Torrent details for "Distant Voices, Still Lives 1988 720p bluray YTS" Log in to bookmark
Controls:
Category:
Language:
en
Total Size:
745.6 MB
Info Hash:
7C826E79CFBE4D345DBC11B92A6D6027B3E75B44
Added By:
Added:
July 22, 2023, 5:20 p.m.
Stats:
| Update
File | Size |
---|
Thanks for rating :
zuluDROOG (3), jhp2025 (5), KingRagnar (5), PeakBadass (5), TWDGOTfan (5), LokiGOAT (5),
zuluDROOG (3), jhp2025 (5), KingRagnar (5), PeakBadass (5), TWDGOTfan (5), LokiGOAT (5),
Name
DL
Uploader
Size
S/L
Added
Title:
Runtime:
1:24:00
Hours -
Rating:
7.4
Director:
Terence Davies
Cast:
Pete Postlethwaite, Freda Dowie, Angela Walsh…
Plot:
The lives of an English working-class family are told out of order in a free-associative manner. The first part, "Distant Voices", focuses on the father's role in the family. The second part, "Still Lives", focuses on his children.
Distant Voices, Still Lives
IMDB - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0095037
NOTE
SOURCE: Distant Voices, Still Lives 1988 720p bluray YTS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GENERAL INFO
Genre: Action, Drama, Music
Director: Terence Davies
Stars: Pete Postlethwaite, Freda Dowie, Angela Walsh
Plot: The lives of an English working-class family are told out of order in a free-associative manner. The first part, "Distant Voices", focuses on the father's role in the family. The second part, "Still Lives", focuses on his children.
Included subtitles
English
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COVER
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MEDIAINFO
The second film in Terence Davies's autobiographical series ('Trilogy', 'The Long Day Closes') is an impressionistic view of a working-class family in 1940s and 1950s Liverpool, based on Davies's own family. The first part, 'Distant Voices', opens with grown siblings Eileen (Angela Walsh), Maisie (Lorraine Ashbourne) and Tony (Dean Williams), and their mother (Freda Dowie) arranged in mourning clothes before the photograph of their smiling father (Pete Postlethwaite). Soon after, the family poses in a similar tableau, but for a happier occasion - Eileen's wedding. While relatives sing at her reception, Eileen hysterically grieves for her dad, and recalls happy times of her youth. Tony and Maisie's memories, however, are more troubled. Davies intermingles and contrasts scenes like the family peacefully lighting candles in church with the brutal man beating his wife and terrorizing his young children. In 'Still Lives', set (and filmed) two years later, the siblings are settled in life, but not all happily. For Eileen, relief from her drab existence comes only when singing at the pub. With his skillfully composed frames and evocative use of music in place of dialogue, Davies creates a lovely, affecting photo album of a troubled family wrestling with the complexity of love.—Anonymous