水木夫妇婚姻生活幸福美满。然后不幸降临到两人身上。因为丈夫的失误,公司遭受巨大损失,丈夫最终被调到肤浅的部门,整天盯着办公桌。当她的丈夫从他不喜欢的同事那里听说这件事时,他得到了一笔交易……
1978年,死亡峡谷。警官戴维•麦克阿里斯特(David Stanbra 饰)将杀人如麻、残酷血腥的雾人(Ben Gunther 饰)绳之于法,这个作恶多端的噩梦最终死在毒气室里。 时间回到现在,警长麦克阿里斯特(Robert Pine 饰)即将退休,他的儿子哈里斯(Michael Muhney 饰)则尾随父亲当上了警察。父子二人在六角餐馆用餐时,遭遇了在逃的赌场抢劫犯。双方展开对峙,年轻气盛的哈里斯引起大爆炸,两名劫匪劫持餐馆女招待玛雅(Mircea Monroe 饰)逃亡。在救援部队迟迟未到之时,戴维带着儿子展开谨慎的追踪。不过令双方始料未及的是,似乎有另一个神秘、恐怖的杀手将他们玩弄于鼓掌之中。邪恶的雾人精神不死,重返人间……
烧腊店老板娘娟(杨梵 饰)生性风骚、放荡不羁,然而在性生活方面丈夫昌(张锦程 饰)却无法满足她,以至于她经常对其吆五喝六。娟的表妹亚凤(孙佳君 饰)从大陆来香港探亲,并暂住店中。由于亚凤面容姣好,吸引了来此用餐的客人,其中也包括辖区警探亚生(黄秋生 饰)。某日,娟带亚凤逛街,亚凤因为一件真丝睡衣遭店员白眼,暗中发誓要出这口恶气。在娟出门鬼混之际,亚凤暗中勾引了昌,令对方俯首帖耳。此后,亚凤不但狠狠回敬了趋炎附势的店员,而且还获得了在港的身份。此后,娟和昌再过性生活时,发现昌的反应有所转变,怀疑他在外偷腥。这时,发型、衣着大变样的亚凤,引起了娟的注意。两人之间的争斗逐渐升级。但亚凤毫无惧色,她仰仗昌的宠爱,变本加厉跟娟对抗,一步步施行着自己变态的复仇计划……
《人间世》抗疫特别节目摄制组,深入红区,拍摄武汉与上海两地病区医护与患者们的鲜活故事和危难之中激发的人性光辉,力求细腻呈现疫情下的动人故事。 3月31日,摄制组随上海援鄂医疗队返沪后,立即开始进行后期制作。历时两个多月,拍摄的逾三万分钟的素材,最终剪辑成6集共240分钟的纪录片《人间世·抗击疫情特别节目》。纪录片秉承沉浸式记录,大主题、小切入,分为《红区》《相逢》《脸庞》《雷神山往事》《我要找到你》《我会陪着你》六个主题,用鲜活的叙事语言和画面,展现面对重大突发公共卫生事件的时候,人类所表现出的勇气和力量。 前四集计划分别于5月21日、22日、27日、28日在东方卫视晚间22:00播出。
Advertising executive Holly walks by the same holiday window every day on her way to work featuring the perfect man(equin). When a fateful icicle knocks her out. The fake window man becomes the man of her dreams. Then she discovers that though his looks are perfect, his personality is still…plastic.
Lucjan is a theatre actor whose health is failing. He forgets his lines on stage and feels confused and out of place in his daily life. He decides to end his acting career and soon winds up in a nursing home. In this new place, the elderly man misses his late wife. He starts having nightmares that seem to become real. In one of them, he discovers a passage into a magical world deceptively similar to his theatre. Lucjan starts living in two parallel dimensions – real life and the fairy tale – that become increasingly dependent on each other and intertwined. His immersion in the imaginary world leads to an unexpected ending. A bittersweet treatise on passing. The fairy-tale world Lucjan creates is not so much a metaphor for death as a symbolic reconciliation to its coming.