『壹』 电影英文版《刮痧》的英语笔记和感想
http://wenku..com/view/f6fcd78ed0d233d4b14e696b.html
『贰』 电影刮痧八十个单词简介
本片的英文简介,见附件。
如果手机看看不到附件,请用电脑访问。
『叁』 电影《刮痧》讲述了这样一个故事:一位中国许姓老人到美国探亲,他发现孙子发高烧,因不认识药瓶上的英文
C |
『肆』 电影刮痧英文观后感
题目可以:
The difference between Chinese Culture and Western Culture
『伍』 谁有电影《刮痧》的英文影评啊!急
Masterpiece on Cultural misunderstandings
Author: zzmale
Gua Sha is a treatment in traditional oriental medicine in which a wooden board repeatedly slides across the patient's acupuncture/acupressure/massage points. It works in similar principles like that of acupuncture/acupressure/massage. This method would inevitably leave bruise on the skin, and the story begins here, when the visiting grandpa who does not speak any English used this traditional practice to treat the grandson when both son and daughter-in-law were at work.
Sadly, in US, this is a story that repeats itself many times in the area where many oriental immigrants lives and all of these are e to simple misunderstanding between cultures.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0297928/usercomments
这里还有,请查看
『陆』 电影 刮痧(2001年) 双语或 英语字幕
QVOD会用吗?会用到http://www.kuitv.com/movie/2688.htm 看,高清,看完即下完,
有问题, HI我
『柒』 求一篇400字左右的电影《刮痧》英文观后感,体现中西方文化差异,语法不用太准确,高中生水平即可
《刮痧》这部电影重点不是讲怎么刮痧,刮痧有什么好处,而是讲因为刮痧致使一个家庭经历具体的苦难。电脑游戏设计师许大同与妻子简宁在美国奋斗了8年,事业有成。一次意外却令美好的家庭变得愁云惨雾:5岁的儿子生病了,老父亲用传统的中国民间刮痧帮孙子治病。大同夫妻继而被控告虐待儿童,一个又一个物证人证令夫妻俩百口莫辩,西医根本无法了解这种传统中国疗法。因为这件事,父子与夫妻都不得已的分开了。圣诞节那天,门卫不让大同去家里见简宁和他儿子,无奈之下,他只好冒着生命危险爬水管爬上九楼,并在那晚法院撤销了对抚养孩子的审判,最终皆大欢喜。
观看这部电影时,给我最大的感触就是中西文化的差异。老父亲是爱他的孙子的,他孙子生病了老父亲给他刮痧,在背上留下的痕迹却被人认为是这孩子受了虐待,这是美国人不懂得刮痧是什么造成的;对待孩子的问题上,中国人将孩子当做是自己的私人财产,可以随时对孩子进行管教,但在美国,孩子却被当成是社会财产,一旦孩子受了伤害,孩子的父母就会被剥夺抚养权,由儿童福利中心进行养育,在大同的颁奖会上,他的儿子打了他老板的儿子,大同让他儿子道歉,但他却不道歉,大同打了一下他儿子的头,大同认为这是对他老板的尊重,当然,中国人大多都是这样,在不分三七二十一先打了自己的孩子再说,这表示自己没有教养好,打孩子是对别人的尊重,但美国人却不这么认为,他的老板看到大同打他儿子表示很惊讶,并且认为教养孩子跟尊重他人没有关系。大同为了给他的父亲办绿卡,在听证会上说了是他给他的儿子刮痧的,老父亲知道了这件事后,他自己一个人到了大同老板昆兰的家里,跟他讲了是他刮痧的,而不是大同,昆兰问简宁为什么大同要说是他刮痧的,简宁回了他一句:因为他是中国人。这些都是中西文化碰撞后产生的火花!
原文地址:http://www.guanhougan.net/guanhougan/5599.html,转载请保留地址,谢谢
『捌』 求电影《刮痧》影评 英文版的
Gua Sha (The Treatment) shows how a person's cultural beliefs are so deeply set within oneself that it is usually impossible to examine why you do most anything, from how you dress and talk to whom you love and respect and how you show it. The invisible nature of one's cultural beliefs also makes it difficult to impossible to explain yourself to others when questioned. Da Tong experiences an excruciatingly painful and difficult struggle while trying to protect his son, an ordeal that forces him to examine the validity of some of the most vital things he thought he knew about his identity, his Chinese culture, and the new American world he'd chosen as his home.
The movie showed me how normal it is for people to look for ways that their culture is superior to others' and how the misunderstandings arising from different cultural perspectives can seem very large, but can be nullified with simple, 2-sided explanations when people are willing to listen.
It appears this film is not readily available in the USA, but it's the best I've seen at highlighting the differences between American and Chinese culture. Parts of the movie's dialog are only in Chinese and I've yet to find a DVD with English subtitles, although it's easy to get the gist of what's going on ring those short passages. The credits are a combination of Chinese and English, holding true to the integration of both worlds. I've noticed some important roles are not credited here on IMDb, such as Judge Horowitz, who was played by Alexander Barton.
『玖』 电影《刮痧》观后感——英文版
Gua Sha is a movie about the differences between American and Chinese culture. Xu datong is a video games designer in St. Louis. When his father visits from China, he performs Gua Sha (a Chinese traditional treatment) on his grandson, which leaves bright red marks on the skin and causes a lawsuit of child abuse. In the court, Datong loses his mind so that finally he loses custody of his son. I think this scene is shocking and thought-provoking to most of the Chinese audiences. But the most impressing scene to me is the ending. Datong wants to see his son in Christmas eve, he has to climb a pipe to the ninth floor which his son lives. I think the pipe is not only a pipe, but also a gap, a deep gap between American and 5000-year Chinese culture. He wants to climb over the gap and he will never succeed, perhaps no Chinese people really could succeed.