Posté le: Jeu 04 Jan 2007 - 18:08 Sujet du message: Re: A
Nagios a
écrit:
Je connais que le
chinois
J'ai un BAC +6 en chinois
puis les amerlok parlent trop vite et bouffent tous les mots quand ils mettent
pas des fuck partout
Tu comptes nous faire gober que le chinois est + simple à comprendre que
l'anglais ?
Je n'ai aucune licence en anglais, aucun diplome d'anglas ou autre chose,
juste mon Bac S Mention Bien et pourtant, je comprend parfaitement 70 à 80% de
l'anglais ! _________________ Evolution de l'audience de 24 au fil des saisons : http://www.audiencesusa.com/article-24384572.html
>> www.AudiencesUSA.com <<
Inscrit le: 07 Fév 2004 Messages: 950 Localisation: A la Cellule Anti-Terroriste de Los Angeles
Posté le: Jeu 04 Jan 2007 - 18:31 Sujet du message:
Merci Catilina.
Je trouve que c'est le meilleur et le plus interessant extrait.Je comprend
pourqoui les journalistes ont dit que c'était plus profond _________________ Ira Gaines : Sois tu es mort ou soit tu ne l'es pas je vais te montrer
Mason : Partout ou vous passer Jack on compte des cadavres
Posté le: Jeu 04 Jan 2007 - 21:25 Sujet du message:
Boby c'était de l'humour pour le chinois
cf Saison 5
Serieusement je comprends aussi l'anglais aller à 60 % surtout l'ecrit
Mais je suis trop feneant alors je prefere même regarder les versions
Françaises même si des fois les traductions sont pas toujours top
Inscrit le: 01 Nov 2005 Messages: 498 Localisation: Valentigney dans le doubs (25)
Posté le: Jeu 04 Jan 2007 - 21:55 Sujet du message:
Et ben et ben en voyant cet extrait tout ce que je peux dire cet qu'il est
magnifique et que cette saison 6 promet de + en + et devient extremement
difficile a attendre quand on voit cette discussion entre thomas lennox et karen hayes on dit
chapeau il joue vraiment bien leur role et sont d'exellent acteurs de qualité
rien que pour cette scène.
Alors on n'imagine meme pas le reste et ça parle de camp de concentration et
de terme raciale bref ça augure que du tout bon ça et une intrigue dramatique
et pleine d'enjeu qui s'annonce il me tarde de voir ça et très vite jen peux
plus d'attendre j-10 !!! _________________
[mon adresse msn www.jackbauerleboss@hotmail.fr]
Posté le: Jeu 04 Jan 2007 - 22:31 Sujet du message:
ELISA24 a
écrit:
tony almeida1250 a
écrit:
Merci Catilina.
Je trouve que c'est le meilleur et le plus interessant extrait.Je comprend
pourqoui les journalistes ont dit que c'était plus
profond
En effet, la communauté musulmanne des USA (et d'ailleurs aussi) va peut être
s'y retrouver..
En tous cas, ça peut donner de beaux débats
Boby a
écrit:
J'hésite entre regarder
les 4 premiers à la suite, ou à faire 2 fois 2 épisodes 2 jours de suite.
Cruel dilemme
Car 4 inédits à la suite, ça fait bcp qd même
Moi comme d'hab, je vais ronger mon frein jusqu'au 12/13 et après je me lance
!!
Tous à vos magnetoscopes numériques et autres moyens pour enregistrer et nous
faire partager la sasion 6 (pour ceux qui n'ont pas la chance de recevoir la
Fox)
Inscrit le: 18 Avr 2004 Messages: 6501 Localisation: A l'intérieur de mon sac
Posté le: Jeu 04 Jan 2007 - 23:58 Sujet du message:
ELISA24 a
écrit:
tony almeida1250 a
écrit:
Merci Catilina.
Je trouve que c'est le meilleur et le plus interessant extrait.Je comprend
pourqoui les journalistes ont dit que c'était plus
profond
En effet, la communauté musulmanne des USA (et d'ailleurs aussi) va peut être
s'y retrouver..
En tous cas, ça peut donner de beaux débats
Mais si introduire cette intrigue avec les musulmans c'est juste un moyen pour
corriger le tir de la saison 4 ça ira pas très loin...
Puis on va vite comprendre que d'autres terroristes non-musulmans sont
derrière ça ( dans le cas contraire, le personnage joué par McNicols aurait
raison et il y aurait contradiction du message en jeu ). _________________ Fan-fiction Operation Crepuscule:Terminée
Fan-fiction Operation Aurore Boréale:Terminée
Fan-fiction Opération Eclipse : Terminée
Fan-fiction Opération Sombres Soleils: Episode 5 disponible
Posté le: Ven 05 Jan 2007 - 6:09 Sujet du message:
Nouvelle Review du Season Premiere par Stephen King :
Citation:
The
Pop of King
'24': So Good It's Scary
Even longtime viewers will be spooked by the new season's surprisingly real
take on terrorism
All About
24
By Stephen King
Most viewers of 24 will want to know one thing above all others: Is the
upcoming season of Fox's groundbreaking experiment in serial TV (father of
Lost, grandpappy of Heroes and Jericho) as good as last year? Let me put it to
you this way: There are more thrills and suspense in the first four hours than
most series can pack into a single season. Or an entire run of show, for that
matter. I got those four episodes from EW Central Command and planned to dole
them out over the course of maybe a week. Instead I ended up watching all of
them that same night. Day 6 (at least so far) is like a book you can't put
down...even though there are times when you may want to.
The reason is simple enough. This time the story spun out by Joel Surnow,
Howard Gordon, and their co-conspirators seems, if not real, then dismayingly
possible. Season 5, distinguished by Gregory Itzin as President Slimeball (and
let's not forget Jean Smart as his long-suffering, screw-loosey wife), was
almost extinguished by the creaking plot. Sentox? Really? It doesn't sound
like nerve gas; it sounds like something you buy at the drugstore to combat
athlete's foot or hide those embarrassing facial blemishes.
This time the threat — and no, I'm not going to tell
you what it is — seems too plausible. When I got to the shocker that ends
episode 4, I could understand Jack Bauer's expression of disbelief; it's a
perfectly human reaction to what has just happened. And yet at the same time
I'm sitting in my office chair and thinking, This could really happen.
And at some point, it probably will. I suppose my reaction was intensified by
having just finished Nelson DeMille's excellent novel Wild Fire, which deals
with a similar scenario, but mostly it was that clear and persuasive sense of
plausibility. 24 doesn't always achieve that, but when it does, it's the best
thing on TV. Really, no one does the old ''We're surrounded by enemies!'' bit
better than Fox. Bill O'Reilly's going to love this baby.
24 is a perfect example of why some serial TV works and some doesn't. The
audience will come along for the ride, but it requires certain things as a
quid pro quo. One is an element of believability (which ABC's Invasion never
supplied). Another is what producers sometimes call ''a clear through-line.''
What this high-toned bit of jargon actually means is simplicity (NBC's
Kidnapped threw that out in the first five minutes of its abortive run).
Another is a high emotional temperature (which ABC's The Nine managed for
exactly one week before lapsing into soap opera torpidity). Continuing stories
have to run hot. How 24 has managed this kind of heat for six seasons is
beyond me.
Last — and here's the genius part — continuing series must provide some degree
of closure; the audience must feel they are getting somewhere. One of the
reasons Lost may have suffered in the ratings this season (although suffering
in TV is relative, and many struggling shows would kill to have Lost's
ratings) is because it somehow misplaced that sense of things rushing toward
some sort of conclusion. Even Fox's Prison Break (a column on this wonderful
and hilarious show is forthcoming) provides that sense of closure; at the end
of the first season, the main characters broke out of prison (well, duh). Now
that the actual prison break's over, season 2 should be titled Show Me the
Money.
I would argue that 24 is a genuine New Thing Under the Sun, not really a
serial at all, but the world's first überseries. Each season is, in effect, a
24-week ''episode'' in the adventures of Jack Bauer...and while we're on the
subject of Jack, let's not forget Kiefer Sutherland, who is now probably the
best male actor on TV (although young Mr. Skeet Ulrich from Jericho is a
comer).
24 also remains fresh, I think, because it is regularly watered by the blood
of supporting characters — the sort who used to be considered eternal. This
grisly but effective ritual began with the murder of Jack's wife, Teri Bauer
(Leslie Hope), in season 1 and reached its apogee last year, when writers and
producers knocked off lovable teddy bear Edgar Stiles (Louis Lombardi). And
just when you thought there was no one else worth mourning...along comes
another of these shockers this year.
Is 24 my idea of perfection in long-form TV? Indeed not. Just the most
successful so far. That doesn't protect it from the occasional loopy plot
twist (Kim Bauer and the cougar, case closed), the rather more frequent detour
into the TV equivalent of Disney World (I couldn't believe who's president
this time), or the sense — it usually sets in between episodes 16 and 20 —
that the writers are stretching their material until it's almost thin enough
to read a newspaper through. There's also a queasily gleeful subtext to 24
that suggests, ''If things are this bad, why, I guess we can torture anybody
we want! In fact, we have an obligation to torture in order to protect the
country! Hooray!'' Yet Jack Bauer's face — increasingly lined, increasingly
haggard — suggests that extreme measures eventually catch up with the human
soul.
One note to 24 writers and producers: Mary Lynn Rajskub (sulky as ever, but
looking remarkably pretty this year) is still one of the best things about the
show. So let me close by doing my best John Wayne imitation: ''If ya hurt the
little lady, you're gonna answer to me.''
And I mean it.
_________________ Jack Bauer is not the only man who can do the job ! Put someone else in charge !