Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Tiger Tiger is an IMAX® conservation adventure film, in the tradition of White Mountain Films’s highly-praised Shackleton’s Antarctic Adventure and Roving Mars. The story follows conservation legend Alan Rabinowitz as he tracks the wildest and least-known remaining tiger population on Earth through the Sundarbans, an immense belt of mangrove forest around the Bay of Bengal.

  2. 9 lug 2015 · di Tsui Hark. con Hanyu Zhang, Tony Ka Fai Leung, Kenny Lin. Quattro anni fa, con Flying Swords of Dragon Gate, Tsui Hark ha scoperto un nuovo giocattolo: il 3D. Era il suo primo esperimento con quel genere di riprese, non era scontato che andasse bene e invece, tutto sommato, pur con qualche dubbio su alcuni aspetti, ne è venuto fuori ...

  3. The Taking of Tiger Mountain è un film di Hong Kong/Cina del 2014 scritto (insieme a diversi collaboratori) e diretto dal maestro Tsui Hark che riesce ad incantare come sempre lo spettatore aggiudicandosi, meritatamente, il premio al miglior regista sia agli Hong Kong Film Critics Society Award, e soprattutto agli Hong Kong Films Award (due premi molto importanti, edizioni 2015).

  4. 25 gen 2016 · Yang volunteers to infiltrate Tiger Mountain Fortress, and 203 reluctantly agrees. After being attacked by a Siberian tiger in the forest, Yang is captured by Lord Hawk’s men and taken to the fortress. Posing as Hu Biao, Big Stick’s horse master, Yang gives Lord Hawk the Advance Map and is awarded the post of Colonel of the Security Brigade.

  5. Like these films, The Taking of Tiger Mountain 3D is a very irreverent take on Chinese history, populated by outlandish villains and ever-increasing layers of stylized artificiality. What begins as a snowy war tale soon becomes something of a fantasy film, complete with garish prosthetics and implausible derring-do.

  6. 2 gen 2015 · Tiger Mountain 3D opens in present-day New York City, of all places, with a group of young expats gathering for a little Christmastime karaoke in Chinatown.A number from the 1970 film version of ...

  7. Tiger Mountain also offers impressive use of 3D with plenty of showy moments including slowed-down Matrix-like camera moves plus knives and grenades flying towards the audience. But Tsui also uses the 3D for layered perspectives, e.g., the initial railway station shootout, with jutting steel rails that intrude at every depth level, or a climactic chase down a long hallway.