• HD
  • 烈女镖客
  • 正片
烈女镖客

烈女镖客

主演:
克林特·伊斯特伍德,雪莉·麦克雷恩,曼努埃尔·法夫雷加斯
备注:
正片
类型:
喜剧片
导演:
唐·希格尔
年代:
2016
地区:
墨西哥
语言:
其他
更新:
2024-01-17 10:25
简介:
莎拉(雪莉·麦克雷恩ShirleyMacLaine饰)是一名修女,正在孤身一人独自前往美国西部的旅途之中。途中,莎拉不幸遇到了三名劫匪企图对她不利,在性命攸关的紧急时刻,牛仔霍根(克林特·伊斯特伍德ClintEastwood饰)现身将莎拉解救于水火之中。惊魂未定的莎拉.....详细
相关喜剧片
烈女镖客剧情简介
喜剧片《烈女镖客》由克林特·伊斯特伍德,雪莉·麦克雷恩,曼努埃尔·法夫雷加斯主演,2016年墨西哥地区发行,欢迎点播。
莎拉(雪莉·麦克雷恩ShirleyMacLaine饰)是一名修女,正在孤身一人独自前往美国西部的旅途之中。途中,莎拉不幸遇到了三名劫匪企图对她不利,在性命攸关的紧急时刻,牛仔霍根(克林特·伊斯特伍德ClintEastwood饰)现身将莎拉解救于水火之中。惊魂未定的莎拉决定雇佣霍根当自己的保镖护送自己抵达目的地,但相对的,她必须向霍根出卖法国军队驻地的内部情报,这正是霍根一直想要得到的消息。刚开始互相看不顺眼的两人,在漫长而又孤独的旅途中渐渐靠近,让霍根百思不得其解的是,莎拉身为一名修女,却完全没有神职人员的自觉,她喝酒、抽烟、讲脏话,百无禁忌,这种表里不一的神秘逐渐转变成为了一股强大的吸引力。
烈女镖客相关影评
{if:"

Don Siegel and Clint Eastwood’s second collaboration jocousely teams Eastwood's Leone-sque soldier-of-fortune Hogan (scarcely changing his apparel and paraphernalia from Leone’s Dollars Trilogy) with Shirley MacLaine’s sister Sara against an extensive western landscape, to fight for a good cause, aiding Mexico’s Juarista rebels to assail the colonial French army during 1860s.

Let’s just turn a blind eye on the self-conscious revisionist stance about colonialism, the movie's appeal is right on its game when conjuring up the odd pairing of a devout nun and a cynical atheist, from a skin-baring introduction of Sara, on the point of being gang-raped, to the reveal of her votary attire which amusingly takes Hogan aback, until they soften their discrepancy and clearly Hogan is swept off his feet by her prim but valiant defiance. And the cunning machination to keep a lid on the real identity of a heart-of-gold Sara is well-wrought through her unfeigned piety and devotion (including a Christian burial for her assaulters), but Siegel slyly leaves small clues to insinuate there is something iffy in train - Sara’s secretive cigar-smoking and she apparently makes no bones about uttering one particular profane word - to keep audience intrigued, and Ms. MacLaine makes Sara a ballsy heroine through and through, she will soon proactively return the favor to save Eastwood’s perpetually squinting Hogan, not once but twice, and successfully pulls the wool over his (and our) eyes as a hardened, trestle-climbing partisan who is off-limits to no man but God himself.

Alas, what the film (predictably yet regretfully) fails to make right is the ill-treatment of the Mexican counterpart, it is a story happening in their land, but the movie never for one second, delves into their mindset, Col, Beltrán (Fábregas) is a one-note cipher and his army is a bunch of rabbles, not to mention that the climatic garrison-sallying action pieces are starkly rinky-dink and finish in abruptness, but a grace note is maestroMorricone’s lilting and clanging accompaniments, ever so pervasive in a boisterous, above-average Hollywood fluff.

referential points: Don Siegel’s THE BEGUILED (1971, 7.3/10), THE KILLERS (1964, 5.3/10); Sergio Leone's THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY (1966, 8.3/10), ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST (1968, 8.4/10).

"<>"" && "

Don Siegel and Clint Eastwood’s second collaboration jocousely teams Eastwood's Leone-sque soldier-of-fortune Hogan (scarcely changing his apparel and paraphernalia from Leone’s Dollars Trilogy) with Shirley MacLaine’s sister Sara against an extensive western landscape, to fight for a good cause, aiding Mexico’s Juarista rebels to assail the colonial French army during 1860s.

Let’s just turn a blind eye on the self-conscious revisionist stance about colonialism, the movie's appeal is right on its game when conjuring up the odd pairing of a devout nun and a cynical atheist, from a skin-baring introduction of Sara, on the point of being gang-raped, to the reveal of her votary attire which amusingly takes Hogan aback, until they soften their discrepancy and clearly Hogan is swept off his feet by her prim but valiant defiance. And the cunning machination to keep a lid on the real identity of a heart-of-gold Sara is well-wrought through her unfeigned piety and devotion (including a Christian burial for her assaulters), but Siegel slyly leaves small clues to insinuate there is something iffy in train - Sara’s secretive cigar-smoking and she apparently makes no bones about uttering one particular profane word - to keep audience intrigued, and Ms. MacLaine makes Sara a ballsy heroine through and through, she will soon proactively return the favor to save Eastwood’s perpetually squinting Hogan, not once but twice, and successfully pulls the wool over his (and our) eyes as a hardened, trestle-climbing partisan who is off-limits to no man but God himself.

Alas, what the film (predictably yet regretfully) fails to make right is the ill-treatment of the Mexican counterpart, it is a story happening in their land, but the movie never for one second, delves into their mindset, Col, Beltrán (Fábregas) is a one-note cipher and his army is a bunch of rabbles, not to mention that the climatic garrison-sallying action pieces are starkly rinky-dink and finish in abruptness, but a grace note is maestroMorricone’s lilting and clanging accompaniments, ever so pervasive in a boisterous, above-average Hollywood fluff.

referential points: Don Siegel’s THE BEGUILED (1971, 7.3/10), THE KILLERS (1964, 5.3/10); Sergio Leone's THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY (1966, 8.3/10), ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST (1968, 8.4/10).

"<>"暂时没有网友评论该影片"}

@豆瓣短评

Don Siegel and Clint Eastwood’s second collaboration jocousely teams Eastwood's Leone-sque soldier-of-fortune Hogan (scarcely changing his apparel and paraphernalia from Leone’s Dollars Trilogy) with Shirley MacLaine’s sister Sara against an extensive western landscape, to fight for a good cause, aiding Mexico’s Juarista rebels to assail the colonial French army during 1860s.

Let’s just turn a blind eye on the self-conscious revisionist stance about colonialism, the movie's appeal is right on its game when conjuring up the odd pairing of a devout nun and a cynical atheist, from a skin-baring introduction of Sara, on the point of being gang-raped, to the reveal of her votary attire which amusingly takes Hogan aback, until they soften their discrepancy and clearly Hogan is swept off his feet by her prim but valiant defiance. And the cunning machination to keep a lid on the real identity of a heart-of-gold Sara is well-wrought through her unfeigned piety and devotion (including a Christian burial for her assaulters), but Siegel slyly leaves small clues to insinuate there is something iffy in train - Sara’s secretive cigar-smoking and she apparently makes no bones about uttering one particular profane word - to keep audience intrigued, and Ms. MacLaine makes Sara a ballsy heroine through and through, she will soon proactively return the favor to save Eastwood’s perpetually squinting Hogan, not once but twice, and successfully pulls the wool over his (and our) eyes as a hardened, trestle-climbing partisan who is off-limits to no man but God himself.

Alas, what the film (predictably yet regretfully) fails to make right is the ill-treatment of the Mexican counterpart, it is a story happening in their land, but the movie never for one second, delves into their mindset, Col, Beltrán (Fábregas) is a one-note cipher and his army is a bunch of rabbles, not to mention that the climatic garrison-sallying action pieces are starkly rinky-dink and finish in abruptness, but a grace note is maestroMorricone’s lilting and clanging accompaniments, ever so pervasive in a boisterous, above-average Hollywood fluff.

referential points: Don Siegel’s THE BEGUILED (1971, 7.3/10), THE KILLERS (1964, 5.3/10); Sergio Leone's THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY (1966, 8.3/10), ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST (1968, 8.4/10).

{end if}