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HDTV | 1280x720 | .MKV/AVC @ 3576 Kbps | 1 h 52 min
Audio: English AC3 384 kbps, 2 channels | Subs: English
Genre: Documentary
Disastrous hurricanes. Widespread droughts and wildfires. Pervasive heat. And extreme rainfall. It is hard not to conclude that something's up with the weather. And many scientists agree this trend in our weather is not just a coincidence. It's the result of the weather machine itself - our climate - changing, becoming hotter, more erratic. Climate change is arguably the defining challenge of our time, yet widespread misunderstanding and misinformation has hampered the public's ability to understand the science and address the issue. NOVA will cut through the confusion and help define the way forward. Why do scientists overwhelmingly agree that our climate is changing, and that human activity is causing it? How will it affect us through the weather we experience, and when? And what will it take to bend the trajectory of planetary warming toward more benign outcomes? Join scientists around the globe on a quest to better understand the workings of the weather and climate machine we call Earth, and discover how they are finding that we can be resilient - even thrive - in the face of enormous change.
Download size: 3.13 GB
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Won 3 Oscars, 1 Golden Globe, 5 BAFTA Film Awards with other 12 more
1080p BDRip | mkv | x265 HEVC (10 bits) @ 3197 Kbps, 23.976 FPS | 1920 x 1080 | 1h 57min
Audio: 2.0 English DTS-HD MA @ 2114 Kbps/DTS Core @ 1509 Kbps, 24 bits | Subtitle: English
Genres: Drama, Romance | Country: UK
Director: James Ivory (1 BAFTA Film Award for Best Picture)
Writers: E.M. Forster (novel), Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (1 Oscar for Best Screenplay)
Stars: Maggie Smith (1 Golden Globe, 1 BAFTA for Best Actress), Helena Bonham Carter, Denholm Elliott
In sunny Florence, Lucy Honeychurch (Helena Bonham Carter), a young and clever upper-class Englishwoman, meets George Emerson (Julian Sands), a young and uninhibited Englishman. While taking a walk together, he unexpectedly kisses her. What she experiences during that short moment while his lips touch her lips later on forces her to begin suspecting that she might have fallen in love with him.
Lucy's mind, however, insists that her heart is playing tricks on her. Later on, without George next to her, she comes to the conclusion that a woman of her stature couldn't possibly fall in love so quickly.
A few months later, Lucy announces her engagement to Cecil Vyse (Daniel Day-Lewis), a wealthy moralist obsessed with his public image. Initially she is uncertain if she loves him, but because she feels safe with him she concludes that he is in fact the man she deserves. True love, she assumes, will come as they become more comfortable with each other.
The more time Lucy spends with Cecil, however, the more she begins to realize that they have vastly different expectations of each other. Around the same time, George reemerges together with his father (Denholm Eliot) and Lucy begins to wonder whether she should have listened to her heart instead of her mind.
The contrasts in the film are brilliant. Initially, the footage from Florence creates the impression that one would witness a beautiful story about two people who discover that they were meant to be together and then fall madly in love with each other. There is a lot of talk about feelings and passion, but the more one learns about Lucy and her world, the more one begins to realize that the film is in fact an uncompromising condemnation of the British class system and the values that define it.
Initially, the countryside also seems like the perfect place for progressive and romantic minds to coexist in peace. But this is Edwardian England and the only free-thinker around actually looks and acts a lot like a depressed eccentric struggling with impure thoughts. The gentleman who has stolen the girl he wants is also an unbearably pretentious snob who loves to prove that his opinions are always right with quotes from his favorite books.
Lucy senses that something isn't right, but instead of questioning her 'logical' mind she second-guesses her heart. She also shares her doubts and secrets with her trusted chaperon (Maggie Smith), but discovers that they were never safe with her.
The exchanges are elegant but largely meaningless. The game of manners also never stops but the plays are always the same and the players no longer seem to care about it. And because they are not willing to walk away from it, most of them look like talent-less actors rather than real people who care about their lives.
The film ends with a positive message, but one wonders whether it is in fact possible for true love and happiness to exist in Lucy's world. It just feels too sterile, too intellectually suffocating and painfully dishonest.
Director James Ivory and producer Ismail Merchant adapted E.M. Forster's popular novel together with screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala. In 1987, their film won Academy Awards for Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium, Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, and Best Costume Design.
Download size: 3.83 GB
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