搜索"Amim",共搜索到"20"个相关内容,当前第“1”页
暗冰之下8.0
类型:欧美剧 集数:全部战争电视剧年份:2024别名:暗冰之下
简介:A dedicated investigator, she is being forced into early retirement and takes on a final cold case centered on a young Russian asylum seeker who died mysteriously one year prior.
类型:喜剧片 集数:印度电影全集国语高清年份:2026别名:Noarreglennilimpienmihabitación,amímegustacomoestá|Don’t Tidy or Clean My Room,I Like It as It Is
简介:Ignacio, director of the film, buys a used handycam from France in 2019. Immediately he discovers that the previous owner didn´t erase his videos, but he can't manage to contact him. Years later, after making a movie with this material, he finds a clue to the whereabouts of this man.
类型:欧美剧 集数:2集全年份:2011别名:LouisTheroux:MiAmimegajail
简介:Imagine a jail where dangerous inmates awaiting trial live 24 to a room and fight each other under a violent gladiatorial code. This is life inside Miami's mega-jail, writes Louis Theroux. For a bespectacled, peace-loving Englishman, there can be few places less congenial than a berth on the sixth floor of Miami main jail. The place has to be seen to be believed. Up to 24 inmates are crowded into a single cell, living behind metal bars on steel bunks, sharing a single shower and two toilets. Little of the bright Miami sun filters through the grilles on the windows. Visits to the yard happen twice a week for an hour. The rest of the time, inmates are holed up round the clock, eating, sleeping, and going slightly crazy. But what is most shocking is the behaviour of the inmates themselves. For reasons that remain to some extent opaque - perhaps because of the bleak conditions they live in or because of insufficient supervision by officers, maybe because they lack other outlets for their energies, or because of their involvement with gangs on the outside, or maybe from a warped jailhouse tradition - the incarcerated here have created a brutal gladiatorial code of fighting. Louis Theroux enters a higher security upper floor of Miami's mega-jail They fight for respect, for food and snacks, or simply to pass the time. With around 7,000 inmates, the Miami jail system is one of the biggest in America - a so-called "mega-jail". Most of these inmates are on remand - awaiting bail or being held until their trial dates - usually for fairly minor offences. In America, jails are distinct from prisons in that they hold people who are pre-trial and therefore unconvicted. Most of these inmates reside at one of the two biggest facilities in the Miami jail system, large modern buildings where the cells are well-supervised and safe. But the hardened few hundred who are either charged with particularly serious offences or have a track record of misbehaving behind bars get sent to the fifth and sixth floors of the main jail - a place with its own myth and lore. Continue reading the main story Find out more The two-part documentary, Louis Theroux: Miami Mega-Jail, is broadcast on BBC Two on Sunday 22 and 29 May at 2100 BST Or catch up via iPlayer Inmates throughout the jail speak with a sense of awe about the main jail, for it is here that the code of the jail is most stringently observed. The idea of me spending time in the Miami jail grew out of a documentary I'd made about San Quentin in California in 2007. I'd been struck by the strange self-contained world of the prison - with its own rules and its own unexpected intimacies. I'd come to Miami having heard that jails - with their more transient and therefore more chaotic population of new arrestees and defendants - were quite different, less settled and less domesticated. Inmates tended not to stay long enough to get comfortable or bond with officers or with each other. Also, while prisons separate out their inmates so that the most serious cases are sent to "supermax" ultra-high security facilities, jails house the entire gamut of accused offenders. Still, I was shocked by what I found. Fighting is difficult to stop in the cells A few days into my stay I arrived at the jail to find there had been a fight on the sixth floor - a man had been badly beaten by several of his cellmates. I visited the cell and was told by several inmates that the victim had been testifying on other people's cases. "Snitches get stitches," one said. I tracked down the victim, who'd just arrived back from the clinic, his eyes swollen shut, looking as though he'd just gone 10 rounds with Vitali Klitschko. He said his cellmates had taken it in turns to fight him, one after another, six or seven in a row - a practice called "line-up". Gingerly, I raised the possibility that he might have aroused the ire of his compadres by co-operating with the state on his case, maybe against his co-defendants? He said the idea was absurd - he'd been arrested for driving with a suspended licence. A day or two later I met an inmate called Robert Tosta, a sturdy guy with an extensive track record of muggings and burglaries. Tosta was sporting a black eye and he explained that he'd been in a fight with a man in his cell. Continue reading the main story “ Start Quote Without privacy, sharing a single shower, many of the men had lost their sense of the normal social barriers” He'd noticed that some personal items were missing and, even though he had no idea who was responsible, jailhouse rules dictated that he had to ask his bunk-mate to "strap up" - put his shoes on for a fight. In some cells inmates boasted that they had a policy of "mandatory rec" for new inmates - meaning any inmate coming into the cell had to fight (or "rec") for a bunk, unless he was known to other inmates in the cell, in which case he might be granted a reprieve. And yet, strange as it is, fighting is far from being the only predatory behaviour that flourishes on the fifth and sixth floors of Main Jail. Early in our visit, I heard whispers from the officers accompanying us that some of the inmates were being "disrespectful" during interviews. I was confused. They were shouting? Making faces? No, they were "gunning" - that is to say masturbating - "at" and "to" our female director and assistant producer. I recalled that some of the men behind bars had been swaddled in sheets as they stood or had lain covered on their beds - I'd assumed this was because they were camera shy - but in fact, it was explained, this was the better to hide. Undoubtedly the practice was strange and uncomfortable for all the members of our team. And yet, even this I came to see as symptomatic of the strange conditions of the cells in the Main Jail. Deprived of any outside sensory stimulus they were hyper-alert to the sight of young women from the outside. And without privacy, sharing a single shower, many of the men had lost their sense of the normal social barriers - they were around each other continuously, using the toilets, speaking to loved ones on the phone, and, presumably, indulging in other physical functions. And when we were around them, the same rules applied to us - many of them, living like animals, had lost their grip on social norms. Continue reading the main story “ Start Quote Up close and without the protective bars the men were actually less loud and less menacing” From the off I was keen to get inside the cells. The prison authorities do not usually allow this but we managed to get special permission and I ended up making several forays into the men's quarters. Not surprisingly, having been told by the officers that for safety reasons it was "inadvisable" for me to enter a cell, I was somewhat nervous when I did so - chaperoned by a couple of officers, it must be said. And yet, the first surprise was a sense that up close and without the protective bars the men were actually less loud and less menacing - they seemed nonplussed by my being among them and unsure of how to act. There was an odd moment when one inmate, a young man named Shug, pulled his trousers down. But when I asked him what he thought he was doing, he seemed to think better of gunning and took part in the conversation. Another inmate, Rodney Pearson, known as Hot Rod, told me he'd been inside for several years awaiting trial. Prosecutors wanted to give him the death penalty. Some inmates are on remand for long periods I asked him if, by some quirk of fate, I'd been arrested and sent to their cell, a bespectacled Englishman with a college education who was clearly not cut out to fight, they might let me off the "mandatory rec". The answer was an emphatic "no". Horrible as it is, perhaps the biggest surprise in the main jail is that many of the inmates with the most serious charges choose to extend their stay as long as possible. Facing murder charges and prosecutors keen to give them life or even a death sentence, they figure that their odds of a better outcome at trial will improve the longer they wait, as witnesses die or disappear and memories fade. It is a legal strategy known as "distancing". Some inmates had been inside for five years or more, still technically innocent, putting up with the most brutal conditions, for a chance of a better sentence. Officers say there is little they can do to stamp out the fighting among inmates. They say it is the choice of the incarcerated men to participate in the code of the jail and that the inmate policy of no snitching means they can very rarely identify the chief culprits. It is true that the layout of the jail - an old-fashioned design with a "walk" that runs past cage-like habitations that reminded me of nothing so much as a large multi-storey zoo - makes it difficult for officers to keep a constant watch on their charges. One of the corporals said he thought the county might be happy to make reforms as long as I was happy to stump up the $600m for a new building. Until then, he suggested, the strange code of the fifth and sixth floors will continue to hold sway.
金币灰黄6.0
类型:剧情片 集数:高清年份:2022别名:金币灰黄|藏金风暴
简介:40岁的莱拉一辈子都在照顾父母和她的四个弟弟,但整个家庭被债务击垮,莱拉不得不想出一个商业计划来拯救家庭,就在她急需资金时,她发现其中一个弟弟私藏了一件传家宝,弟弟希望通过这个传家宝成为家族的族长,这个秘密可能将整个家庭带向毁灭。
侯赛因船长6.0
类型:剧情片 集数:高清年份:2005别名:侯赛因船长|NakhodaKhorshid
简介:A mother of a poor family, has guests coming over, yet doesn't know how to get the dinner party altogether with limited resources.
类型:恐怖片 集数:高清年份:1987别名:水谷丰版浅见光彦2:天城峠杀人事件TheAsAmimitsuhikoMystery2|天城山顶杀人事件
简介:ルポライターの光彦は、車の免許を取得したばかりのアイドル夕紀にインタビューした。1ヵ月後、光彦は取材先の伊豆で朝美と知りあう。朝美の父は1ヶ月前にひき逃げされて、犯人は捕まっていなかった。朝美は、亡き父が貼り歩いていたという「下司」という千社札をたよりに、父親の足跡をたどっていた。そんなとき、アイドルの夕紀が、マネージャーの藤田と心中してしまう。疑問に思った光彦は取材を始めるが・・・?!
黑蝶漫舞4.0
类型:纪录片 集数:高清年份:2011别名:黑蝶漫舞|黑色蝴蝶
简介:她寻找故园,她寻找爱情。她面对种族隔离和监管传媒的父亲,一直不断斗争。南非领袖尼尔森曼德拉曾在他第一次对南非议会的演说中朗诵她的诗作:《尼昂加死去的孩子》,并称赞她是南非最优秀的诗人。 奥斯卡女导演葆拉凡德奥斯特最新力作,描述南非女诗人英格丽琼蔻在种族隔离时代对抗体制的传奇一生,也带出她与情人和父亲之间的爱恨恩怨。英格丽琼寇是南非著名的女诗人,她的童年坎坷悲惨,却在写诗创作方面具有惊人的才华。由于丈夫任职南非旧政府,两人因对种族隔离看法分歧、导致婚姻破裂,并进而使抑郁的她最后选择了投海自尽,年仅32岁。 英格丽琼蔻身后留下了一个7岁女儿及诸多感人作品,其中最负盛名的即为诗集《黑蝶漫舞》。1994年,当南非总统曼德拉自监狱获释时,他在全世界瞩目的就职典礼上,就高声朗诵了深得他心的英格丽琼蔻所作的一首感人的诗,终使英格丽琼寇在死去30年后、扬名全球…
类型:剧情片 集数:高清年份:1989别名:水谷丰版浅见光彦5:越后路杀人事件|TheAsAmimitsuhikoMystery5
简介:ルポライターの光彦は、鎌倉で10年ぶりに大学の先輩である宏と再会する。失業中の宏は、その3日後に、釣りに出かけたまま水死体として発見されてしまう。警察は自殺とみたが、宏の妹・肇子は、他殺を主張する。宏の死を知らせに来た肇子を送っていった光彦は、血まみれで倒れている肇子の母睦子を発見してしまう。「シシ・ハマダ」とだけ言い残し睦子は息絶えた。光彦は謎を追う!
类型:恐怖片 集数:高清年份:1988别名:水谷丰版浅见光彦3:佐渡传说杀人事件|TheAsAmimitsuhikoMystery3
简介:「願」と書かれた葉書をもつ2人の男が連続して殺された。事件の謎を追う浅見光彦は、糸口が佐渡ヶ島に隠されていることに気づく。男たちは31年前に島で起こった行き倒れ事件で、死んだ女性の発見者3人のうちの2人だった。光彦は死んだ女性が子供を連れていたことを突きとめ…。
类型:剧情片 集数:高清年份:1990别名:水谷丰版浅见光彦7:备后路杀人事件|TheAsAmimitsuhikoMystery7
简介:1987年~1990年に火曜サスペンス劇場にて放送され高い人気を誇った、水谷豊主演で贈る浅見光彦ミステリーシリーズの「備後路殺人事件」をパッケージ化。
沙漠伏击1.0
类型:动作片 集数:已完结年份:2021别名:沙漠伏击|TheAmbush
简介:When three Emirati soldiers are ambushed in a hostile territory, their commander leads a daring mission to rescue them.
类型:海外剧 集数:2集全年份:2011别名:LouisTheroux:MiAmimegajail
简介:Imagine a jail where dangerous inmates awaiting trial live 24 to a room and fight each other under a violent gladiatorial code. This is life inside Miami's mega-jail, writes Louis Theroux.For a bespectacled, peace-loving Englishman, there can be few places less congenial than a berth on the sixth floor of Miami main jail.The place has to be seen to be believed. Up to 24 inmates are crowded into a single cell, living behind metal bars on steel bunks, sharing a single shower and two toilets.Little of the bright Miami sun filters through the grilles on the windows. Visits to the yard happen twice a week for an hour. The rest of the time, inmates are holed up round the clock, eating, sleeping, and going slightly crazy.But what is most shocking is the behaviour of the inmates themselves. For reasons that remain to some extent opaque - perhaps because of the bleak conditions they live in or because of insufficient supervision by officers, maybe because they lack other outlets for their energies, or because of their involvement with gangs on the outside, or maybe from a warped jailhouse tradition - the incarcerated here have created a brutal gladiatorial code of fighting.Louis Theroux enters a higher security upper floor of Miami's mega-jailThey fight for respect, for food and snacks, or simply to pass the time.With around 7,000 inmates, the Miami jail system is one of the biggest in America - a so-called "mega-jail". Most of these inmates are on remand - awaiting bail or being held until their trial dates - usually for fairly minor offences. In America, jails are distinct from prisons in that they hold people who are pre-trial and therefore unconvicted.Most of these inmates reside at one of the two biggest facilities in the Miami jail system, large mode buildings where the cells are well-supervised and safe.But the hardened few hundred who are either charged with particularly serious offences or have a track record of misbehaving behind bars get sent to the fifth and sixth floors of the main jail - a place with its own myth and lore.Continue reading the main storyFind out moreThe two-part documentary, Louis Theroux: Miami Mega-Jail, is broadcast on BBC Two on Sunday 22 and 29 May at 2100 BSTOr catch up via iPlayerInmates throughout the jail speak with a sense of awe about the main jail, for it is here that the code of the jail is most stringently observed.The idea of me spending time in the Miami jail grew out of a documentary I'd made about San Quentin in Califoia in 2007. I'd been struck by the strange self-contained world of the prison - with its own rules and its own unexpected intimacies.I'd come to Miami having heard that jails - with their more transient and therefore more chaotic population of new arrestees and defendants - were quite different, less settled and less domesticated. Inmates tended not to stay long enough to get comfortable or bond with officers or with each other.Also, while prisons separate out their inmates so that the most serious cases are sent to "supermax" ultra-high security facilities, jails house the entire gamut of accused offenders.Still, I was shocked by what I found.Fighting is difficult to stop in the cellsA few days into my stay I arrived at the jail to find there had been a fight on the sixth floor - a man had been badly beaten by several of his cellmates. I visited the cell and was told by several inmates that the victim had been testifying on other people's cases. "Snitches get stitches," one said.I tracked down the victim, who'd just arrived back from the clinic, his eyes swollen shut, looking as though he'd just gone 10 rounds with Vitali Klitschko. He said his cellmates had taken it in tus to fight him, one after another, six or seven in a row - a practice called "line-up".Gingerly, I raised the possibility that he might have aroused the ire of his compadres by co-operating with the state on his case, maybe against his co-defendants? He said the idea was absurd - he'd been arrested for driving with a suspended licence.A day or two later I met an inmate called Robert Tosta, a sturdy guy with an extensive track record of muggings and burglaries. Tosta was sporting a black eye and he explained that he'd been in a fight with a man in his cell.Continue reading the main story“Start QuoteWithout privacy, sharing a single shower, many of the men had lost their sense of the normal social barriers”He'd noticed that some personal items were missing and, even though he had no idea who was responsible, jailhouse rules dictated that he had to ask his bunk-mate to "strap up" - put his shoes on for a fight.In some cells inmates boasted that they had a policy of "mandatory rec" for new inmates - meaning any inmate coming into the cell had to fight for a bunk, unless he was known to other inmates in the cell, in which case he might be granted a reprieve.And yet, strange as it is, fighting is far from being the only predatory behaviour that flourishes on the fifth and sixth floors of Main Jail.Early in our visit, I heard whispers from the officers accompanying us that some of the inmates were being "disrespectful" during interviews. I was confused. They were shouting? Making faces?No, they were "gunning" - that is to say masturbating - "at" and "to" our female director and assistant producer.I recalled that some of the men behind bars had been swaddled in sheets as they stood or had lain covered on their beds - I'd assumed this was because they were camera shy - but in fact, it was explained, this was the better to hide.Undoubtedly the practice was strange and uncomfortable for all the members of our team. And yet, even this I came to see as symptomatic of the strange conditions of the cells in the Main Jail. Deprived of any outside sensory stimulus they were hyper-alert to the sight of young women from the outside.And without privacy, sharing a single shower, many of the men had lost their sense of the normal social barriers - they were around each other continuously, using the toilets, speaking to loved ones on the phone, and, presumably, indulging in other physical functions. And when we were around them, the same rules applied to us - many of them, living like animals, had lost their grip on social norms.Continue reading the main story“Start QuoteUp close and without the protective bars the men were actually less loud and less menacing”From the off I was keen to get inside the cells. The prison authorities do not usually allow this but we managed to get special permission and I ended up making several forays into the men's quarters.Not surprisingly, having been told by the officers that for safety reasons it was "inadvisable" for me to enter a cell, I was somewhat nervous when I did so - chaperoned by a couple of officers, it must be said.And yet, the first surprise was a sense that up close and without the protective bars the men were actually less loud and less menacing - they seemed nonplussed by my being among them and unsure of how to act.There was an odd moment when one inmate, a young man named Shug, pulled his trousers down. But when I asked him what he thought he was doing, he seemed to think better of gunning and took part in the conversation.Another inmate, Rodney Pearson, known as Hot Rod, told me he'd been inside for several years awaiting trial. Prosecutors wanted to give him the death penalty.Some inmates are on remand for long periodsI asked him if, by some quirk of fate, I'd been arrested and sent to their cell, a bespectacled Englishman with a college education who was clearly not cut out to fight, they might let me off the "mandatory rec". The answer was an emphatic "no".Horrible as it is, perhaps the biggest surprise in the main jail is that many of the inmates with the most serious charges choose to extend their stay as long as possible. Facing murder charges and prosecutors keen to give them life or even a death sentence, they figure that their odds of a better outcome at trial will improve the longer they wait, as witnesses die or disappear and memories fade.It is a legal strategy known as "distancing". Some inmates had been inside for five years or more, still technically innocent, putting up with the most brutal conditions, for a chance of a better sentence.Officers say there is little they can do to stamp out the fighting among inmates. They say it is the choice of the incarcerated men to participate in the code of the jail and that the inmate policy of no snitching means they can very rarely identify the chief culprits.It is true that the layout of the jail - an old-fashioned design with a "walk" that runs past cage-like habitations that reminded me of nothing so much as a large multi-storey zoo - makes it difficult for officers to keep a constant watch on their charges.One of the corporals said he thought the county might be happy to make reforms as long as I was happy to stump up the $600m for a new building.Until then, he suggested, the strange code of the fifth and sixth floors will continue to hold sway.
灵异少年4.0
类型:欧美剧 集数:8集全年份:2011别名:灵异少年|灵异少年
简介:Becoming Human is a British supernatural drama webisode series and a spin-off from the TV series Being Human. Created by Toby Whithouse, it was written by Brian Dooley, Jamie Mathieson and John Jackson) and stars Craig Roberts as the teenage vampire Adam , Leila Mimmack as the werewolf Christa and Josh Brown as the ghost Matt.
浅见光彦最终章2.0
类型:日本剧 集数:9集全年份:2009别名:浅见光彦最终章|AsAmimitsuhiko~Saishusho
简介:先祖代々官僚トップを務める超エリートの家柄・浅見家。 その落ちこぼれ次男坊・光彦は、史上最年少で警察庁刑事局長に就任した兄・陽一郎や、明るく闊達ながら名誉と格式を重んじる厳格な母・雪江らに囲まれながらも、明るくのびのびと生きる好青年。 ルポライターという仕事柄、日本全国を取材で飛び回る光彦は、各地でさまざまな人と出会い、偶然にもさまざまな事件に遭遇します。 持ち前の正義感と好奇心を抑えきれず、事件に首を突っ込む光彦ですが、よそ者の不審人物として煙たがられ、時には容疑者扱いされ、地元警察の取調べを受けることもしばしば…。 しかし、光彦の身元を調べた地元警察は、刑事局長の弟だと知って唖然騒然。 今までの非礼をわびて態度を一転させ、光彦に協力、光彦の捜査の追い風となっていきます。 母・雪江からの絶対命令「陽一郎さんの迷惑にだけはならないように」を健気に守る一方、兄からの密かな応援を受けながら、また事件を通して巡り逢う素敵な女性への淡い恋心をパワーに変えて、光彦は独自の粘り強さで事件へと向かい合います。 やがて光彦が辿り着く事件の真相……そこには、どうすることもできない悲しみや苦しみ、憎しみや恐れを抱える当事者たちの素顔が見えてきます。 そんな彼らの哀しみや辛さ、想いを、光彦は共有しようとします。 「その人のために出来ることは、僕に出来る限りの、その人との想いを共有する。それしかできないと思っています…」と。 そんな心優しく正義感に溢れる光彦は、今週はどんな土地へと向かい、どんな人たちと出会うのでしょうか?
经纪人10.0
类型:欧美剧 集数:已完结年份:2023别名:经纪人
简介:As an agent for some of the top names in music and film, Johan’s job is to solve his clients’ private and professional problems. Chronically overstretched, but never short of ideas, he teeters breathlessly between ingenious plans and absolute chaos. 源自:https://www.berlinale.de/en/2023/programme/202313706.html
呼救第一季6.0
类型:欧美剧 集数:5集全年份:2013别名:呼救第一季
简介:五朔节(May Day,五月的第一个星期一)到了,一个小型社区正在等待一年一度的异教徒游行开始。当地少年Linus Newcombe沮丧地看着心中最爱的女孩Caitlin Sutton与自己的一个死敌接吻。在小镇的另一边,Caitlin的双胞胎妹妹、美丽的五月皇后(五朔节女王,五朔节选出的美女)Hattie Sutton正在做参加庆祝活动的准备——她即将成为这座小镇的「新生活象征」。但是活动开始之后Hattie并没有出现,她人间蒸发了。整个小镇陷入一片混乱——他们当中的某人已经绑架了Hattie……
本片相关热门话题




















