Sección dedicada al cine experimental. Largometrajes, cortos, series y material raro, prácticamente desconocido o de interés muy minoritario.
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by_MaRio
- Mensajes: 993
- Registrado: Mié 30 Abr, 2003 02:00
- Ubicación: León
Mensaje
por by_MaRio » Mié 13 Oct, 2004 21:15
Publicada por
Danidin en Fileheaven —junto a
Caravaggio—:
imdb fileheaven
VIDEO:
Resolution: 640x384 (1.66:1)
Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Codec: XviD
bitrate: 1256 kbps
AUDIO:
Sampling rate: 32000 Hz
Codec: MP3 VBR
bitrate: 96 kbps
Language: English
Length: 1:11:55
Subtitles: There are only Japanese subtitles on the dvd, I'll release them if someone asks for them.
Wittgenstein.(1993).DVDRip.XviD.DANIDIN.avi
Danidin escribió:ENJOY!
Otras copias
Preferibles, la de Danidin está entrelazada.
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Arcadia_Ego
- Mensajes: 1254
- Registrado: Jue 27 Mar, 2003 01:00
- Ubicación: Madriles
Mensaje
por Arcadia_Ego » Mar 09 Nov, 2004 16:50
Witt por mi parte.
Sin subs.
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bluegardenia
- Mensajes: 6128
- Registrado: Sab 11 Oct, 2003 02:00
- Ubicación: El Páramo del Espanto
Mensaje
por bluegardenia » Dom 17 Jul, 2005 21:02
Un nuevo ripeo para Wittgenstein
, lástima que sigue sin unos subtítulos a los que agarrarse:
Scylla en Fileheaven
Subtítulos en castellano (sincronización de
dorn1).
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Persona
- Mensajes: 409
- Registrado: Mié 08 Sep, 2004 02:00
- Ubicación: Madrid
Mensaje
por Persona » Jue 18 Ago, 2005 23:09
y Wittgenstein sigue sin aparecer... buah buah... en mi facultad lo que tienen es un VHS que a pesar de que en la ficha pusiera que traía subs carece de ellos. Si alguien tuviera acceso al dvd (que por lo que veo existe, y eso que no lo encuentro ni en Amazon ni en ningún lado) podría conseguir los subtítulos. Nunca habría traducido nada con tanto gusto!.
Saludos!
“Qué mala suerte, si esto le puede pasar a cualquiera”.
Alfonso XIII a Douglas Fairbanks sobre el caso Arbuckle-Rappese.
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canaguayo
- Mensajes: 734
- Registrado: Mié 08 Sep, 2004 02:00
- Ubicación: Siempre al sur...
Mensaje
por canaguayo » Sab 03 Dic, 2005 17:45
Tiro un mensajito al vacío a ver si alguien se acuerda de que estamos a la espera de que surjan subs para estas dos joyitas de Jarman
.
Saludos...
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Si nos gustan tanto las pirámides ¿por qué no hacemos más? - Pablo Motos
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spione
- Mensajes: 2187
- Registrado: Mar 04 Nov, 2003 01:00
- Ubicación: Madrid
Mensaje
por spione » Sab 03 Dic, 2005 17:48
joer a ver si salen unos subs para Wittgenstein que le tengo unas ganas
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V
- Mensajes: 731
- Registrado: Sab 01 Oct, 2005 02:00
Mensaje
por V » Dom 19 Sep, 2010 17:54
Hace tiempo que aparecieron subtítulos en el hilo correspondiente:
t=36392. Además de poner tildes y cosas de esas, los he sincronizado con la siguiente copia de la edición del British Film Institute —publicada en karagarga—.
Wittgenstein
(Derek Jarman, 1993)
IMDb
Wittgenstein the Movie
- The film was originally commissioned as part of a series of TV production about the life and work of philosophers, and a screenplay and script were written by Oxford literature scholar, Terry Eagleton. This was adapted by Jarman and Ken Butler, his associate director, when the British Film Institute made funds available for the production of a 75-minute feature film. Whereas the television film envisaged by Eagleton would have adopted a more conventional and naturalistic style with its interior and exterior scenes shot in Cambridge, Jarman's aesthetic approach coupled with the constraints of producing a feature film on a budget of just £300,000 (a familiar scenario for Jarman and his team), meant that the screenplay and script were changed to enable the entire film to be shot in the studio. These constraints contribute to a film that is characteristically Wittgensteinian in form and content.
Although the film, like Monk's biography, aims to show how the philosophical work comes from the man, it does so as a drama, not as a documentary nor as a drama-documentary. and in fact resembles a stage play in form and appearance. Inevitably, then, Jarman's Wittgenstein is a dramatic character, not the documented figure that might be presented had someone come across old home movie footage of Wittgenstein. It is thus important that students of Wittgenstein's work do not become too much in thrall to the cinematic personage; that they do not, as one put it, fall prey to a "cult of the personality" and thereby lose their ability to critically analyse Wittgenstein's philosophical ideas. The personage is, however, very closely traced from the portrait of Wittgenstein that is finely detailed in Monk's widely acclaimed and frequently cited biography. While remaining a dramatic construction, it is, as far as one can tell, a truthful portrayal that neither caricatures nor understates its subject.
Although basically chronological —its pretitle sequence displays a schoolboy Wittgenstein at a writing desk recounting his family background; its final scenes take place at Wittgenstein's deathbed— the film does at times play with the details of his life and work. This is only to be expected, for one must bear in mind and emphasise to one's students that Jarman's task was to "turn philosophy into cinema." For example, the well-documented incident in which Italian economist Pietro Sraffa demonstrated the Neapolitan gesture of brushing one's chin with the fingertips that (apparently) motivated Wittgenstein to give more thought to the theory of meaning developed in his Tractatus is portrayed in the film by the dramatic device of three young women making conmptuous V-signs at Wittgenstein in the street. The incident serves Jarman's aim of showing Wittgenstein as an outsider within Cambridge academic society, but its philosophical import is not lost. What Wittgenstein viewed as the need for a theory of meaning to take anthropological stance —looking at what language users say and do with language, closing the gap between theory and practices— is perspicuously demonstrated, as is Wittgenstein's likely despair at finding that "I have spent most of my life groping down a blind alley."
The play-like feel and appearance of the film derives largely from Jarman's use of colour against a black drape. Where Wittgenstein is dressed always in more or less the same grey academic garb, the Cambridge characters shine out against the black, dressed in brightly coloured clothes —a scarlet cloak for Russell, purple waistcoat for Keynes, a green ostrich feather hat for Russell's lover, Lady Ottoline Morell—. As Jarman puts it in his introduction to the film script, "Grey Ludwig and dotty Cambridge, friends in High Key." Whilst the entire film is suffused with Wittgensteinian ideas, it also includes many explicitly philosophical moments. These divide into roughly two types, reflecting some of the variety of devices Wittgenstein used in the practice of philosophy: seminar scenes in which Wittgenstein the teacher develops his ideas and students and colleagues endeavour to engage with them, and reminders which Jarman assembles for the audience, similar to the devices Wittgenstein's writing contains, that guide the reader's recollection of the pretheoretical use and therefore meaning of language.
Referencia
BOWELL, TRACY: «Making Manifest: Viewing Wittgenstein's Philosophy through Derek Jarman's Lens». Teaching Philosophy, 2001, 24:2, pp. 133-142. Disponible en: Research Commons @ Waikato.
Datos técnicos
Código: Seleccionar todo
File Name .........................................: Wittgenstein (Derek Jarman, 1993) DVDRip [BFI-kg].avi
File Size (in bytes) ............................: 939,704,320 bytes
Runtime ............................................: 1:09:11
Video Codec ...................................: XviD ISO MPEG-4
Frame Size ......................................: 720x432 (AR: 1.667)
FPS .................................................: 23.976
Video Bitrate ...................................: 1626 kb/s
Bits per Pixel ...................................: 0.218 bpp
B-VOP, N-VOP, QPel, GMC.............: [], [N-VOP], [], []
Audio Codec ...................................: 0x0055 MPEG-1 Layer 3
Sample Rate ...................................: 48000 Hz
Audio Bitrate ...................................: 172 kb/s [2 channel(s)] VBR
No. of audio streams .......................: 1
Capturas
Enlace a la película
Wittgenstein (Derek Jarman, 1993) DVDRip (BFI-kg).avi
Subtítulos
Castellano
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oscarriutort
- Mensajes: 2135
- Registrado: Mié 11 Jun, 2003 02:00
- Ubicación: Okinawa
Mensaje
por oscarriutort » Mar 16 Abr, 2013 23:13
muchas gracias
"Los videojuegos no afectan a los niños. Si fuera así y el comecocos nos hubiera afectado, ahora estaríamos deambulando por lugares oscuros, comiendo píldoras mágicas y escuchando ritmos electrónicos repetitivos"
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enidma
- Mensajes: 1
- Registrado: Lun 01 Jun, 2015 20:26
Mensaje
por enidma » Lun 01 Jun, 2015 20:34
donde estan los enlaces de descarga?
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professor keller
- Mensajes: 1949
- Registrado: Jue 27 Ene, 2005 01:00
- Ubicación: Buenos Aires
Mensaje
por professor keller » Lun 01 Jun, 2015 21:37
enidma escribió:donde estan los enlaces de descarga?
Aquí:
Ten en cuenta,
Enidma, que este no es un foro de descargas directas. Para bajar archivos necesitas tener instalado
eMule.
Saludos.