生活残骸

Trainwreck,火车出轨,姐姐爱最大(港/台)

主演:柯林·奎恩,Devin Fabry,Carla Oudin,艾米·舒默,乔什·塞加拉,瑞恩·法瑞尔,Robert E. Torres,吉姆·佛罗伦丁,Robert Kelly,Dan Soder,约翰·塞纳,戴夫·阿特尔,瓦妮莎·贝尔

类型:电影地区:美国,日本语言:英语,汉语普通话年份:2015

《生活残骸》剧照

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《生活残骸》剧情介绍

生活残骸电影免费高清在线观看全集。
女孩艾米(艾米·舒默 Amy Schumer 饰),从小被父亲教导婚姻不现实,一夫一妻不现实,长大后热衷泡吧,一直与不同男人约会却从不恋爱。一天,身为男性杂志编辑的她,前去采访一位专为运动员治疗运动损伤的医生亚伦(比尔·哈德尔 Bill Hader 饰),不料遇见了可能终结她完美单身生活的真命天子。 本片由女主角艾米·舒默编剧,根据她本人的真实经历改编。热播电视剧最新电影最游记RELOAD不解之谜移动迷宫237冽之花回归之路记忆暗线牵我的手悬崖下的妻子风中的女王第三季极乐我是僵尸第一季摘下你的面具勇敢的心泰若星球邪灵女巫去过月球吗燃情克利夫兰第一季迷路的花花公子神机妙算刘伯温推理要在晚餐后败犬女王无声大学江南剿匪记之使命召唤百万火急京城教一坏狗肥皂泡牛奶树下喜欢您

《生活残骸》长篇影评

 1 ) Trainwreck

1、Kim(Amy's sister):他自己选择衣服穿,他的内心就是这样。

2、Amy:当我问他是怎么向妈妈吗求婚的。

他的回答是“WHO?”.3、Alister:批萨里有谷蛋白,glutenin.4、Boss Diana:最好的哀悼方式就是不要哀悼。

5、Aron:我想帮助他,他却叫我witch.巫师。

6、Aron:那些啦啦队队员的优点就是,她们召聚众人,让大家开心,不像你们杂志社的人,坐在那远远的评判人。

因为如果你不尝试,你就永远不会失败。

Because if you dont try,you cant fail.所以你觉得啦啦队队员对你有威胁。

Amy:Now you got me.7、Amy:我先开始,你找我太屈尊了。

go down for me that much.Aron:什么?

Amy:对,那是一种自私。

因为,你表现得好像是为了我,但只是要表现你自己有多伟大。

你总是在帮助别人。

Aron:难道你不想我对你好吗?

Amy:别反过来说,我不想你屈尊。

太好笑了,当然我想你为我屈尊。

Aron:那就屈尊一点点。

Amy:不要再争这个部分了,好吗?

8、Amy:我不太舒服。

太亲密了。

接受爱吧。

Amy:过载了。

我要退出这个拥抱了。

9、Amy:其实我的形体太差了。

I‘m just sweat up more than I'm proud of.我出的汗多得让我自己难堪。

10、Aron:一般人跳上蹦床都会弹起来,但是不知道为什么你却向下一头栽下去了,狠狠地。

you went down,you went straight down,hard.

 2 ) 《生活残骸》像是《伴娘》的姐妹篇。

导演是一手炮制美式现代都会爱情喜剧类型片的Judd Apatow,导演过《四十岁老处男》,《一夜大肚》;制片过很多90年代的脱口秀,包括像《本斯蒂勒秀》,金凯利的一些低成本喜剧,大部分他自己导演的片子和《伴娘》。

女主演兼编剧Amy Schumer在美国拥有自己的脱口秀Inside Amy Schumer,家喻户晓。

片子奉承《伴娘》和导演Judd Apatow的优良传统,充斥大量限制级元素,女主角开篇床戏就大吼尺寸太大好痛好痛!

本片终极探索也是美国典型都市环境下有承诺恐惧综合征的事业男女们突破自己的故事,不论是Amy Schumer饰演的女主角角色还是Bill Hader的运动医生角色或者是Tilda Swinton饰演的如同Anna Wintour一样的歪斜女老板角色都是典型的美国都市中年缺乏安全感,性欲旺盛,面临40年限,事业平淡的承诺恐惧综合征患者。

片子在结构上和《伴娘》极其相似,女性主人公在情感和事业期的瓶颈通过自我反思和生活达到精神顿彻。

极度生活化的对白和口无遮拦是的情色端子鞭笞着观众脆弱的心脏。

引用片中Tilda Swinton的话说“我喜欢你,Amy。

你聪明但又不太有头脑,你可爱但又不够性感。

总结一句话:你挺low的。

 3 ) Amy Schumer and Judd Apatow on Stand-up, Sex, and Other “Serious” Stuff

Judd Apatow和Amy Schumer的访谈,收录在他的书Sick in the Head中。

I was sitting in my car one day, listening to The Howard Stern Show, when Amy Schumer came on. I think I had seen her do a little stand-up on television once or twice before, or maybe just some jokes at a roast, but that’s about it. I didn’t have a clear picture in my mind. But sitting there in my car, listening to her talk to Howard, I was blown away by how funny and intimate and fresh she was. You could sense that she had stories to tell and was a lot more than just a comedian. I instantly thought: I need to make a movie with her.So we did.Amy and I spent the next few years working on Trainwreck, and I found that she was, indeed, so much more than just a comedian. She is someone who is willing to go emotionally deep, as well as work obsessively hard, and there’s a frankness to her work that I find inspiring. The stories tumble out of her. She is able to make important points about our culture and feminism and relationships and what it’s like to be a woman in America right now, and to do it in a way that is consistently insightful and hysterical. Here is someone at the beginning of a very exciting career.JUDD APATOW: I was watching a movie about women in comedy recently—I think it was called Are Women Funny? And I noticed that you weren’t in it. Was that by choice?AMY SCHUMER: I got cut out. Actually, I am in one scene. But I don’t talk.J.A.: Oh, I thought maybe it was a political choice, a way of saying, We shouldn’t even be debating this anymore.A.S.: No, that debate is insane to me. It doesn’t even make me mad. It’s like asking, Do Jewish people smell like orange juice? It’s just such a weird question. It’s not even a question. The thing that gets to me is the question “Isn’t this a great time to be a woman in comedy?” I mean, all the TV I watched growing up featured funny women.J.A.: People said the same thing when Bridesmaids came out. We never thought about that when we were making it. I just thought, Kristen Wiig is funny. It would be fun to make a movie with Kristen Wiig. And then she had this idea to make a movie about bridesmaids. We never thought of it as a female movie. At some point, in the middle of it, it occurred to us: Oh, it’s kind of cool to have so many funny women in one movie. But it wasn’t conscious or anything. At the end of the process, we realized that it meant something to people. But what is shocking to me was that, even after the movie did well, there was almost zero follow-up in the culture.A.S.: In terms of what?J.A.: In terms of funny movies that are dominated by women. The studio system didn’t embrace them. They don’t know how to do it.A.S.: In my experience, there will be a script and you’ll be like, This is funny—I think I’ll audition. And you’ll know other women, who are hilarious, are auditioning, too. And then they give it to, like, some beautiful movie star. They’re great actresses and they’re really pretty, but they’re not funny.J.A.: When we did Undeclared, the note from Fox was: You need more eye candy.A.S.: Do you think that’s true? Do people really need more eye candy?J.A.: I have thought about that a lot. I don’t know. But what if people do want it?A.S.: I’m not above that. I want to look at Jennifer Lawrence eating cereal.J.A.: Are you someone who believes that life is easier if you’re attractive?A.S.: I think that beautiful people are not any happier than people who are not as beautiful. Even with models—there’s always someone who is more beautiful or younger. So no matter what realm you’re operating in, it’s all relative. I didn’t develop my personality, or my sense of humor, because I felt unattractive. I thought I was attractive until I got older. It was probably a defense mechanism for whatever pain was going on around me. But I don’t think that people who feel beautiful feel like “I don’t need to do this other thing.”J.A.: You’re in a weird area. I would describe it as: Everyone thinks you are beautiful, but maybe you don’t agree with their opinion.A.S.: Um.J.A.: I’ll talk about me for a second. I always thought I was right in the middle, looks-wise, and that if I had a good personality it could put me over the top. But it wasn’t like, behind my back, everyone thought I was handsome. I get the sense that you feel like some days you’re looking great, some days you’re not, but the audience sees you in a certain way that maybe you don’t agree with. Does that make sense?A.S.: I think that’s probably true. I think that’s probably dead-on. I feel, like you just said, that some days I am like a real monster, completely unlovable and unfuckable, and then there’s a moment, every now and then, when I’m more like Elaine on Seinfeld: “Is it possible that I’m not as attractive as I had thought?” Or maybe it’s the opposite of that. Anytime I start feeling better about myself, physically, someone will say something that pushes me right back down. I think every woman feels this way.J.A.: I ask about it because it is about who you think you’re speaking to.A.S.: That’s a really good point.J.A.: I was a year younger than everybody in school. I was the youngest kid in class, always. But I only realized later in life that I was much smaller than everybody.A.S.: Physically?J.A.: Yeah. And by the time I caught up a little bit, in sixth or seventh grade, I had been defined. On some level, I guess it made me feel less masculine. And as a result I always feel like a fucking nerd. I have a beautiful wife, I’m successful, but I still feel like the kid who’s picked last in gym class. And that shaped my idea of comedy, being about outsiders. It was a way for me to attack all of these systems that I thought were unfair to me.A.S.: I would say the same for me.J.A.: What was your version of that? What happened to you as a kid that made you think and defined your sense of humor?A.S.: I would say, with the physical stuff, that I was always pretty but not beautiful. And that was something that you were punished for. I was very aware of this stuff early on.J.A.: With girls, it’s weird because it changes dramatically. In high school, girls don’t look anything like they looked in third grade. Whereas with guys, the handsome third-grade dude is still handsome in high school. Girls blossom and change. That was the kind of girl I always tried to date: the girl who, near the end of high school, got pretty but still acted insecure.A.S.: Well, that’s the jackpot. That’s my favorite kind of guy too. The guy that blossoms but still sees himself as the fat kid.J.A.: Al Roker.A.S.: Al Roker is the perfect example.J.A.: He lost the weight, but he’s still nice to you.A.S.: Because he remembers.J.A.: At what age did you become aware of comedians?A.S.: Really young, when we would watch the Muppets. And then I discovered stand-ups. I loved Gilda. I was so drawn to funny chicks. I remember watching Rita Rudner and George Carlin and Richard Pryor. My dad must’ve had it on. And Letterman.J.A.: How old were you?A.S.: Ten or younger. Stand-up trickled in over the years, but it wasn’t until I was in college, early college, where I discovered Margaret Cho and got really into it.J.A.: At what point did you think, Stand-up is something I can do?A.S.: After college. I was 23.J.A.: What did it take for you to think, O.K., I’m going to try this? Because it’s a crazy leap. The need to show up at an open mike—to even write your first joke. I was a lunatic about it. I was trying to write those jokes at 12.A.S.: How old were you when you got up for the first time?J.A.: Seventeen. I had wanted to do it really badly since 14, but I was afraid to admit it to anybody.A.S.: My experience was like this: I was in an abusive improv troupe after college. This guy set it up to get 50 bucks a month from each of us, but it was not really improv—it was a crazy, schizophrenic, delusional situation. I went one night to see one of the girls do stand-up at Gotham, Bring Your Show. It was like at six P.M., and she was bombing. Everyone was bombing. I thought, I want to try this because I’m not digging the improv, but I like it when I say something and I get a laugh.J.A.: That’s interesting. Because it’s not about being inspired by watching someone murder. It’s like: Oh, this is as bad as it gets. And I can do better.A.S.: I still think that all the time. It’s not that I feel like what I’m doing is so amazing, but it’s pretty good compared to what other people are doing. So that same week, I was walking past the club, and it was my birthday, and I was like, I’m from New York, so I can get people in the seats. I had three hours to prepare.J.A.: You wrote it in one day?A.S.: I wrote it in two hours.J.A.: How did you do?A.S.: Pretty good.J.A.: Do you remember any of it?A.S.: I have a tape of it. I remember it. I talked about how skywriting annoys me. Don’t you find that when you talk about your early jokes, even though you know they were bad, you’re still trying to sell them? Like, I still want you to think this is funny shit, but I know it’s not. Anyway, I talked about skywriting, how it’s annoying and it fades and you can never read it. I was like, If somebody proposed to me that way, I’d be like, Fuck you. And so like, this summer, do me a favor, keep it at eye level or whatever. So horrible. But it went O.K., I think. People came up to me and asked how long I’d been doing it, which suggested that maybe I could do this if I wanted.J.A.: What were you doing for a living back then?A.S.: Waiting tables at Michael Jordan’s Steakhouse.J.A.: Trying to get acting work?A.S.: Yeah, auditioning. But one day this woman came into the restaurant and she really liked me. She was like, I’m going to hook you up with my agent. So I went in and I did a one-act play to audition for the agent, and he was like, You’re pretty mediocre, and I have too many girls like you that are better than you.J.A.: That happened to me and I never acted again. Do you think you have a much different experience, as a woman on the road, than guys are having?A.S.: Not in terms of the audience or anything, but in terms of fun? Yeah. Like, I’ve never hooked up with somebody after a show.J.A.: I did.A.S.: You did?J.A.: Once. It lasted eight seconds and I looked in her eyes as she realized what a horrible mistake she had made. And then we had sex again, and this time it lasted six seconds, and she really looked like—if she became a nun after that, it wouldn’t have shocked me.A.S.: Oh my God.J.A.: And I thought, I’m never going to do this again. This is terrible.A.S.: I’ve had one one-night stand in my life.J.A.: And yet people see your act as very sexual.A.S.: Right.J.A.: So is that a character you’re playing?A.S.: Well, it’s a part of me, too. Because the stuff you’re copping to and the saddest, worst moments of your life—that’s the stuff people connect to and appreciate. In reality, I’ve almost always had a boyfriend. Every year, if I have like one or two sexual experiences, they might both be hilarious.J.A.: And then they add up, and people think, She must be doing this all the time. I have maybe six experiences from my whole life. But if I go onstage and tell three of them, it sounds like I have hundreds of them.A.S.: Right. But you can get up there and do that, and you’re not the Sex Guy. But if I do it, I am. So I just embraced it.J.A.: But those experiences are funny. That’s the thing. Your worst sexual experience can be so humiliating and hilarious, both in movies and in stand-up. They’re always the best stories. A guy who has got a lot of terrible sex stories is the best dinner companion of all time.Not too long ago, you gave a speech at Gloria Steinem’s birthday party. Did people have a strong reaction to that?A.S.: Yeah. I got asked to do a monologue the year before for some event—I can’t remember what it was called. It was me and all these tiny actresses, and I just felt like I needed to joke about it because we looked like an evolution chart or something. I felt like a big, blonde monster, standing with a bunch of girls who had never seen semen before. But my speech really came off strong because I was actually talking about some real things, bad things that had happened to me—and the other speeches weren’t as hard. And so Gloria asked me to come talk the following year at her birthday party. So I wrote this speech about losing all my self-esteem in college, and a kind of painful night that I tried my best to make funny.J.A.: What about it do you think connected with people?A.S.: Just the feeling of losing all your confidence and feeling like you’re worthless because of how other people are treating you. And then having to realize that the real issue is actually how you’re treating yourself. I think that’s something most people have experienced, feeling like they don’t deserve love.J.A.: Do you ever go back and read your own speech, to cheer yourself up?A.S.: Yeah, and my friends will quote it to me.J.A.: That must be a big change, to go from doing stand-up, just trying to get laughs, to realizing that people are paying attention to what you’re saying. And that they’re moved and inspired by certain things you say. It’s not just about being funny.A.S.: I’m taking this responsibility seriously. I’m looking at it as an opportunity. What do I want to say? What have I really learned? Where am I, really? I’m not interested in just saying something for shock value anymore. I do feel more of a weight about the message that I’m sending because I know what it’s like to be on the other end of that and I don’t want to be in denial about what success means—and like how many people I’m reaching now. I want to make people feel better.

 4 ) 重口味包装下的小清新

有好久没有这么笑过了。

除去片子本身的原因,影院里观众们互相传染的情绪,到影院得以专注的空间,都是让我能够笑得起劲的因素。

片子本身,讲述的是一个很传统小清新的男欢女爱的故事。

其实有些俗套的爱情片套路:一个下定决心无心进入婚姻的女强人,给无数男士灭灯以后,终于见到了Mr. Right的故事。

不过,喜剧片,有一个基本过关的内核也就够了。

本片最出彩的,在于其喜剧功底。

不同于很多粗制滥造的喜剧片,Trainwreck的喜剧元素,是能够看到编剧的用心的,是有一种智慧感在里面的。

后来一查,果然,女一号Amy就是编剧。

一个编剧出演的电影,自然会很认真负责的把事情做好。

一号肌肉男友,是一个著名的美国摔角运动员John Cena。

Amy和他滚床单的时候,想要一些浪漫的东西,于是让Cena说一些sexy的语言来调动一下情绪。

结果,Cena一番拒绝后,被迫开口,说出来的句子……我不愿意剧透,但影院里的观众都笑趴下了,我反正快把旁边的椅子扶手捶断了。

后来Cena在影院里和Amy看电影的时候,跟后排的观众发生口角,吵架也吵得观众们锤地:You know, you are an asshole! You know what I do to an asshole? I LICK it.男一号的死党闺蜜,居然找来了NBA球星勒布朗詹姆斯。

更让我吃惊的,他竟然不是打酱油的,是铁骨铮铮的男二号!

最让我吃惊的,他竟然演得不错!

这就好像,突然有一天刘翔跑去参加快乐男声,别人说你一个跨栏的过来凑什么热闹,结果他得了全国总冠军,靠实力的。

老詹我是今年才彻底迷上的,打到全国总决赛,最后错失总冠军。

一路看下来,对老詹的死忠程度可谓是与日俱增。

所以,看他演喜剧,我自然入眼。

老詹飙戏最好的一段,要算是篮球场边他和女主Amy的一番对话,劝她要和自己闺蜜在一起。

你想想,一身腱子肉,棱角分明,虎背熊腰,牛高马大的一个篮球巨星,问Amy:你看天空的白云,会看到他的笑脸吗?

你听微风的呼吸,会感受到他的心跳吗?

然后,Amy盯着他,用尽力气的问:啥?

然后,空气凝固了。

镜头上方疑似有乌鸦飞过。

老詹萌萌哒的样子,真让人恨不得上去亲一口。

说说缺点。

本片估计是有NBA的赞助,所以还有大量的桥段,最后一幕也是在篮球场结束的。

不过,也不是每一个篮球主题植入都那么成功。

最后一幕的啦啦队热舞感觉挺多余。

另外,女主工作杂志社的设定过于粗暴了,拿fucking作为主题的笑点,感觉过于低端了,Amy小同学有赶工嫌疑哦。

让我看得这么开心,这些小瑕疵我都不计较了,五星!

 5 ) 曼哈顿娘们的支离与破碎

从来没有看过Shumer的秀,不过小资们对其普遍好评。

这个姑娘的外貌,就和她女老板对她的点评如出一辙。

不丑,不艳,不美,不骚。

于是,对于这个妹子能放倒如此多的男人,除了伶俐的口舌,还得要“伶俐的口舌”了。

身材还是不错的,不过我还是不禁对此女几十年如一日的漏逼短裙侧目。

这个片子吧,想走小清新来着,却被MBA给活生生毁了一逼。

明显的整个故事像是几个写着不同风格内容的写手生拼硬凑起来的。

如果去掉打篮球的货和家庭故事,此电影就是Shumer版的欲望都市。

如果去掉谈恋爱和篮球,这就是一部关于一个被大麻和酒精困扰一生的放浪女子的故事片。

如果去掉篮球和滥用,这就是一部关于从无名小店biu的直升Vouge的立志电影。

如果去掉篮球,剩下的我都能接受。。。

所有关于纽约的电影,如果与情欲挂钩,基本是以女性视角切入一个浪漫的故事的。

不过,如果去掉浪漫,我只看到对女性社会地位的不平等。

我不是女权主义,可是为什么美女,玉女,修女,浪女,谈得总是律师,医师,什么师。

好莱坞男人狭隘的眼光。

仿佛上城的那些几十楼高的公寓,只要打个炮且打对炮,你就能拥有一个美丽结局。

结局是,你们到城外买别野,那种渗透着英国殖民时期浓浓的银子为的建筑。

一丝不苟的花园,美丽的白人小孩儿,朝九晚五的丈夫,家里做着家务考虑买几千刀一条的浴巾的老婆。

噢糕,如果生活如此简单就好了。

突然让我想到了Gone Girl。

那个故事被写的如此惨烈,恐怕与女主角变态和男猪角渣关系没有太大。

那是因为,少有的一次在荷里活的电影史上,女性被赋予了智慧,手段和财富;而对立的男性,只是一个大街上满地跑的蛤蟆。

不是说Shumer只是一个大波浪女,这个片子我嗅到了她的诚意,却没有看到好的作品。

Shumer自己本来就是一个纽约客,生于纽约,曾经家庭富裕,是英式别墅门口的那个白人小孩儿。

可惜后来家门落魄,她也品尝了做轮渡,挤地铁,做平凡人而已。

想要做一个witty的人不难,只不过搞fuck和大姨妈的笑,还只能属下流。

最后的再次吐槽NBA。

你们这个德行简直就像惠特你休斯顿过气后去中国巡回演出的状态。

我已经没什么可以呕吐了。。。

 6 ) LBJ出镜挺多的啊

LBJ出镜挺多的啊,难道艾米·舒默的个人经历真是和这群运动明星紧密相连的?

女主长得丑不用说了,男主咋说也是个专业演员,总感觉这两人做搭档不伦不类。

片子的说服力太差。

结构太松散完全没必要整俩小时,笑点主要集中在运动员身上倒是让人没有想到,笑料够黄够损,从自我放纵到自我救赎的正能量主线也足够清晰,但是,颜值太差了。

 7 ) 为什么它如此好笑

为什么这个片子好笑:1.性总是最好的段子。

比如:在杂志选题的时候讨论吃大蒜是否会导致男人的精液味道不同等;比如男女做爱的时候要求说一些黄段子之类的。

2.镜头或者情节的重复使用:开场3分钟,amy和若干个男人上床并送走他们,这个片段当中,无数个男人站在门口向amy告别。

一个镜头还好,但若干个这样的场景被快速、大数量地重复,就变得很好笑起来。

一个人不断地说谎,说一个谎就被人揭穿;再说一个谎又被揭穿,直到他不得不说出真相。

这个过程当中他可以瞎编一些谎言和根本就是胡扯的东西。

3.夸张的人物设定:(1)amy的爸爸:满嘴脏话的一个老头,愤世嫉俗到好笑,四处和人斗,但心肠软。

这个时候一定要注意他的语言要风趣,否则的话一定会让观众不喜欢,一个满嘴胡话地愤青才能让人喜欢。

(2)amy的女同事,性格非常突出。

饶舌妇,叽叽喳喳,性格略胆小,喜欢附和,脑子有点不太好用,呆呆地。

(3)amy的男同事们,一个是东亚人,一个是以色列人,从外形就可以看到明显的差异化。

也是欧美喜剧片中典型的配角。

他们都很贱,都性格有明显差异而且突出。

这些人物一定都是有各自的人物小传的,所以才能够有明显的差异。

而国内的喜剧电影人物的性格特点并不明显(剩者为王当中的同事都非常脸谱化,没有任何特色,都是观众身边能够看到的人物,平庸,无趣),即使明显也只是作为一般人的明显(比如会被设定成一个男人婆-肿瘤君中的闺蜜,或者一个娇滴滴的美女-剩着为王中的熊黛林),而不是做为一个喜剧角色的那种明显。

(4)欧美喜剧片当中一般都有一个小角色,贯穿始终。

比如片中amy楼下的流浪汉,总是有金句不断。

不占太多的篇幅,但总是让观众感到映像深刻。

然后片中会有一些路人的角色,会说一些很搞笑的话,仅仅用于调节气氛。

(5)amy的夸张性格:不喜欢和一个男人有长久的发展,所以会产生各种和想和她产生长久关系的男人各种矛盾。

amy睡觉很轻,所以她和conner一起睡觉的时候会很夸张地要求他不要大声呼气,以免感到风声。

amy跟人讲话有时候也把握不好分量,会错误判断形势,所以比如一群女人一起玩游戏讲真心话大冒险,她会真的说一些很隐私的事情,以至于众人不知道说什么好。

4.夸张的台词和语言风格:比如amy在面对男性伴侣脱下裤子露出的dick时说:“your dick never ends”以表达他的dick很长。

这个台词绝对是绝无仅有的形容,而且形象得不得了。

5.尖刻嘲讽的语言风格:amy会当众嘲笑喜欢体育的人,认为他们很无聊,认为他们人格低下。

这种略带争议的台词要演员用很自信或者一开始自信但发现大家反映不太对之后的不自信来表现。

6.对比:(1)人物反应对比:开场时,amy和一个男伴提出永久分手。

男伴并没有听懂,还在一边傻傻地搞笑,说一些非常愚蠢的话,可是amy已经明确地说了他们要分手。

观众此时是明白amy的意思的,可是男伴不懂,于是观众就在一种智力优越的地位上看这个男伴在傻傻地搞笑。

这种对比就尤其让人觉得搞笑。

另外一种对比是,一个人讲了很好笑的段子,可是另外的人没有反映,这种尴尬和沉默会让观众笑翻天。

另外一种对比是,一个人讲了很长一段自己很欣赏的言论和台词,可是另外的人没有反映,把他打发走了,这也会好笑。

(2)情节上的对比:amy让男伴做爱时说脏话,男伴说了,可是说得非常没意思。

这种错位让观众觉得好笑。

amy和男友吵架,这是男友主动发起来的吵架,可是到最后,amy话多得男友睡着了。

amy最后想投篮让男友impressed,结果最后却一下子摔在了地上,这是一个极度夸张的反衬。

(3)人物身份和形象对比:比如amy和男友在电影院和另外一个人吵架,男友就说了很多很gay的攻击性的语言,观众会觉得这些话和他的身份很不相符,这就有了差异性。

一个角色可以一本正经地说一些很扯的话,形成反差,而且他自己一点都不觉得好笑。

比如amy告诉conner她没怎么吃早饭,然后她开始数自己到底吃了些什么东西,然后观众知道她其实吃了很多东西。

amy一边跟正经的说这些话,于是就有笑点了。

intern是一个在全片当中都非常文静和一本正经的人物,但是他在私密环境当中却是一个喜欢玩SM的角色,这让人觉得很好笑。

7.其他一个人自己突然无意识地说了一些很愚蠢的话,他自己都没有意识到。

等他意识到了的时候又会嘲笑自己。

在一个场景结束的时候,需要一个人(处在这一幕当中的,或者不在这一幕当中的人)说一句很搞笑的话来结束这一幕。

比如在amy的父亲和amy的姐姐结束了一场争吵,最后姐姐离开之后,同桌吃饭的一个老头说“这个女人是你的老婆么?

”于是这个喜感就出来了。

嘲笑名人和知名商人是喜剧的一个点。

一个搞笑的段落结束的时候要很快就切掉,要造成一种意犹未尽的感觉,而不是让这个笑点慢慢消逝掉。

喜剧当中需要有有分量的悲剧,但悲剧持续的时间不宜过长,而且都要穿插喜剧的台词或者以喜剧结束。

 8 ) Hi James

去看侏罗纪的时候看到的预告片本是单纯的冲着James去的讲真 James 在里面可爱哭啊!

每套衣服都那么随意合适有风格!!!

(所以平时也要这么打扮!

答应我好吗!!

不要背你那个MCM的小包包了好吗!!!!!!

btw 我觉得唯一不好看的就是打篮球那套T恤了。。。

深度怀疑那是他自己的衣服。。。

啊哈哈哈)而且在里面也很好笑 几乎本色出演嘛虽然他自己觉得自己演的不好 但我还是很喜欢啊 啊啊啊 除了James之外没想到很喜欢这部电影 感觉是今年看到的最好的轻松型喜剧了开头处 Amy 爸爸用doll 比做恋人解释了跟妈妈离婚的原因 也顺便给Amy 灌输了“奇怪的”三观其实也不能算奇怪吧?

就是简单追求快乐 而不想settle down的感觉就像他说的那样 一辈子就跟一个玩具玩儿 想想就很悲伤啊 总感觉玩具城 就像花花世界很精彩 每个玩具都想拿起来玩儿两下但你总会遇见一个玩具 是你想要每晚都跟它睡在一起的那个玩具你会越来越喜欢它 离不开他我就有一个 花椰菜(就是ikea买的很便宜那个)虽然平时床上放着 草莓娃娃 姜饼娃娃 阿毛 小青蛙 无脸人 我都喜欢 但睡觉只会抱着 我的花椰菜好羡慕Amy遇到自己的花椰菜

 9 ) SNL风格串起来的电影。

首先哦,我是冲着Bill去的。

SNL时期,他是我最喜欢的卡司之一。

离开SNL后,就眼巴巴的期盼着他的各路电影。

首先看过的是和wiig姐崩溃姐弟,然后是和amy合作的头脑特工队,现在冲着男主的身份,又看完了两小时的爱情片。

总体来说,他的风格类似,似乎不像SNL时期给人印象深刻。

关注。

其次,女主艾米,喜欢啊。

之前只看过她在ellen秀的一些采访片段,想说怎么能有胖乎乎的这么有喜感的女孩子,看久了还能让人略有爱怜。

敢于自黑重口味的女谐星,好莱坞似乎不多。

特别是越看越性感的这种。

然后,是蒂尔达,浓烈的烟熏妆,好吧,我是完全习惯她的中性装扮,没认出来。

再然后,瓦妮莎、pete、leslie,客串出场,snl聚会吗?

再然后,森森感觉到詹姆斯的“感性”,外形和角色反差这么大,好玩。

 10 ) 大龄剩女的现代爱情生活观

懂了很多道理,却过不好这一生。

这句话有歧义,懂了很多道理,未必能照做,懂了很多道理,也未必能保证道理有用。

是在B站看的这部片,片子一开头老爸的一番说法,如果你一辈子只能跟同一个娃娃玩,你会不会玩腻,看到新的娃娃会不会更喜欢,那你怎么办。

然后就秒懂了,这个老爸玩了妈妈的闺蜜,玩了空姐,玩了服务员,玩了朋友的女朋友,玩了3P。

渣男无疑,但我心里的字幕从弹幕里飞出来,觉得他说得好有道理。

不仅是男人,女人也会烦。

艾米是不打算相信男女关系了,她放浪形骸,天天喝醉,性经验多得可以写教科书。

与其说这是来自父亲的感情伤害,还不如说基因遗传的作用更大。

总而言之,她是一个标准的都市女人,说到底不是不相信爱情,是不敢相信。

她觉得相夫教子很无聊,孩子很无聊,有个老公也很无聊。

是的,像我们一样,还没有经历过生活,已经有了生活观。

如果继续这样下去,其实不知道生活会走向何方。

大龄剩女常常是这样的,设置了诸多限制跟原则,隔开的岂止是别人,还限制了自己。

有的时候作天作地,搂着睡太烦人,工作的时候不想接他电话,约会也不要太频繁。

还有就是绝不妥协,或者偶尔妥协的时候,拉个臭脸,告诉你老娘就是不爽。

男主真是撞到克星了,所谓克星就是你爱她比较多,隐约觉得不对劲,架不住脾气好地一昧忍让。

其实爱她什么呢,就是最怕说不清楚,看第一眼的时候就发了懵。

本片配角阵容也非常强大,靠着他们完成了几乎所有的笑料,蒂尔达女神演神经兮兮的上司,女人到了某个年纪,要么走向家庭生活,要么越变越神经病。

勒布朗詹姆斯,跟男主形同闺蜜,坐在场边问女主你到底爱不爱他,反差萌得一塌糊涂。

结果当然是皆大欢喜,因为这是一部轻松爱情喜剧。

男主并没有你叫我滚,对不起,我滚远了。

而是她想你时,就跳着啦啦队舞去看你,跟你说我爱你。

一切都很梦幻,在NBA的场子里,在众朋友、陌生人的面前,确认爱情,虐死单身狗。

可是在现实里,我们都理性得不得了。

我们不妥协,相信爱情,却不信会发生在自己身上。

不做一点点努力,因为怕失败。

有过亲密感,再失去,我们都知道这个过程何其艰辛。

有个朋友前两天来看我,说你就多睡几个,怕什么,睡到一个对的就成了。

这个过程也许很长,也许很短,但是也别抱太大希望,顺其自然。

道理是蛮简单,然而生活好难。

《生活残骸》短评

电影拍得很笨拙,这不是贬义词,也就是说拍得很真诚,但不够聪明,也不够轻巧,但不讨人烦,这对类型片来说很重要。

7分钟前
  • 华盛顿樱桃树
  • 还行

再桀骜不驯戏梦生活的妹子也总有收心的一天,要么碰着所谓真命天子,要么事业遭遇打击,片中则二者皆有。话说回来,绝大多数自己作死的人都不会有这样的团圆结果,把中年chick flick电影当成生活的,感情大多都难得善终 #肌肉男的dirty talk是“中国是个很重要的国家”LOL#

9分钟前
  • davekozg
  • 还行

哈哈哈前一大半真的好好笑梗好多啊,Rhapsody in Blue出来笑得我差点一口水喷出来,全程都带着Amy特有的略带尴尬的自嘲,可真拍太长了而且结局完全不能接受,感觉她要酷得多才对。客串都挺有意思,LeBron吃饭算账那里太逗了。

14分钟前
  • Lycidas
  • 还行

甜~~~

18分钟前
  • uma y
  • 还行

最后一场一出,就知道这还是个Apatow片

23分钟前
  • 11
  • 较差

剧情惊喜不多,观感很舒服,台词巧妙,感情自然,风趣而非下流。Amy 完美carry了角色,多个名人的互动如同彩蛋,赞一下LeBron,演技之成熟完全不像第一次演戏,Tilda Swindon又一次彻底融入角色。喜欢对于八卦变味的Journalism的讽刺,运动医生很伟大。

24分钟前
  • Sevens
  • 推荐

简单幼稚的青春剧,毫无特色。就是作。

28分钟前
  • 冬季向日葵
  • 还行

你到底装了多少部这样的电影在你的脑里

30分钟前
  • Magus
  • 推荐

烂片

34分钟前
  • 光年‖影视歌三栖民工
  • 很差

现在的喜剧爱情片,把原来的男混蛋改成女混蛋,一开始很讨厌这位艾米舒默女士,但到了片子后面发现丫还是挺可爱挺搞得,不像那种奶茶婊绿茶婊,全片谈不上好看,但也不算太烂,周六夜场那男的完全配角脸,太猥琐也找不到特点,现在居然也翻身上位了,蒂妖现在到处打酱油,一出场就好笑,死跟棒子走!

36分钟前
  • ★冰凌宫★
  • 较差

3.5 虽然黄爆的喜剧这年头已经算常见,但凭着一众SNL卡司以及黄金客串的精彩搭配,真的能从头笑到尾,当然家庭温情也一并照顾令人感动!男女主角都不算养眼,却在各种滑稽的故事里认真的谈恋爱,好评!看到片尾才知道那是真的LeBlanc本人,我这个体育白痴啊……

41分钟前
  • 埃蘭迪爾
  • 推荐

4.5/10.完全是为了看LBJ,然后看完之后也只记住了他和小斯和约翰塞纳

44分钟前
  • 老Ben蘇
  • 较差

女主角有一种特殊的亲和力,好好笑

45分钟前
  • 圣墟
  • 推荐

很俗套的爱情喜剧。差点没认出蒂尔达·斯文顿。

50分钟前
  • 帕拉
  • 较差

Elton John和Billy Joel是最棒的,太喜欢这句台词了!!结局响起Uptown Girl和A Matter Of Trust真的感动哭,刚好在看之前聊天的时候提到Uptown Girl,没想到电影里刚好有这首歌呜呜呜!

52分钟前
  • FLYPIG
  • 推荐

最后球场那段看的我又哭又笑然后大哭了一场,每个渴望爱又自卑的胖女孩把自己的生活搞的一团糟这不就是我么,好的电影让你想到自己。

53分钟前
  • 阿囡
  • 推荐

过半了才意识到谁是蒂尔达斯文顿

54分钟前
  • SJ
  • 推荐

其实这是非常有趣的一个故事啊!但是!为什么要本人来演?!她太出戏了好嘛!

56分钟前
  • 阿底
  • 还行

女主角的长相真是让人难入戏

58分钟前
  • ellie..fish
  • 较差

找一部有始有终的喜剧怎么就这么难呢!就前半部分还有点意思...

1小时前
  • 同志亦凡人中文站
  • 还行