作者KaoriKuraki (我爱你,但是那与你无关)
看板KaoriAshuan
标题[殒落] Angelopoulos dies in accident
时间Wed Jan 25 14:03:45 2012
http://ppt.cc/tj8B
Greek filmmaker Theo Angelopoulos dies in car accident
Jan 25, 2012
Athens, Greece: Theo Angelopoulos, an award-winning Greek filmmaker known for
his slow and dreamlike style as a director, was killed in a road accident
Tuesday while working on his latest movie. He was 76.
Police and hospital officials said Angelopoulos suffered serious head
injuries and died at a hospital after being hit by a motorcycle while walking
across a road close to a movie set near Athens’ main port of Piraeus.
The driver, also injured and hospitalised, was later identified as an
off-duty police officer.
The accident occurred while Angelopoulos was working on his upcoming movie
The Other Sea. Angelopoulos had won numerous awards for his movies, mostly at
European film festivals, during a career that spanned more than 40 years.
In 1995, he won the Grand Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival for Ulysses’
Gaze, starring American actor Harvey Keitel.
Greek film director Theo Angelopoulos looks on during a news conference for
the movie I Skoni Tou Chronou - The Dust Of Time at the Berlinale film
festival in Berlin, Germany in this 2009 file photo.AP
Three years later, he won the main prize at the festival, the Palme d’Or,
for Eternity and a Day, starring Swiss actor Bruno Ganz.
Born in Athens in 1935, Angelopoulos lived through the Nazi occupation of
Greece during World War II and the ensuing 1946-49 Greek Civil War —
recurring themes in his early films.
He studied law at Athens University, but eventually lost interest and moved
to France where he studied film at the Institute of Advanced Cinematographic
Studies in Paris.
After returning to Greece, he worked as a film critic for a small, left-wing
newspaper and started to make films during the 1967-74 dictatorship.
Described as mild-mannered but uncompromising, Angelopoulos’ often sad and
slow-moving films mostly dealt with issues from Greece’s turbulent recent
history: war, exile, immigration and political division.
It was not until 1984 with Voyage to Kythera that his scripts were written in
collaboration with others.
Angelopoulos mostly attracted art-house audiences, using established actors
including Marcello Mastroianni and Jeanne Moreau in two of his most widely
acclaimed films, The Bee Keeper and The Suspended Stride of the Stalk.
Bleak landscapes, the slow editing pace, and the long spells without any
dialogue, common in Angelopoulos movies did not always please filmgoers or
critics.
The American film critic Roger Ebert wrote of Ulysses’ Gaze: “There is a
temptation to give ‘Ulysses’ Gaze the benefit of the doubt: To praise it
for its vision, its daring, its courage, its great length. But I would not be
able to look you in the eye if you went to see it, because how could I deny
that it is a numbing bore?”
In a rare television interview last year, Angelopoulos said his next film was
to be about Greece’s major financial crisis, and he publicly called on rival
political parties to work together to try and ease the hardships facing many
Greeks.
“I remain a leftist in total confusion,” he told state-run NET television,
in the interview given several months before the country’s two main rival
political parties agreed to form a coalition government.
“This is an emergency situation. We must realise this. So we must all
examine what can be done — the left and right. This is my plea,” he said.
“I am afraid of what tomorrow will bring.”
AP
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※ 转录者: clearff (218.163.147.162), 时间: 01/27/2012 11:02:47
※ 编辑: clearff 来自: 218.163.147.162 (01/27 11:03)