小众纪录片影视聚合

 找回密码
 立即注册
查看: 18|回复: 0

外语原版纪录片《 Lagerfeld Confidential 》 - 纪录片1080P/720P/360P高清标清网盘迅雷下载

[复制链接]

6万

主题

6万

帖子

10万

积分

版主

Rank: 7Rank: 7Rank: 7

积分
107869
发表于 2022-10-5 12:02:36 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式


外语原版纪录片《 Lagerfeld Confidential 》 - 纪录片1080P/720P/360P高清标清网盘迅雷下载

Lagerfeld Confidential

General Information:
Biography Documentary hosted by cast themselves, published by Realitism Films in 2007- French narration

Information
Those seeking career advice about how to become an emperor of fashion will find little if any useful information in “Lagerfeld Confidential,” an intimate portrait of the designer who has ruled the House of Chanel for more than two decades. At least Mr. Lagerfeld, an imperial figure if there ever was one, demonstrates how to act the part.
In every frame this designer, who is shown in his Paris studio and presiding at photo shoots (one with Nicole Kidman) and fashion shows, exudes a papal grandeur. Mr. Lagerfeld says he never formally studied fashion and has no patience for the craft of dressmaking. The movie offers no résumé or analysis of his work. It is simply an extended interview, without talking-head commentary.
Mr. Lagerfeld claims to be “a complete improvisation.”
“I don’t want to be real in other people’s minds,” he declares. “I want to be an apparition.”
Much of the film, written, directed and photographed by Rodolphe Marconi, might be described as a friendly sparring match between the filmmaker and his subject, with Mr. Marconi repeatedly pressuring Mr. Lagerfeld to open up about his private life. The tone of the questions implies that Mr. Marconi already knows the answers and wants Mr. Lagerfeld to spill the same beans on camera that he has off, but the designer continually eludes his interrogator.
To a point, Mr. Lagerfeld is candid about his homosexuality. He says he was aware of it by the age of 13, when he told his parents, for whom it was not a problem. When an older man and woman made passes at him, he recalls, his mother, instead of flying into a rage about child molestation, scolded her son and said such incidents wouldn’t happen if he didn’t behave so provocatively.
Beyond declaring that he was sexually very active as a youth, however, Mr. Lagerfeld avoids mentioning the names of lovers or recalling major relationships. The most he will say is that there have been “a few tragedies I couldn’t possibly talk about.”
A cinematic scrapbook of photos reveals him to have been an exceptionally handsome young man, but the male companions pictured are unidentified.
His adoring mother seems to have been the major formative influence. He grew up in northern Germany, near the Danish border, and moved to Paris as a teenager. As a child, he admits, he was “unbearable and spoiled” and compares himself to Shirley Temple. Even now, he cannot go to sleep without a pillow clutched to his stomach.
His mother, he says, was “the polar opposite of a typical German mother.” She “exuded frivolity” and “made slaves of everyone.” Mr. Lagerfeld displays a similar mixture of eccentricity and severity. With his white ponytail, high white collars, sunglasses, fingerless gloves (his hands are festooned with rings) and preference for black, he resembles a man of the cloth, “a defrocked one,” he says matter-of-factly.
And like a priest, he is given to making lofty pronouncements with an aphoristic ring. If the documentary had a subtitle, it might be “The Wit and Wisdom of Karl Lagerfeld.” Or more accurately, “The Wisdom and Obfuscation.”
Here are some sample quotations: “I hate people who can’t be alone”; “The best things I’ve ever done have come from dreams”; “Fashion is ephemeral, dangerous and unfair”; “There is a German saying: ‘You can’t borrow on your past.’”; “I love change; I’m attached to nothing”; “When I took on Chanel, it was a sleeping beauty — not even a beautiful one; she snored”; “Success nullifies; you have to do it again, and better.” He sneers at “bourgeois marriages,” is pro-prostitution and, as befits a man who aspires to be an apparition, virulently anti-psychoanalysis.
His most unsettling remarks concern friendship. Hanging over every close relationship, he asserts, is a sword of Damocles. And he implies that many have been permanently exiled from his court. “Forgiveness isn’t something I’m preoccupied with,” he says. “Turning the other cheek is not my trip. The curtain falls: an iron curtain.”


Technical Specs
Duration: 1h 25mn
File size: 689
Container: MKV
Width: 640 pixels
Height: 352 pixels
Display aspect ratio: 16:9
Overall bit rate: 1122 kbps
Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Audio Codec: MP3
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 48.0 KHz
Credit goes to: anonymous


纪录片关键词:


Lagerfeld Confidential,Documentary,Karl Lagerfeld: The Kaiser of Fashion,2007,Biography,Cast themselves,French,Realitism Films,Turbojugend

Biography,Cast themselves,Realitism Films,2007


纪录片内容简介:

General Information:
Biography Documentary hosted by cast themselves, published by Realitism Films in 2007- French narration

Information
Those seeking career advice about how to become an emperor of fashion will find little if any useful information in “Lagerfeld Confidential,” an intimate portrait of the designer who has ruled the House of Chanel for more than two decades. At least Mr. Lagerfeld, an imperial figure if there ever was one, demonstrates how to act the part.
In every frame this designer, who is shown in his Paris studio and presiding at photo shoots (one with Nicole Kidman) and fashion shows, exudes a papal grandeur. Mr. Lagerfeld says he never formally studied fashion and has no patience for the craft of dressmaking. The movie offers no résumé or analysis of his work. It is simply an extended interview, without talking-head commentary.
Mr. Lagerfeld claims to be “a complete improvisation.”
“I don’t want to be real in other people’s minds,” he declares. “I want to be an apparition.”
Much of the film, written, directed and photographed by Rodolphe Marconi, might be described as a friendly sparring match between the filmmaker and his subject, with Mr. Marconi repeatedly pressuring Mr. Lagerfeld to open up about his private life. The tone of the questions implies that Mr. Marconi already knows the answers and wants Mr. Lagerfeld to spill the same beans on camera that he has off, but the designer continually eludes his interrogator.
To a point, Mr. Lagerfeld is candid about his homosexuality. He says he was aware of it by the age of 13, when he told his parents, for whom it was not a problem. When an older man and woman made passes at him, he recalls, his mother, instead of flying into a rage about child molestation, scolded her son and said such incidents wouldn’t happen if he didn’t behave so provocatively.
Beyond declaring that he was sexually very active as a youth, however, Mr. Lagerfeld avoids mentioning the names of lovers or recalling major relationships. The most he will say is that there have been “a few tragedies I couldn’t possibly talk about.”
A cinematic scrapbook of photos reveals him to have been an exceptionally handsome young man, but the male companions pictured are unidentified.
His adoring mother seems to have been the major formative influence. He grew up in northern Germany, near the Danish border, and moved to Paris as a teenager. As a child, he admits, he was “unbearable and spoiled” and compares himself to Shirley Temple. Even now, he cannot go to sleep without a pillow clutched to his stomach.
His mother, he says, was “the polar opposite of a typical German mother.” She “exuded frivolity” and “made slaves of everyone.” Mr. Lagerfeld displays a similar mixture of eccentricity and severity. With his white ponytail, high white collars, sunglasses, fingerless gloves (his hands are festooned with rings) and preference for black, he resembles a man of the cloth, “a defrocked one,” he says matter-of-factly.
And like a priest, he is given to making lofty pronouncements with an aphoristic ring. If the documentary had a subtitle, it might be “The Wit and Wisdom of Karl Lagerfeld.” Or more accurately, “The Wisdom and Obfuscation.”
Here are some sample quotations: “I hate people who can’t be alone”; “The best things I’ve ever done have come from dreams”; “Fashion is ephemeral, dangerous and unfair”; “There is a German saying: ‘You can’t borrow on your past.’”; “I love change; I’m attached to nothing”; “When I took on Chanel, it was a sleeping beauty — not even a beautiful one; she snored”; “Success nullifies; you have to do it again, and better.” He sneers at “bourgeois marriages,” is pro-prostitution and, as befits a man who aspires to be an apparition, virulently anti-psychoanalysis.
His most unsettling remarks concern friendship. Hanging over every close relationship, he asserts, is a sword of Damocles. And he implies that many have been permanently exiled from his court. “Forgiveness isn’t something I’m preoccupied with,” he says. “Turning the other cheek is not my trip. The curtain falls: an iron curtain.”


Technical Specs
Duration: 1h 25mn
File size: 689
Container: MKV
Width: 640 pixels
Height: 352 pixels
Display aspect ratio: 16:9
Overall bit rate: 1122 kbps
Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Audio Codec: MP3
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 48.0 KHz
Credit goes to: anonymous

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

外语原版纪录片《 Lagerfeld Confidential 》 - 纪录片1080P/720P/360P高清标清网盘迅雷下载

下载地址:
(本链接可能为BT下载方式,需自备BT类下载工具。推荐使用115网盘离线下载,或使用其他具有离线下载功能的网盘)

游客
文件下载链接就在这里,在您回复评论成功后才能显示。
请勿回复无意义的灌水内容。


下拉页面到最底部回复或者【点击此处快捷回复】,回复后返回此处即可查看下载链接。
如您没注册本站会员,可以点击注册本站,注册后即可回复下载。

小贴士:【影视自媒体解说文案请移步:夏至文案解说网 www.xiazhi.vip

上一篇:外语原版纪录片《 Napoleon: In the Name of Art 》 - 纪录片1080P/720P/360P高清标清网盘迅雷下载
下一篇:外语原版纪录片《 Rim Banna: The Voice of Palestine 》 - 纪录片1080P/720P/360P高清标清网盘迅雷下载
回复

使用道具 举报

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 立即注册

本版积分规则

Archiver|手机版|小众纪录片影视聚合

GMT+8, 2024-10-14 08:24 , Processed in 0.217369 second(s), 13 queries , Gzip On, Redis On.

Powered by 小众纪录片影视聚合 @2010-2023

Copyright © 2010-2024, https://www.abjlp.com/.


免责说明:本站所有内容链接、图文介绍等均来自于互联网网友分享,本站仅支持web页面展示和文字介绍,绝不提供在线观看和存储服务,也不参与录制、上传、压片。若本站收录内容无意侵犯贵司版权,请发邮件到【a885185#163.com】联系本站,我们将在第一时间删除侵权内容。谢谢!

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表