『壹』 求一个全英文的介绍电影的ppt
最次的套模板的PPT也得5块一页,你这电影介绍少说也得20页吧,关键是你也没说要哪部电影的介绍啊,这完全没法弄的事情。
『贰』 要一篇英语PPT,是关于自己喜欢的电影的,谁能帮帮忙啊
我去年做过一个视频
就是一张一张的图片
加一些文字介绍,效果还不错,
要就hi我
『叁』 我急需一个介绍加勒比海盗系列电影的英文ppt 介绍演员 电影内容以及表达的思想字少图多 简单的就好
故事发生在传说中海盗最活跃的加勒比海(Caribbean Sea)。这片神秘的海域位于北美洲东南部,那里碧海蓝天,阳光明媚,海面水晶般清澈。17世纪的时候,这里更是欧洲大陆的商旅舰队到达美洲的必经之地,所以,当时的海盗活动非常猖獗,不仅攻击过...
『肆』 2012电影英文介绍ppt
Plot
Curtis Jackson (John Cusack ornaments) to the Yellowstone National Park vacation with children play, they found that had good memories of the lake has dried up, and this region has become a closed area. Yellowstone is full of doubts of his camp near the chance to know Charlie. Charlie told him the greatest in human history as the first outbreak of the sun, the earth's own balance system has collapsed, mankind will face unprecedented natural disasters. Charlie said that some countries have developed and built in the joint secret can avoid this disaster spacecraft. Jackson thought he was crazy, they laugh it off and walked away.
But the next day, disaster would happen. Strong earthquakes, volcanic eruptions to great home front became a familiar hell on earth. Elsewhere in the world, various natural disasters on an unprecedented scale outbreak. Jackson and many families survive as set foot on the road. Face of the global natural disasters do not know where he suddenly remembered Charlie mentioned the Ark and maps, and decided to search for Ark base chance of survival.
Ark in the search for and to base the process, Jackson has experienced a death in the face. Eventually they finally reached the ark base. However, the Ark has been completed the number of manufacturing is far from meeting the world heard the news coming from the affected people. Who is who remain have become a challenge to the entire human moral choice. The face of disaster, from different countries made the most important human choice: "All are equal, has an equal chance of survival!" Ark of the last people finally spent this global disaster, obtained to continue the reproctive and development of hope.
希望能帮到你
『伍』 急需,英语课,需要一份PPT,介绍一部英文电影,【包含图片,经典语句,片段】PPT
http://wenku..com/view/47d5a0eff8c75fbfc77db2ce.html 网络文库的,《重返十七岁》喜剧
『陆』 英文书 电影 介绍 PPT
Hello everyone,my name is XXX,I'm in shi yan school Grade 6 Class 3,I'm thirteen years old.I like to eat fruit very much,My hobby is reading books,My favorite color is blue.At school, I am a very quiet girl,Academic performance is also good,and served as a member of the post study,I like to learn, I learn, I am happy, I am happy to learn and grow up!
『柒』 英文影片的英文简介
1、《英国病人》
Directed by Anthony mingra, the English patient is adapted from the novel of the same name by Michael ondaj.
The film is co starred by Ralph Fiennes, Christine Scott Thomas and Juliet Binoche. The film was released in the United States on November 6, 1996.
The movie takes the war and desert as the background, decing a love tragedy across time and space.
During World War II, a British plane was shot down by the German army while flying over the Sahara desert.
The pilot on the plane was completely burned on the face. The local people rescued him and sent him to the Allied field hospital.
Because of the injury, the pilot lost his memory and could not remember who he was, so he could only be called "English Patient".
《英国病人》由安东尼·明格拉执导,是根据作家迈克尔·翁达杰的同名小说改编而成。
该片由拉尔夫·费因斯、克里斯汀·斯科特·托马斯、朱丽叶·比诺什等联袂主演。影片于1996年11月6日在美国上映 。
电影以战争和沙漠为背景,演绎一场跨越时空的爱情悲剧。
二战期间,一架英国飞机在飞越撒哈拉沙漠时被德军击落,飞机上的机师面部被全部烧伤,当地人将他救活后送往了盟军战地医院。
由于受伤这个机师丧失了记忆,不能想起自己是谁,因此只能被叫做“英国病人”。
影片讲述由莱昂纳多·迪卡普里奥扮演的造梦师,带领约瑟夫·高登-莱维特、艾伦·佩吉扮演的特工团队,进入他人梦境,从他人的潜意识中盗取机密,并重塑他人梦境的故事。
『捌』 英语课要用ppt介绍一部电影,要怎么做
方案二可以。应该开始放个视频小片段,给观众第一印象。开过电影节上的影片介绍吧。
①用软件把电影合理的剪开,把需要的留存。
②用PPT编辑文件。加载保存的视频,穿插文字描述。
③末了,放上精彩的镜头。幻灯片不宜过多!
可以先讲一下该剧的大概剧情
还有你推荐该剧的原因
再讲一下主要演员啦
最后讲一下该剧有啥值得我们学的
(8)英国电影的介绍英语ppt扩展阅读
首先我想问是中学还是大学?
如果是中学,我建议选取些英文片,英文的警句和名言多些,可以用来介绍,同时最好选择《阿甘正传》,《肖申克的救赎》等励志题材的片子,好立意,老师也肯定喜欢。
如果是大学的,配合充足的事先准备,可以随便发挥啦,从剧情,人物,故事情节,甚至是拍摄手法,一部分一个PPT,深入浅出的去说,重在表达你的独特见解。
『玖』 我要做一个英文的PPT谁能介绍一部【比较有深度的电影】
阿甘正传 Forrest Gump
Forrest Gump is a 1994 American drama film based on the 1986 novel of the same name by Winston Groom and the name of the title character of both. The film was a huge commercial success, earning US$677 million worldwide ring its theatrical run making it the top grossing film in North America released that year. The film garnered a total of 13 Academy Award nominations, of which it won six, including Best Picture, Best Visual Effects, Best Director (Robert Zemeckis), and Best Actor (Tom Hanks).
The film tells the story of a man with an IQ of 75 and his epic journey through life, meeting historical figures, influencing popular culture and experiencing first-hand historic events while being largely unaware of their significance, e to his lower than average intelligence. The film differs substantially from the book on which it was based.
Plot
The film begins with a feather falling to the feet of Forrest Gump who is sitting at a bus stop in Savannah, Georgia. Forrest picks up the feather and puts it in the book Curious George, then tells the story of his life to a woman seated next to him. The listeners at the bus stop change regularly throughout his narration, each showing a different attitude ranging from disbelief and indifference to rapt veneration.
On his first day of school, his mother had sex with the principal to get him into the school despite his low I.Q., and he meets a girl named Jenny, whose life is followed in parallel to Forrest's at times. Having discarded his leg braces, his ability to run at lightning speed gets him into college on a football scholarship, where he plays for legendary Alabama head coach Paul "Bear" Bryant; ring this time, he was also chosen as a member of the All-American Football Team and he was invited to meet President Kennedy at the White House. After his college graation, he enlists in the army and is sent to Vietnam, where he makes fast friends with a man named Bubba, who convinces Forrest to go into the shrimping business with him when the war is over. After a ferocious Vietnamese attack, however, Forrest ends up saving much of his platoon from the Viet Cong, including his platoon leader, Lt. Dan Taylor, a career military officer who felt his destiny was to die in battle like his ancestors did who fought in every major war that America fought since the Revolution. Bubba is killed in action. Lt. Dan is unwillingly saved by Forrest but loses his legs. Forrest is awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroism by President Lyndon Johnson.
At an anti-war rally in Washington, D.C. Forrest reunites with Jenny, who has been living a hippie counterculture lifestyle.
While Forrest is in recovery for a bullet shot to his "butt-tox", he discovers his uncanny ability for ping-pong, eventually gaining popularity and rising to celebrity status, later playing ping-pong competitively against Chinese teams. He is later invited to the White House and is given an award from President Nixon. That evening he calls security when he sees flashlights in an office building across from his hotel room at the Watergate Hotel; this leads to the Watergate scandal and the subsequent resignation of Richard Nixon.
He appears on the Dick Cavett show in 1971 and inspires John Lennon to write the song "Imagine." After the broadcast, he briefly reunites with his old commanding officer Lieutenant Dan in New York. Dan, after losing both legs in war, has become extremely pessimistic, and has resorted to debauchery.
Returning home, Forrest endorses a company that makes ping-pong paddles, earning himself $25,000 which he uses to buy a shrimping boat, fulfilling his promise to Bubba. Eventually, Lieutenant Dan joins him. Though initially Forrest has little success, after finding his boat, the only surviving boat in the area after Hurricane Carmen in the fall of 1974, he begins to pull in huge amounts of shrimp and uses it to buy an entire fleet of shrimp boats. Lieutenant Dan invests the money in Apple Computer and Forrest is financially secure for the rest of his life. He returns home to see his mother's last days as she is dying of cancer circa 1975.
One day, Jenny returns to visit Forrest and he proposes marriage to her. She declines, though feels obliged to prove her love to him by sleeping with him. She leaves early the next morning. On a whim, Forrest elects to go for a run. Seemingly capricious at first, he decides to keep running across the country several times, over some three and a half years, becoming famous.
In the present-day (the early 1980s in the film), Forrest reveals that he is waiting at the bus stop because he received a letter from Jenny who, having seen him run on television, asks him to visit her. Once he is reunited with Jenny, Forrest discovers she has a young son, of whom Forrest is the father. Jenny tells Forrest she is suffering from a virus (probably HIV, though this is never definitively stated).[1][2][3] Together the three move back to Greenbow, Alabama. Jenny and Forrest finally marry. Jenny dies soon afterward.
The film ends with father and son waiting for the school bus on little Forrest's first day of school. Opening the book his son is taking to school, the white feather from the beginning of the movie is seen to fall from within the pages. As the bus pulls away, the white feather is caught on a breeze and drifts skyward.
[edit] Themes
Though superficially Gump might not seem to understand all that goes on around him, the viewer gets the sense that he knows enough, the rest being superfluous detail. Roger Ebert offers the example of Jenny telling Forrest, "You don't know what love is."[4]
Also explored in the film are the opposing ideas that in life we either follow a set plan, or that we float about randomly like a feather in the wind. Relevant to this idea is the now famous quotation from the film, "life is like a box of chocolates; you never know what you're gonna get."
It has been noted that while Forrest follows a very conservative lifestyle, Jenny's life is full of countercultural embrace, replete with drug usage and antiwar rallies, and that their eventual marriage might be a kind of tongue-in-cheek reconciliation. However, the nature of Jenny's death has lead others to conclude that the movie is looking down on counterculture lifestyles, considering them to be the wrong type of path to choose.
Other commentators believe that the film forecasted the 1994 Republican Revolution and used the image of Forrest Gump to promote traditional, conservative values adhered by Gump's character.[5]
[edit] Proction details
Ken Ralston and his team at Instrial Light & Magic were responsible for the film's visual effects. Using CGI-techniques it was possible to depict Gump meeting now-deceased presidents and shaking their hands.
Archival footage was used and with the help of techniques like chroma key, warping, morphing and rotoscoping, Tom Hanks was integrated into it. This feat was honored with an Oscar for Best Visual Effects.
The CGI removal of actor Gary Sinise's legs, after his character had them amputated, was achieved by wrapping his legs with a blue fabric, which later facilitated the work of the "roto-paint"-team to paint out his legs from every single frame. At one point, while hoisting himself into his wheelchair, his "missing" legs are used for support.
Dick Cavett played himself in the 1970s with make-up applied to make it appear that he was much younger than the commentator was ring the filming. Consequently, Cavett is the only well-known figure in the film to actually play himself for the feature, rather than via archive footage.
Differences from novel
Forrest Gump is based on the 1986 novel by Winston Groom. Both center around the character of Forrest Gump. However, the film primarily focuses on the first eleven chapters of the novel, before skipping ahead to the end of the novel with the founding of Bubba Gump Shrimp and the meeting with Forrest Jr. In addition to skipping some parts of the novel, the film adds several aspects to Forrest's life that do not occur in the novel, such as his needing leg braces as a child and his run across the country.
Forrest's core character and personality are also changed from the novel, and it has been reported that Groom was annoyed by the changes.[6] For example, in the book Forrest is crude, curses regularly, joins a band with Jenny, has a prolonged sexual relationship with Jenny, smokes dope, becomes a professional wrestler, and an astronaut. What is impossible in the book is made plausible in the movie.
[edit] Reception
In Tom Hanks' words, "The film is non-political and thus non-judgmental". Nevertheless, in 1994, CNN's Crossfire debated whether the film had a left- or right-wing bias. Filmmaker Lloyd Kaufman has noted that Gump's successes result from doing what he is told by others, and never showing any initiative of his own, in contrast to Jenny's more forthright and independent character who is shown descending into drugs, prostitution, and death.[7]
The film received mostly positive critical reviews at the time of its release, with Roger Ebert saying, "The screenplay by Eric Roth has the complexity of modern fiction....[Hanks'] performance is a breathtaking balancing act between comedy and sadness, in a story rich in big laughs and quiet truths....what a magical movie."[8] The film received notable pans from several major reviewers, however, including The New Yorker and Entertainment Weekly, which said that the movie "reces the tumult of the last few decades to a virtual-reality theme park: a baby-boomer version of Disney's America."[9] As of June 2008, the film garners a 72% "Fresh" rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes.[10]
However, the film is commonly seen as a polarizing one for audiences, with Entertainment Weekly writing in 2004, "Nearly a decade after it earned gazillions and swept the Oscars, Robert Zemeckis' ode to 20th-century America still represents one of cinema's most clearly drawn lines in the sand. One half of folks see it as an artificial piece of pop melodrama, while everyone else raves that it's sweet as a box of chocolates."[11] The film also came in at #76 on AFI's Top-100 American movies of all time list in 2007.
[edit] Cast
Actor Role
Tom Hanks Forrest Gump
Robin Wright Penn Jenny Curran
Gary Sinise Lieutenant Dan Taylor
Mykelti Williamson Benjamin Buford "Bubba" Blue
Sally Field Forrest's mother
Michael Conner Humphreys Young Forrest Gump
Hanna R. Hall Young Jenny Curran
Haley Joel Osment Forrest Gump Jr.
Sam Anderson Principal Hancock
Geoffrey Blake Wesley, SDS Organizer
David Brisbin Newscaster
Peter Dobson Elvis Presley
Siobhan Fallon Dorothy Harris, School Bus Driver
Osmar Olivo Drill Sergeant
Brett Rice High School Football Coach
Sonny Shroyer Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant
Kurt Russell Voice of Elvis Presley
Harold G. Herthum Doctor
Soundtrack
Main articles: Forrest Gump (soundtrack) and Forrest Gump - Original Motion Picture Score
The soundtrack from Forrest Gump had a variety of music from the 50s, 60s, 70s, and early 80s performed by American artists. It went on to sell 12 million copies, and is one of the top selling albums in the United States.
1994 Academy Awards (Oscars)
Won - Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role — Tom Hanks
Won - Best Director — Robert Zemeckis
Won - Best Film Editing — Arthur Schmidt
Won - Best Picture — Wendy Finerman, Steve Starkey, Steve Tisch
Won - Best Visual Effects — Ken Ralston, George Murphy, Stephen Rosenbaum, Allen Hall
Won - Best Adapted Screenplay — Eric Roth
Nominated - Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role — Gary Sinise (as Lieutenant Dan Taylor)
Nominated - Best Achievement in Art Direction — Rick Carter, Nancy Haigh
Nominated - Best Achievement in Cinematography — Don Burgess
Nominated - Best Makeup — Daniel C. Striepeke, Hallie D'Amore
Nominated - Best Original Score — Alan Silvestri
Nominated - Best Sound Mixing — Randy Thom, Tom Johnson, Dennis S. Sands, William B. Kaplan
Nominated - Best Sound Editing — Gloria S. Borders, Randy Thom
1995 Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films (Saturn Awards)
Won - Best Supporting Actor (Film) — Gary Sinise
Won - Best Fantasy Film
Nominated - Best Actor (Film) — Tom Hanks
Nominated - Best Music — Alan Silvestri
Nominated - Best Special Effects — Ken Ralston
Nominated - Best Writing — Eric Roth
1995 Amanda Awards
Won - Best Film (International)
1995 American Cinema Editors (Eddies)
Won - Best Edited Feature Film — Arthur Schmidt
1995 American Comedy Awards
Won - Funniest Actor in a Motion Picture (Leading Role) — Tom Hanks
1995 American Society of Cinematographers
Nominated - Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Theatrical Releases — Don Burgess
1995 BAFTA Film Awards
Won - Outstanding Achievement in Special Visual Effects — Ken Ralston, George Murphy, Stephen Rosenbaum, Doug Chiang, Allen Hall
Nominated - Best Actor in a Leading Role — Tom Hanks
Nominated - Best Actress in a Supporting Role — Sally Field
Nominated - Best Film — Wendy Finerman, Steve Tisch, Steve Starkey, Robert Zemeckis
Nominated - Best Cinematography — Don Burgess
Nominated - David Lean Award for Direction — Robert Zemeckis
Nominated - Best Editing — Aurthur Schmidt
Nominated - Best Adapted Screenplay — Eric Roth
1995 Casting Society of America (Artios)
Nominated - Best Casting for Feature Film, Drama — Ellen Lewis
1995 Chicago Film Critics Association Awards
Won - Best Actor — Tom Hanks
1995 Directors Guild of America
Won - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures — Robert Zemeckis, Charles Newirth, Bruce Moriarity, Cherylanne Martin, Dana J. Kuznetzkoff
1995 Golden Globe Awards
Won - Best Actor - Motion Picture Drama — Tom Hanks
Won - Best Director - Motion Picture — Robert Zemeckis
Won - Best Motion Picture - Drama
Nominated - Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture — Gary Sinise
Nominated - Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture — Robin Wright Penn
Nominated - Best Original Score — Alan Silvestri
Nominated - Best Screenplay - Motion Picture — Eric Roth
1995 Heartland Film Festival
Won - Studio Crystal Heart Award — Winston Groom
1995 MTV Movie Awards
Nominated - Best Breakthrough Performance — Mykelti Williamson
Nominated - Best Male Performance — Tom Hanks
Nominated - Best Movie
1995 Motion Picture Sound Editors (Golden Reel Award)
Won - Best Sound Editing
1994 National Board of Review of Motion Pictures
Nominated - Best Actor — Tom Hanks
Nominated - Best Supporting Actor — Gary Sinise
Nominated - Best Picture
1995 PGA Golden Laurel Awards
Won - Motion Picture Procer of the Year Award — Wendy Finerman, Steve Tisch, Steve Starkey, Charles Newirth
1995 People's Choice Awards
Won - Favorite All-Around Motion Picture
Won - Favorite Dramatic Motion Picture
1995 Screen Actors Guild Awards
Won - Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role — Tom Hanks
Nominated - Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role — Gary Sinise
Nominated - Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role — Sally Field & Robin Wright Penn
1995 Writers Guild of America Awards
Won - Best Screenplay Adapted from Another Medium — Eric Roth
1995 Young Artist Awards
Won - Best Performance in a Feature Film - Young Actor 10 or Younger — Haley Joel Osment
Won - Best Performance in a Feature Film - Young Actress 10 or Younger — Hanna R. Hall
Nominated - Best Performance in a Feature Film - Young Actor Co-Starring — Michael Conner Humphreys
[edit] Sequel
A screenplay based on the original novel's sequel, Gump and Co., was written by Eric Roth in 2001. Due to a legal dispute between Winston Groom and Paramount Pictures over the first movie, the sequel was never put into proction. In March 2007, however, it was reported that the dispute has been resolved and that Paramount procers are now taking another look at the screenplay.
『拾』 英文电影介绍PPT
Bladerunner Screenshot Analysis PPT
http://www.slideshare.net/kellimcgraw/bladerunner-screenshot-analysis-presentation