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入殓师英文台词

时间:2019-09-12 21:08

求<<入殓师>>经典台词

不好意思,没有日文的。

全世界的城镇都是我们的新居,一边演奏一边旅行,一起走吧。

这是我求婚时的话,但 现实是严峻的。

不,我在早点发现自己才能的极限就好了。

我打算迎来人生最大的转折点,但卖掉大提琴时,很不可思议,觉得很轻松。

觉得被一 直以来的束缚解放了。

自己以前坚信不移的梦想,可能根本不是梦想。

5万 10万 30万。

有真么大的差别啊。

左边的是胶合板的,接下来是金属装饰两边雕刻的,最贵的是扁柏制成的。

材料和装饰不同啊。

是啊,虽然烧起来都一样,躺在里面也一样,人一辈子买的最后一样东西,是由他人决定 的。

总觉得有点讽刺。

我到底被骗了什么?是没见母亲最后一面的惩罚么

以后究竟会怎样呢

这样想着,不知为 何想拉拉大提琴,卷进过去的回忆之中。

只是,只是想拉大提琴。

加油 加油

总觉得让人悲伤,为了死而努力,终归是一死,不用那么辛苦也可以吧。

是自然定律吧,它们天生就这样。

你经过这里是偶然吧. 是命运吧。

这种事。

让已经冰冷的人重新焕发生机,给他永恒的美丽。

这要有冷静,准确,而且要怀着温柔的情 感,在分别的时刻,送别故人。

静谧,所有的举动都如此美丽。

尚美

尚美。

尚美。

今天是她最美丽的一天—— 真的非常感谢! 我第一次看到入殓,我想自己死时一定要让他来帮忙入殓,怎么说呢,那个人和别人完全不 一样。

都传开了。

什么

怎样都好吧,你找个正经点的工作吧。

为什么不告诉我呢

说了你一定会反对的。

当然了,这种工作。

你不觉得羞耻吗

为什么要羞耻呢

因为每天会碰死人

我只想让你做普通的工作。

普通是什么啊,谁都会死的吧,我也会死,你也会死,死本身就是很平常的事。

不要找借口了,马上辞职吧,求你了。

我到现在为止都没反对过吧,你说不想拉大提琴时也是, 想回乡下时也是,我只是笑着跟着你而已。

其实,我真的很难过。

但是,因为你喜欢。

所以 只有这次,求求你,听我的吧。

我要是说不行的话。

你要一辈子做这个吗

我要回娘家,你辞职之后在来找我吧。

美香。

别碰我,肮脏

你要像那个人做的工作一样赎罪吗

你要想辞职的话,自己跟他说吧。

他就在上边。

那是我老婆,5年前死了。

夫妻总有一天会因为死亡而分别,被留下的人是很痛苦的。

把她弄 的漂漂亮亮的,送走了她。

她是我的第一个客人。

她死后我就开始做这份工作。

这个,这个也想这么说。

生物吃着其他生物生存下去,对吧。

它们倒是不同(指盆栽), 不想死的话,就要吃。

吃的话,好吃的才行。

止夫变成那样后,总是和人打架。

我没好好看过他的脸,但是看到他的笑容,我突然想起来。

啊,他 是我的孩子啊。

即使打扮成女孩子,果然还是我的孩子啊... 奶奶说过葬礼想穿长筒袜。

奶奶,拜拜。

奶奶您辛苦了。

(亲吻死者留下唇印) 哈哈哈哈哈哈哈。

孩子他爸,谢谢你。

(流泪。

) 美香。

你没收拾屋子吗

偶尔收拾一下。

说谎,一次都没收拾过。

收拾过两次。

这就不算偶尔收拾了吧。

果然我不在就是不行呢。

我也有事要告诉你。

什么

我有孩子了。

(惊喜)好厉害,我要当爸爸了吗

所以不要在过半途而废的人生了。

你的工作,可以堂堂正正地对孩子说出口吗

孩子一定会被其他孩子 欺负的。

不需要什么钱,三个人一起开心地生活就好。

(电话铃响)什么,现在就去吗

什么,我知道了,我马上就去。

这种时候,你要去工作吗

洗澡堂的老太太去世了。

(对死者)谢谢了,以后再见吧。

感叹之后,就开始一点点回忆过去。

死可能是一道门,逝去并不是终结,而是超越,走下一程,正如门 一样。

我作为看门人(火葬师),在这里送走了很多人。

说着,路上小心,总会再见的。

(按下按钮) 我丈夫是入殓师

电影《入殓师》的英文是什么

Okuribito (Departures)前者是日文的英式表达吧,不知是不是“入殓师”的意思,后者是英译片名,大概和“入殓师”无关。

其实,你直接搜索:《入殓师》只要看到关于影片的简介,英文片名也会给出的。

求入殓师的英文影评 不要百度上已经有的

I believe this movie won the Oscar for best foreign film, and it is easy to see why. The main character is Daigo, a young man who grew up playing the cello, and finally has a job with an orchestra. But it is quickly dissolved and Diago decides that he really isn't good enough to pursue a well-paying professional career. So he and his young wife move back to the smaller community he was raised in.He needs a job, and finds an advertisement for departures, which he interprets as some sort of travel booking service. He interviews and Boss offers him a job, on the spot. We find out later it was because Boss had a hunch about Daigo.But the ad was incorrect, Boss says it is for the departed, a job to prepare dead bodies for the coffin. We see, in Japanese culture, this involves a process that is performed in the home, with friends and family looking on. It involves ceremonial washing of the body, all in an elaborate choreography to keep the body itself from being exposed.Daigo gets off to a rough start, he isn't sure he wants to deal with bodies, and the stench at one home, where the person had been dead for a few days, really gets to him. Besides, he didn't even admit to his wife, Mika, what he actually did. But Diago is a natural, once he gets over the initial hurdles. He has a natural empathy for family members and a reverence for the dead. Friends and then his wife try to get him to quit, but Daigo sees his profession as something good, as it contributes to the happiness of survivors. Eventually, when a close friend dies, and Daigo performs the ceremony, everyone realizes this too and Diago's profession is finally appreciated for what it is.

《入殓师》英文怎么说

一共给你找了两篇:)Almost three decades since starring in Juzo Itami's classic The Funeral, Tsutomu Yamazaki once more shines in a tale woven around the rituals, traditions and theatre involved in Japanese death rites. The irreverence that makes Itami's classic such a delight is present here. Daigo's first day on the job playing a stiff in a DVD for the funeral business comes back to haunt him in hilarious fashion later on. However, there is also reverence, the film respectfully pointing out that the people who do this necessary but thankless task do not deserve the disdain and revulsion that their profession often attracts.Daigo loses his job as a cellist, returns to his inaka roots and stumbles into a job as an undertaker. Too ashamed to tell his wife, he slowly warms to his apprenticeship under the masterful tutelage of Sasaki. As he goes about his business, the inevitable traumas of a childhood long forgotten bubble to the surface as he goes about re-acquainting himself with the town. The conduit for the negative feelings towards his profession is Daigo's wife Mika, who takes punitive steps on discovering his new employment.desperate to find a job, he answers an ad listed under departures, which turns out to be misspelled. it was supposed to say the departed, the job pertains to dressing, washing, and putting makeup on the deceased before the funeral.it is a job that most people look down upon because you earn money when someone dies. At first Daigo, does not like his job but little by little he comes to a new understanding of it. the process of prepping the corpse is shown in detail within the context of the story, and little by little we too as an audience get sucked in. it is an incredible ceremony to witness. the undertaker handles the corpse with the utmost reverence and care, every touch of the deceased is done with care and always with perfect precision. we realized as we watch that the deceased are shown the the utmost and ultimate respect before they leave us for good. it is a beautiful and solemn act that will make you cry.there are many other subplots that all tie up at the end bringing everything full circle. watching this movie one does not feel like we are preached to yet it is powerfully effective in making us realize how every moment is precious and we should not take things for granted. so ironic, a new comprehension on life while communing with death...Screenwriter Kundo Koyama has to take credit for a script that moves along briskly, juxtaposing black farce with raw tenderness, all done seamlessly, and acutely observed. Lipstick on a corpse produces gales of laughter, and you are reminded that sometimes the best fun is had at funerals. Daigo moves towards a form of reconciliation and redemption through the promptings of those around him, and the comfort of his cello.It would be all too easy for material like this to lurch into sappy sentimentality, but the film tugs at the heartstrings without overtly manipulating its audience. Motoki has to take some plaudits for this for a performance that amuses at times but hints at deep inner turmoil at others. Hirosue is less consistent, at times indulging in the head-bobbing, giggly, saccharine sweet girlishness that is the forte of the Japanese TV drama actress. She has one line in the climactic scene of such stunning obviousness I am surprised it stayed in, but for the most part she redeems herself in the tense interactions with Motoki over their differing views on his new career. Overall, she convinces as the supportive but put-upon wife.From Kurosawa's Ikiru through The Funeral and now Okuribito, Japanese cinema has a rich vein of movies that exploit the rituals of death. How those rituals comfort us, enchant us, and see us through to a place where the pain still exists but might come to an end, is laid bare in Okuribito. It is an absorbing, moving tale, full of laughter and tears, that celebrates the intricate details of a Japanese rites of passage while laying bare their universal function. Best seen in the cinema, to get the full effect of the luscious orchestral score. 第二篇(你自己选择哈)By now almost everyone would have heard of this Japanese film Okuribito (Departures), given its win in the recent Academy Awards, clinching the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, beating the likes of crowd favourite Waltzing With Bashir, and the Palme D'or winner The Class. And now after watching it, it's no surprise really, because if I were to go tongue in cheek, it's the novelty factor, given that the Academy would never have conceived upon the notion that a film coming from Asia and filled with death, corpses and coffins, would be anything but a horror film. Seriously though, Departures have Awards written all over it, with fine acting complementing a strong story to tell.I suppose the equivalent of a casketer in local context, would be the embalmer. And it's without a doubt a profession most misunderstood, and shunned because of our innate fear of death. We choose to avoid death where it had gone, and being an embalmer would unlikely be on any kid's wish list of professions. Despite the stereotypical negative connotations, it is a profession that is quite dignified, because the professional is entrusted with the responsibility of helping the loved ones of the deceased cope with the passing on, and to help ease the pain in bringing some colour before the final journey to either the burial ground, or crematorium.Departures demystifies this profession in the Japanese context. And like all things Japanese, the process comes with an elaborate ritual of preparation, cleansing and presentation, all done with great precision, skillful grace and utmost respect for both the deceased, and the family members. The profession depicted here in the film, is one of the highest order, where we see exactly how the casketers go about their job, and the separation of duties with the undertaker.Masahiro Motoki (last seen in The Longest Night in Shanghai) stars as the lead protagonist Daigo Kobayashi, a cellist in an orchestra who dreams of going places around the world with his wife Mika (Ryoko Hirosue) in tow. Unfortunately for him, his orchestra folds and he is forced to sell his expensive white elephant since he doubts he could make his passion into a successful career. Dejected, he convinces his wife to retreat back into the small town he came from, living in the house his late mother had left behind, in order to start a new life. Little did he know when responding to a job classifieds that a typo had given him the impression he would be in a career that involves travel. The boss of the shop Ikuei Sasaki (Tsutomu Yamazaki) hires him on instinct, and as the saying goes, the rest is history.For the curious, the film is an excellent medium to showcase the profession and to do so in good light. We come to learn the craft behind the job, and the necessity of it all, be it dealing with grieving family members, or taking care of bodies that are bound for autopsies. Departures paints through Daigo's experience, the varying spectrum of emotions that one as a service provider would have to face, as we journey with him from novice level. All's not doom and gloom of course, as director Yujiro Takita paced the film with well meaning humour – again never slapstick or disrespectful – throughout the narrative.The story by Kundo Koyama also excellently portrayed Daigo's relationships with his wife and with his mentor, where the former was like a rubber band waiting to snap because of Daigo's deliberate attempts to not tell his lovely wife what he's up to for a career in order to shield her from the taboo. With the latter from whom he picks up the tools of the trade from, there's a surrogate father figure which he never had while growing up, resulting in some pent up hatred toward his dad who walked out on the family when he was young.It's an extremely moving piece of drama that doesn't get bogged down by melodrama, and I thoroughly enjoyed its themes of reconciliation, forgiveness and best of all, being a professional and serving with pride. It's a fantastically crafted film with an excellent cast all round, and shatters all taboos that come with the profession of a casketer. I know it's cliché to say this, but Departures will be a strong contender when I compile my list of top films for the year. It's been some time already where I'm equally entertained and moved by a film, and without a doubt, do not let this depart from our local cinemas before you get a chance to watch it on the big screen. Highly recommended!

英语中用什么单词表达 入殓师 这一职业

embalmer或encoffiner,望采纳

求第五人格中所有角色的语录

世界带给我的幸运。

——幸运儿黛儿一笑倾者仁心永不弃。

——医生我们最应该的,是自己。

——律师他保护了所有人,谁来保护他

——慈善家在这地狱一般的世界里,至少还有你。

——园丁魔术能给人带来快乐,但终究是假的。

——魔术师只向往小人国的神秘,也渴望巨人国的坦荡。

——冒险家他是战争遗留下来的天使。

——佣兵你和信号枪的区别,就是一个保护我,一个被我保护。

——空军希望危险来临时,我的身边不是人偶。

——机械师嘿,如果你跑的够快会发生什么

——前锋有人在受伤后一蹶不振,有人却变得更加坚韧。

——盲女门之钥永远通向真正的预言。

——祭司闻到了吗

这是忘忧之香。

——调香师让凯文绑住你的心吧。

——牛仔我喜欢在舞台上跳舞,那感觉真好。

——舞女生命即是痛苦本身。

——咒术师当愤怒到达顶点时,还有什么能阻拦你吗

——厂长请摘下痛苦的面具,我愿对你永远微笑。

——小丑小心弱势者的善良,他们只是无力践踏强者而已。

——鹿头为什么要逃走呢,是我招待不周吗。

——杰克出色的演员永远不会过气。

——蜘蛛般若化骨,红蝶陨落。

——红蝶封印即将崩坏,旧日的支配者。

——黄衣之主寄魂于伞,怨恨难消。

——宿伞之魂吾将逝去而时光永存。

——约瑟夫只能找到这么多了嘤qwq要是再找到其他角色的语录我会立即放到这里来的

跪求《入殓师》的英文影评……简单点的

《入殓师》的英文影评:This movie is unique in every way. It has a neither inspired, neither copied story about a person who carry out the encoffining of deceased people and how his life goes around with his beautiful wife at the town of his birthplace, to where he moved in after his musical career in an orchestra failed miserably, making him question his talent as a cello player. The performance of the cast, most notably Masahiro Motoki is astounding. The way he goes around his uneasy job, telling lies about his job to his wife, dealing with the memories of his father who left him at an early age makes his performance really mesmerizing. Add the beautiful story and performance with the picturesque surroundings and wonderful score, you get a movie that really deserve the Academy Award For The Best Foreign Language Film. This movie is very different from the usual horror movie coming from Japan. This movie is not boring for a single instant and will make you cry by the end of the movie.

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