INDIA is an exotic mixing pot of iconic wildlife, secret locations, epic landscapes and colourful beauty. This iconic and landmark series is a celebration of India’s most spectacular locations and incredible wildlife. From the "home of snow" in the epic Himalayan Mountains we travel to the mighty River Ganges, lifeblood of India as it carves out its dramatic path across the subcontinent. We also reveal Thar, the “Great Indian Desert”. Its territory includes much of Rajasthan (“the desert state”), where the bleakness of its environment is juxtaposed with the striking colours of traditional Rajasthani dress and amazing wildlife spectacles Also featured is India's lost world of the north east, home to head hunting tribes, tiger infested forests, mountains not yet climbed, rivers waiting to be fished. And finally to the Western Ghats. This biodiversity hotspot is home to epic waterfalls, hill tribes, hidden caves and stunning wildlife.. Part 1: Thar Desert Sacred Sands Covering 200,000 square kilometres, India’s Thar Desert is one of the harshest places on the planet. Baking heat, desiccating winds and near permanent drought has earned this unforgiving land another name – “the region of death.” As we explore India’s great desert we unveil its hidden secrets, and ultimately shed light as to how the Thar has become the most crowded desert in the world. Part 2: Ganges River of Life The Ganges is the longest river in India. It flows from the glaciers of the world’s highest mountains, the Himalayas, to the largest bay in the world, the Bay of Bengal. Human pollution threatens to overwhelm the river, but somehow wild animals survive. Hindus believe that Ganges water has the power to purify, and it seems there is some scientific evidence to support this conviction: microscopic organisms actually eat bacteria that could cause disease, and uniquely high level levels of oxygen break down organic waste faster than any in other river. This self-cleaning property of Ganges water helps support some of the last remaining true wilderness in the world – the Sundarbans swamp. Here, India’s largest population of wild tigers have never learned to fear man, making them very dangerous neighbours. Part 3: Himalayas Surviving the Summits Outside Asia, no peak reaches above 7000 metres, but along the Himalayan range, over 100 mountains exceed this height by at least 200 metres, making it the tallest mountain range on the planet.As Earth meets the sky along this hostile terrain, powerful winds, sub-zero temperatures, and a lack of oxygen oppose virtually all forms of life, but remarkably, this immense geological feature somehow supports one of the largest and most diverse collections of creatures on the planet – including man. While the Himalayas rugged highlands offer little direct refuge to humans, in the shadow below, over a billion people in India rely on the mountains for survival. Part 4: Western Ghats Monsoon Mountains Stretching for a thousand miles along India’s west coast, the Western Ghats are a spine of mountains that lay claim to being one of the most bio-diverse places in the world. Mountains rear their heads into the path of monsoon clouds, intercepting rains and making the western slopes some of the wettest places in India. Tropical rainforests thrives, and explode with life. The Western Ghats hold the key to life across southern India. Rainwater harvested by the mountains washes down to the coast, feeding Kerala’s backwaters; huge rivers flow east across India’s dry interior, a lifeline to animals and people. Part 5: Indias Lost World Imagine a lost world – head hunting tribes, tiger-infested forests, unclimbed mountains, pristine rivers. Known as the Seven Sisters of India, there are seven relatively unexplored and isolated Indian states. What mysteries lie within this secretive land and why have they remained untouched for so long? North-east India is an anthropological paradise; there is no other place on Earth with so many different ethnic groups. The forest slopes are filled with mysterious tribes whose lives are dictated by the ebb and flow of the rain and the seasonal fruits of the forest. In these largely unexplored and isolated areas people scarcely known to the Western world continue a way of life steeped in ancient rituals.
30几岁就得这种病 有点尴尬
泪崩了…太难了…前面有多体面后面就有多伤心…和父亲撑了这么久…终于女儿和丈夫回来了…一下子放心许多…看的时候总是想到自己要是患了这种病该怎么办…唉……其实挺难过剧中父亲打她那下的…看来久病床前不仅无孝子…时间长了谁都控制不了情绪,理解但悲伤而现实
充其量算是软血腥/恐怖的文艺片,很棒!片中老女巫的形象可看作是早期时代的女性牺牲品,代表着所有因迫害而心生绝望的女人。其中,女巫需要饮血续命的设定也很有意思,可以看作是一种女性在自我意识觉醒初期时与自然本我的一种决裂,片中老女巫‘教导’女主杀生嗜血其实就可看作是一种由外界塑造的‘女性独立意识’对女性自身的支配,这种力量促使她们‘和男人一样’,以另一种形式剥削自然/剥削自我,是一种对本性和自然的冷漠。而女主脑海中不断闪现的老女巫身影可看作是某种对‘女性末路’的感知。此外,片中的女主也有着不同于现实生活中女人们的地方,这在于她有机会在男人的躯壳里感受女人、思考女人,这是处于男人视阈中的女人的‘另一面’,而在经历种种之后,女主依旧选择做回了女人,也是值得我们思考的…
絮絮低语的旁白,古朴美丽的山村风景,失焦放大的镜头,令人迷糊的哲学文艺范来了。
女性不断生成、水一样流动的生命体验。代际相传又困守自然,一条河,奔腾向前却滞留原地。
形而上的一部文艺片。以超然视角俯视众生万物,感叹自然的美且惋惜人类的脆弱与丑陋。层层虚假外皮之下却能孕育出纯真的情感。自私的基因驱动并灼烧着虚无的灵魂,爱恨交加的郁闷中结出绯红人生的果实。虽然该片主线是在描写一位女巫的嫉妒与落寞。然而中间大段大段的意识流内心独白却是在展现人生的周而复始与世代传承。坦白说,都有这么强大的能力了还成天想着结婚生娃。。。这套么是怎样的一种情操哇。。。变身后居然还能正常成长的,这挂也忒bug惹。。。
比恐怖电影多很多,想起«Ida»和«Pieces of a Woman»。’A journey to learn life, death, gender, love and motherhood in a harsh but beautiful world, to understand one’s existence, place in whole universe’。
借别人的皮囊和人生,学会掉眼泪、做农活和爱。也许人生是虚无,但爱从来不作假。
更像一部和自己的对话,寻找自己生命的真相,不是其他任何人告诉你的,而是你真正感动的价值所在,与内心消极抗争
太阳升起,我的身体像一条河流,流淌了许久,却仍在原地。这是一个灼烧着、痛苦着的世界,但或许还能感受温情的火光。
可以是任何人,但也从不是任何人,没有归属的孤独,但还是选择去感受,活下去
看了是谜,看完也是谜。电影讲述哑女逃避女巫『她自己也是』,多次替换身体,并想让自己生活?
玛利亚玛利亚,可怜的玛利亚,因为得不到而嫉妒,而无法理解爱。
成为男人,成为女人,成为狗,成为世间万物。感受生命,感受爱,找到那一个足以对抗命运的勇气。出乎意料,血腥又文艺。
差点因为“恐怖”和“超自然”的标签错过了,其实还挺温情的,无奈也是真的无奈
三点五,这么好的题材,怎么会呈现得如此平庸……一直说可以当万物,没想到生命体验还真就窝在这个人类村庄里了,老女巫的塑造也没起到导演想要的作用,而视听语言整个一MV水平,开头十分钟就很多冗余,配乐更是令人不解,你哪怕随便整点巴尔干民歌呢
有别于马利克的诗气 电影搭配了一个新颖又猎奇的方式讲述了感受生命与万物的内核故事
节奏很慢,但却不觉得囧长,她是女巫,但那些人比女巫还危险
前面节奏稍慢了,后半段开始明晰起来。爱战胜孤独。
暂停了三次缓解我的心碎 徐玄振演技太有代入感以至于我哭了半部电影 好绝望啊真的
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