就看得出来,然后你会体验到导演对底层阶级的悲悯之心。如果你的父母做过矿工,或者是农民,你就能跟这个电影产生共鸣。而现在农村的留守儿童,无异于跟卡士柏一样的处境,想想就令人心酸,你很想改变,却发现改变不了什么,更别说那些留守儿童,他们凭借什么去改变?

所谓的自由和尊严,就是飞在天上的鹰,它们不可被驯服,而人们想要的驯服,就是借教育以工具在其他人身上套上绳子和枷锁,他们以为这样可以收获信任和爱。

 4 ) 少年

从男孩收养了鹰开始,就很清楚,这只鹰死路一条,因为像这样的小人物是不可以有心爱之物的,他们支配不了自己的命运。再看一看他所描绘的男孩身边的人,自身难保的母亲、愚蠢冷漠的哥哥、不懂教育的校长,唯有文学课的老师可以有一线希望成为他的引路人,从他的开明态度、教育方式都可以看出来,男孩与他之间的一席谈话也让人开始更多了解这个心不在焉、沉默寡言的孩子,男孩是机灵聪慧的,他其实很明白自己所处的环境。但是,冷静的Ken Loach并没有让这个指路人发挥一点作用,只说明了现实的无奈。也猜了猜男孩会不会哭,终是没有,Ken Loach冷静得让人发指。于是,男孩汗津津的头发、黑乎乎的双手、皱巴巴的表情就定格在了脑海里,与许多少年一起:《四百下》里的安东万、《放牛班》里的金嗓子、《小小逃亡者》里的弟弟...
(看完这部电影没多久,就在戛纳的甬道边找到了而Ken Loach的手印.)

 5 ) 身份的证明

动物文学之父西顿在《动物记:我眼中的野生动物》一书前言写到,“我希望有人可以找到像《圣经》中所强调的古老的道德观——我们和四条腿的动物是一家人。人类没有的东西,动物也没有;而动物没有的,人类在某种程度上也没有。”但打小我们受的东方式教育,是人在逻辑思维、情感表达等上高级于其它动物,对不同种类的动物,我们或恐惧总试图征服,或食用、穿戴满足私欲,或怜悯施予恩宠,只要能凸显我们的优越同时凌驾于同类,怎样对它们都是理所应当。乙之砒霜甲之熊掌,“低等动物”对某些弱势人群,却可能是活下去的支撑。

奉俊昊处女作[绑架门前狗]中,事业止步的大学讲师元俊及楼道管理员眼里,分别代表生活的反讽及美味食物的宠物狗,对它们的主人却是孤独或失落的慰藉;同样,[卡拉是条狗]里警察及老二朋友看来可丢可屠“不过是一条狗”的卡拉,对老二一家尤其他本人,已是家庭不可或缺的成员。但东方人的思维及情感,对人对物似乎一向暧昧,只在一定程度上坚持初衷,狗被猫或另一条狗取代,也能让两部电影中的成人寄托情感,感知已被生活剥离的七零八碎的活着的意义。可是对本片中生活在1970年代英国某沉闷工业小镇的自卑少年卡士伯来说,名为Kes的鹰对他却是辨识自己少年身份的唯一载体。

Kes成为卡士伯形影不离的朋友之前,导演用相当多的“记录”笔触描述这个脸上终日挂着与年龄不相称愁容的少年的生活轨迹。经济的不景气令小镇居民忧心未来自顾不暇,母亲眼里他正处于“少年不知愁滋味”阶段时常将他忽视,可能在他将一月送报纸的收入上交一刻,才会意识到在这个父亲缺席的家庭,他所作的贡献,多于不愿做矿工,却无力改变生活的大儿子祖德(他发泄对生活不满的方式,醉酒、赌马是小,最爱用言语辱骂、拳头殴打卡士伯)。而在学校,盼下课铃声快点敲响的焦急多过学生的老师,在以嘲讽警告口吻告知学生工作难找之余,只会借与他们年龄悬殊的孩子试图找回昔日的荣耀。常会做出老师看来可笑无比举动的他,屡屡成为漩涡的中心。他在某个周末午夜大骂过喝得烂醉带一身血污归来的祖德,夺门而出奔至农场,小心翼翼将Kes从半空的巢穴摘下,是因见识过鹰在空中的自由翱翔,再难忍受每日所过的仅是在重复屈辱的生活。训练、放飞Kes令他感受到某种不会被驯服的力量,将一个孩子本应有的天真与自信还原于他,这是他认为Kes独一无二,不同于之前所养的狐狸、喜鹊等野生动物的根本原因。

体育课上,被老师指定当守门员的卡士伯因无聊翻玩门架,并在被斥责时冲看客做鬼脸,对一般男孩只是玩性显露,于他却是因Kes才有的难得快乐(这里他展露在片中的唯一一次笑脸)。而在某堂英文写作课上,他更因为讲述发现、训练、放飞Kes的过程,赢得同窗甚至老师从未给予过的喝彩,并吸引老师其后于惊叹中亲见。说起第一次放飞Kes,因担心它会离自己而去,挣扎数日寝食难安,只凸显Kes对他的重要。设若故事发生在今日,这堂令他体会到自信滋味的英文课极可能是改写他人生的起点,并以他成为亲朋好友甚至小镇全体居民都觉得骄傲的小英雄作终,但在其时,却仅是一段偶然的插曲。何况他并未将Kes当作宠物来养(动物在西方也许享有诸多东方人难想象甚至认为不可思议的权益,但地球村村民养动物最常见心态应该类似,爱看它们在自己面前如何受宠若惊),仅想借暂时被自己操控的它飞翔时的风采,幻想自己能逃离不喜欢的学校、工作。可是Kes并不会被他之外的人看作是证明其少年身份的证据。

祖德要卡士伯代为买马,咨询过相关人士认定祖德欲押注的马不可能跑赢,他开心拿钱为自己及Kes买了吃食,不想令祖德错失一笔小钱惹下大祸,两人开始追逃游戏。正因知道Kes对卡士伯意味什么,遍地找不着他的祖德为发泄心中愤怒,才将黑手伸向Kes——此时的卡士伯,正心不在焉与可提供下矿挖煤工作给他的某机构官员交谈。随后他疯狂找寻Kes始终不见的绝望,拿着Kes的尸首质问祖德求助母亲自知无果而在片中的唯一一次伤心哭泣,只为两人平添生活的烦恼。这里没有家长借动物之死为孩子上认识死亡的第一课的温馨画面,只有祖德对他的一阵暴打和母亲的极不耐烦。

雷蒙德·卡佛的代表作《当我们谈论爱情时我们在谈论什么》中,有一段颇让人伤感的关于人类爱情的描述,“如果我们俩有谁出了事,另一个人会伤心一会儿,你们知道,但很快,活着的一方就会跑出去,再次恋爱,用不了多久就会另有新欢。所有这些,所有这些我们谈论的爱情,只不过是一种记忆罢了,甚至可能连记忆也不是。”这段话其实亦适用人与人或动物的友情,东西方皆准。被迫成人的卡士伯以后回忆Kes会否仅有模糊记忆观众只能想象,可以肯定的是,他面无表情埋葬的不仅是Kes的尸首,尚有始终模糊只昙花一现的少年身份。

 6 ) 男孩与老师的那段对话

老师:她飞起来的时候有一种神秘的力量。
男孩:鹰是最棒的飞行家。
老师:我不是指这个。她飞行着的时候,有一种奇异的感觉。
男孩:是因为安静的缘故吧?
老师:是的。
男孩:其他人也感觉到了。有个农夫说她跟猫头鹰一样,晚上它们吃老鼠,当它们扑食的时候,他觉得自己好害怕,因为它们悄无声息却致命。
老师:就像是在幽静的口袋中飞翔……你没意识到我们说话的声音很小吗?好像我们不敢大声说话一样。
男孩:是因为到感到不安。
老师:不,不是不安。是因为她的一种本能,一种尊严。
男孩:我知道。这就是她让我着迷的原因。我带鸟出去的时候有人说:“快看啊,这是比利•卡斯柏和他的宠物鹰。“我就大声喊:“她不是宠物。”或者有人说:“这鸟是不是驯过的?”驯过的!鹰是不能被驯服的,它们只不过是被人操纵而已。它们本性暴戾狂野,不怕任何人,不怕我,这就是最伟大的地方。
老师:很多人不会了解的。他们喜欢宠物受宠若惊的样子。
男孩:我才不管这些。我只想看着她飞翔。他们可以教鹦鹉说话,但鹦鹉跟她是不能比的。
老师:你说的很对,比利。
男孩:知道吗?我觉得她帮了我个大忙,让我照顾她。

 短评

感人深刻很有寓意的电影

7分钟前
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Hawks can't be tamed. They are manned. It's wild and it's fierce and it's not bothered by anybody. 自由的心魂, 野性的呼唤, 他们何其相似. t4c325b939(CC版)

12分钟前
  • Sophie
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5故事还没开始就这样突然结束了。。。这片子算干嘛呢?英国60年代小镇的少年生活?没有代表性啊

15分钟前
  • 无涯子抵制修音
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海报上写的那段应该就是此片的精神了,they broke his heart, but they couldn't break his spirit。除了最后的结局,全片都拍的很平淡,看得没有什么感觉。看imdb上评论,60年代长大的英国人很推崇此片,所以还是没有相似经历就不好体会。男孩演的很不错

18分钟前
  • 且歌且走
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总是一脸愁苦的男孩,惨淡童年里唯一灵性的存在就这样消失了。肯·洛奇的写实主义是棱角分明、一点煽情都不带的,这样的风格简直是冷暴力。

20分钟前
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偏向紀實的沉重風格,在2006年金馬影展讓當時飽受打工跟出路困擾的我昏昏欲睡。重新看這部電影,不再覺得比利課堂上敘述養鷹經驗的獨白是那樣冗長,反倒很訝異David Bradley唸起來那樣流暢。經過那堂課,原先矮小不起眼的他成為全班矚目的焦點,然而……全文:http://hou26.org/zeta/children03.htm#d

21分钟前
  • 侯二六
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看到自己少年时的影子。影帝级表演。

22分钟前
  • 起床,吃饭
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我想基耶是喜欢这种未经雕琢的自然真实效果吧,毕竟他舍弃纪录片也是因为拍摄对观察对象造成了影响从而造成了“不确定性”,比如“四百击”,能把确定性拍出不确定的真实效果,毫不做作;大概就是他觉得自己永远达不到的,这样的导演就是他羡慕不来的(也如同小津拍不出浮云和祇园姊妹)。

24分钟前
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肯·洛奇质朴而厚重的写实主义佳作,英国影史经典。苍郁的绿意渗透在每一格影像之中,与向往自由且无法被驯服的红隼一道倔强地对抗着工业区底层民众的精神贫乏与情感虚空。大量跟拍长镜头,驯鹰时的中远景段落镜头。拿孩子出气的可悲足球教练,顺便黑一把红魔。结尾埋鹰处理得极为克制冷静。(8.5/10)

26分钟前
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可以跟牯岭街两相对照的coming-of-age电影巅峰,弱者内部的生物链。当你们应当互相扶持时,你们却在用绝望扼死对方。“他们为什么专挑你欺负呢,Casper?因为你是个坏人吗?”

31分钟前
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底层少年的苦中作乐的生活,虽然最后结局已是我能猜到。小男孩清瘦的样子惹人怜爱。

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破破烂烂的服装,脏兮兮,父母不管,还有个混蛋哥哥,在学校里得到老师同学的嘲讽,老师都一个个像中国的那种傻逼。他长的那么瘦小,上班又上学的,穷人家的孩子明天有什么希望?唯一的慰藉小鹰,还被哥哥给杀死了。

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摄影,剧本,表演接近完美;冷清、泥泞、阴郁的工业小镇,少见蓝天,贫寒下层生活,叛逆的孩子,纯真、野性、自然的美,想起贫瘠破败的故乡,痛并快乐的孤独童年,林子里行走那一段,简直是我童年再现,这孩子太灵,但不装,不像演戏而像个人真实生活。英国矿工孩子苦涩生活,带着煤球味道,像《比利·埃略特》。

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扭曲的家庭关系,粗暴的学校教育,屠戮着他的童年。当他抽身于人类社会时,从与一只雏鹰的相处中获得了救赎。动物总是单纯的,令人充满敬意,远比人类可爱,他在鹰的身上看到了关于生活与理想的隐喻。然而故事还是以悲剧结尾,鹰死于他厌恶的哥哥之手。他埋葬了它的尸体,亦如埋葬了自己的童年。

43分钟前
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成长的故事

44分钟前
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童年时代,本因无虑。家暴欺凌,孤单叛逆。雏鹰相伴,欢乐嬉戏。驯鹰讲解,神采奕奕。老师鼓励,重燃活力。老哥暴戾,希望折翼。亲葬挚爱,童年远去。社会牢笼,将孩囚禁。

46分钟前
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2019-1-5重看;清冷色调一如严苛生存环境,「无人知晓」式的缺爱家庭,满嘴「一代不如一代」的教育方式,这个破旧衰败的工业小镇满目都是荒凉与暴力,鹰是仅存的亮光与慰藉。摄影极美,浓郁苍翠的树林里也才曾漾起小小珍贵梦想,长镜跟拍里奔跑的身影终究是孤独的。

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漆黑的矿井悄无声息的把青春吞没,冰冷的教室不容分说的把童年禁锢。湛蓝的天空下,梦想给孤独的灵魂插上翅膀,宁静的山岗上,现实把自由的肉身悄然埋葬。瘦弱的比利手捧着一抹幻灭的希望,滚烫的热泪执拗的流下少年的脸庞。他还不理解桀骜的可贵,就已经被迫臣服;他还不明白出发的意义,就已经开始流浪。肯洛奇一出手就是大招,用一个孩子的生活视角来折射整个英国社会当时的茫然与失落,批判与悲悯共存,是新现实主义电影的重要里程碑。在影片中,人与人之间的情感递进与沟通,不是其他儿童片中的人对人,或者人对物,而是人和人之间通过动物实现了情感上的链接,一石二鸟,既没有凸显出其他儿童片的温情气质,又不具备像其他动物类电影中的宠物视角,克制又真实,在同类型影片中别具一格。某种程度上来说,想拍好儿童片或者青春片,这部是必须看的。

54分钟前
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【B】看完八月再看这部,差的真不是一星半点啊。。。。小孩不纯真,他狡诈,爱撒谎,爱惹事,他跟他的周遭一样恶劣,希望才那么可贵。

56分钟前
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1、肯洛奇的现实主义影片(他的第二部长片),浓浓的狄更斯的味道,这个时候他还没有之后那么话痨。2、摄影极赞,跟拍尤其NB,焦点略有点软。3、工人阶级生活,社会问题,老左派,“我不要下矿井”,好悲凉。当然,肯大爷最好的片子还是95年的《以祖国之名》

58分钟前
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