After that, I will interview them again every seven years to get to know their recent situation and latest mentality. By 20 12, this documentary had been filmed in the eighth season ("56up"), and the protagonists were all 56 years old.
This documentary is the longest work I have ever seen. The first season was in the 1960s, directed by paul almond and assisted by michael apted. Today, in 20 18, Paul died, and Michael changed from a young boy to a famous director with gray hair and took over the filming of the documentary "Seven Years of Life".
Limited by space, I don't want to discuss the long-term influence of birth and class differences on life, and I don't want to argue meaningless about which is better or worse in life. After all, I haven't fully contacted the society, and the changes in the environment have left a deep impression on me. What impressed me most was the passage of time, visible growth and aging.
First of all, I have to admit that I haven't finished reading this series (of course, I haven't finished reading this series). I should have seen the season from "7up" to "35up" in one breath, and the passage of nearly 30 years in the image.
I watched it when I was a freshman, and I watched it all weekend in one breath. From tender and lovely at the age of 7, to youthful and lively at the age of 14, to entering the society at the age of 2 1, to the appearance at the age of 28, and then to getting married and having children at the age of 35. I look at other people's stories, but it seems that I was destroyed by the knife that killed the pig. My heart is like holding a stone, which makes me feel uncomfortable.
So I had to stop and plan to wait and see. I didn't expect to graduate from my senior year after half a year. What was hidden in this book a few years later was my whole college career and the time interval between two documentaries.
I have a lot to say but I can't say it, so forget it. I can only recommend you to read this book "Seven Years of Life", hoping it will be beneficial to your future planning.
Who Are We? Where did it come from? Where will it go? These questions are closely related to our survival, but no one can give an answer that everyone believes in.
Director Ron Fricke spent 14 months traveling to 24 countries, and director Ron Fricke used the lens to show us the most magnificent and gorgeous scenery that nature can have-from ancient times to the present, from apes to humans, from uninhabited deserts to shocking religious activities, from the touch brought by the vast world to the happiness given by simple smiling faces of babies.
All the pictures in this film are of symbolic or religious nature and are closely related to human beings. He may want us to find all the beautiful things that happen around us all the time, which we don't realize.
The film is 96 minutes long and was made in 1992. There is no line explanation in the whole process, only the subtitles of place names and mysterious background music are accompanied.
This documentary has a sense of sacredness from the perspective of religion, belief and human events. Maybe you don't believe in religion, but you have to admit that religion is an important part of human history.
This documentary is somewhat similar to another film about nature and animals, Earth: A Magical Day, which tells the events that happened 24 hours a day according to time, but the former is about all kinds of animals, while A Day of Floating Life is a day edited from different segments of people's lives in various countries and nationalities around the world.
The film is managed by famous directors ridley scott and Tony Sugert, and YouTube, the world's largest video sharing website, invites netizens all over the world to record their life trivia with cameras on July 24th, 20 10 and answer some simple questions.
Nearly 4500 hours of videos from 190 countries and regions show the daily life of people all over the world on the same day. Everyone in the film has different contents: in addition to targeting themselves, some people record other people's interesting lives; There are both complete small events and headless and tailless fragments; Some people live an ordinary life, while others just catch up with the lively and extraordinary large-scale activities.
During the day, some people are born, some people get married, some people die, and some people just live a normal life that is no different from ordinary people. How was your day?
This documentary is very interesting. It combines recording, animation, drama, science fiction and other elements. From the perspective of an elderly archivist, Peter Postlethwaite (Peter Postlethwaite peter postlethwaite), this paper tells us the sadness and regret of this old man who lives in a ruined future world and looks at the video materials 20 15 years ago.
"Now all the beautiful waterfalls are actually the evil consequences accumulated by human beings 20 15 years ago."
This sci-fi documentary (yes, it can also be sci-fi) describing the fatal disaster or even destruction caused by global warming is built according to the prediction of mainstream science.
All the film production funds are raised by donations, which has sounded a profound alarm for us and envisaged such a doomsday future-"human beings had the opportunity to save themselves, but they did not do so."
And borrow the post-apocalyptic human perspective to ask us such a question, "Don't you ever care about the dying earth?"
Everyone has a story that can shake people's hearts.
Yann Arthus-Bertrand, a famous French photographer, spent three years visiting 60 countries around the world and asked 2020 people of different colors, races and genders to tell their stories in front of the camera. The stories of Ukrainian freedom fighters, farmers in Mali and American death row prisoners have been compiled into a documentary "Man".
In the documentary, the interviewee only tells his story in detail in a pure black background, without clever editing or even repeating the identity of the interviewee. But everyone's own experience alone is enough to shock the audience.
I hate those seemingly sad things, such as "the world is not worth it" and "I was born a human being, and I'm sorry", but they are actually words people use to make fun of. Because I think existence itself is a solemn greatness. Those who are fortunate enough to enjoy the quiet years are not qualified to casually treat death as a joke topic.