亚由美用她的大屁股作为武器来勾引隔壁的男人。隔壁的家伙变得硬起来,好像他被大屁股迷住了......
《纽约图书馆》将观众带到了世界最大的知识宝库之一的幕后,这个图书馆是一个包容的文化交流和学习平台,每年接待1800万读者,线上访客3200万人。在曼哈顿、布朗克斯、斯坦顿岛地区散布着92个图书馆分部,致力于为这个复杂而繁华的大都市的所有居民提供资源。影片审视了这个传奇机构是如何在保留传统的同时适应数字化革命的。纽约公共图书馆是多面的,从位于第五大道的庄严宏伟的总部到分布在城区的各个分部,每一个都有自己独特的项目和目标群体。图书馆的功能远不止借书,而纽约公共图书馆通过讲座、社区工作、为孩子而设的工作坊以及为找工作的人而设的培训课程,造福所有人。这部纪录片展示了图书馆是如何用书、音乐会、讲座、课程等多种方式教化读者,激发学习兴趣、传播知识并巩固社区联系。
Layla is ten years old, and about to meet her new family. She just doesn't know it yet. An act of kindness met with deception leads to Layla's abduction and descent into a life of sex slavery hidden in an ordinary neighborhood. It could even be yours. I AM STILL HERE takes us inside Layla's new world, showing what really happens to these children after the first 48 hours, and why it's so difficult to combat the fastest-growing illegal enterprise in the world: the child sex slave industry. Starring Johnny Rey Diaz (Hawaii Five-O), Erika Ringor (Love and Basketball), and Ciara Jiana (Sharknado), this movie is based on exhaustive research into real cases, and is dedicated to all the missing children who are still out there. From first-time writer/director Mischa Marcus and Emmy-nominated and award-winning producer Stephanie Bell.
雷娜的丈夫今天又赌博了。他坚持要带酒。她似乎厌倦了,给他倒了一杯饮料,然后接到了她丈夫的电话。这是我丈夫的弟弟(他正是我同父异母的弟弟)打来的电话,询问我是否可以留在家里去东京出差。终于见到弟弟的那一天,她趁着丈夫睡着的时候偷偷靠近他,向弟弟展示自己的容貌……
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.