Caroline Martin — 演员 (5)
因爱痴狂 (2004) [剧集] 豆瓣
He Knew He Was Right
导演: 汤姆·沃恩 演员: Oliver Dimsdale / 比尔·奈伊
青年才俊特维尔(奥利弗·迪姆斯戴尔 Oliver Dimsdale 饰)迎娶了美丽的姑娘艾米丽(劳拉·弗雷泽 Laura Fraser 饰)为妻,两人很快就有了爱情的结晶,一家人生活在幸福和甜蜜之中。奥斯特上校(比尔·奈伊 Bill Nighy 饰)是艾米丽的好友,他常常来拜访这一家人。奥斯特上校的频繁出入很快就引起了特维尔的警觉,他总觉得上校和自己的妻子有私情,可实际上,他们之间是清白的。
为了断绝上校和妻子的来往,特维尔逼迫妻子搬到了乡下,和他的好友休伊(史蒂芬·坎贝尔·摩尔 Stephen Campbell Moore 饰)一家人共同生活,不仅如此,特维尔还雇佣了一名私家侦探暗中调查妻子。丈夫的不信任让艾米丽伤透了心。
空幻之屋 (2004) [电影] 豆瓣
Poirot: The Hollow
7.2 (13 个评分) 导演: 西蒙·兰顿 演员: 大卫·苏切 / 乔纳森·凯克
其它标题: Poirot: The Hollow / 大侦探波罗第9季之空幻之屋
约翰·克里斯托是一位受人尊敬的大夫,与他安安静静甚至有些傻傻的太太格尔达以及两个可爱的孩子过着表面上平静的生活。实际上呢?又是怎样?
亨利埃塔,约翰真正的红颜知己,一位出色的雕塑家。在她的生活中除了雕塑还有什么?毫无疑问是约翰,除此之外……也许没再有什么了。格尔达一直以为约翰是个十全十美的人,没有坏毛病,没有不良嗜好,她也许永远也不会发现他与亨利埃塔之间的微妙情绪,是的,在她自愿自欺的脑子里,约翰是个神,她怎么会知道他的秘密,她又怎么会知道约翰当年娶她部分原因是要逃避一个他爱着的噩梦——维罗尼卡。
维罗尼卡,强制的维罗尼卡,约翰曾是那么爱她。十几年后她又回来了,来到了空幻庄园,这个让约翰爱、格尔达怕的地方。
庄园的主人是安格卡特尔夫妇,是他们邀请了包括约翰、格尔达、亨利埃塔、爱德华、米奇等等来这里度周末。对了,还有……波洛。
说到爱德华和米奇,这是一对让人可叹的年轻人,爱德华爱着亨利埃塔,可是雕塑家对于自己的爱情确是如此有主见,约翰……爱德华的痛……米奇,不再是爱德华眼中的小姑娘,她是爱德华的仰慕者,爱恋者,这些,爱德华有知道多少?
平静?这也算平静?无数纠缠不清的三角关系在露西·安格卡特尔冷酷的眼睛下上演。再加上维罗尼卡,你能想象吗?也许是畸形……
约翰死了,是的,就像舞台上的拙劣表演。他躺在游泳池的边上,格尔达在一旁举着枪,茫然,茫然……一群人更加茫然的注视着这个情景。这是真实的吗?波洛想。
这是真实的,真实的即将变成尸体的约翰缓缓地说:“亨利埃塔……”指控?不知道,不知道,不知道。格尔达就这么举着枪,所有的人在想:真的吗?
流浪者 (2023) [电影] 豆瓣 维基数据 IMDb TMDB
The Strays
导演: 纳撒尼尔·马泰洛-怀特 演员: 罗茜·阿克曼 / 玛丽亚·阿尔梅达
其它标题: The Strays / 异客
一名女子生活在古雅的郊区小镇。然而,在镇上出现两名陌生人后,她精心打造的特权生活开始土崩瓦解。
玩偶之家 2013 Young Vic版 [演出] 豆瓣
所属 演出: 玩偶之家
剧院: Duke of York's Theatre 导演: Carrie Cracknell
其它标题: 2013 Young Vic版 编剧: Henrik Ibsen / Simon Stephens 演员: Hattie Morahan / Dominic Rowan
Act one
A Doll's House opens as Nora Helmer returns from Christmas shopping. Her husband Torvald comes out of his study to banter with her. They discuss how their finances will improve now that Torvald has a new job as the vice president of the bank. Torvald expresses his horror of debt. Nora behaves childishly, and he enjoys treating her like a child to be instructed and indulged.
Soon Christine Linde, an old friend of Nora's, arrives at their home. She is a childless widow who is moving back to the city. Her husband left her no money, so she has tried different kinds of work and now hopes to find some work that is not too strenuous. Nora confides to Christine that she once secretly borrowed money from a disgraced lawyer, Nils Krogstad, to save Torvald's life when he was very ill, but she has not told him in order to protect his pride. She told everyone that the money came from her father, who died at about the same time. She has been repaying the debt from her housekeeping budget and also from some work she got copying papers by hand, which she did secretly in her room, and took pride in her ability to earn money "as if she were a man." Torvald's new job promises to finally liberate her from this debt.
Nora asks Torvald to give Kristine a position as a secretary in the bank, and he agrees, as she has experience in bookkeeping. They leave the house together.
Krogstad arrives and tells Nora that he is worried he will be fired. He asks her to help him keep his job and says that he will fight desperately to keep it. Nora is reluctant to commit to helping him, so Krogstad reveals that he knows she committed forgery on the bond she signed for her loan from him. As a woman, she needed an adult male co-signer, so she said she would have her father do so. However the signature is dated three days after his death, which suggests that it is a forgery. Nora admits that she did forge the signature, so as to spare her dying father further worry about her (she was pregnant, poor, and had a seriously ill husband). Krogstad explains that the forgery betrayed his trust and is also a serious crime. If he told others about it, her reputation would be ruined, as was his after a similar "indiscretion," even though he was never prosecuted. He implies that what he did was in order to provide for his sick wife, who later died.
[edit]Act two
Christine arrives to help Nora repair a dress for a costume party she and Torvald plan to attend the next day. Torvald returns from the bank, and Nora pleads with him to reinstate Krogstad in his position, claiming she is worried Krogstad will publish libelous articles about Torvald and ruin his career. Torvald dismisses her fears and explains that, although Krogstad is a good worker and seems to have turned his life around, he must be fired because he is not deferential enough to Torvald in front of other bank personnel. Torvald then retires to his study to work.
Dr. Rank, a family friend, arrives. Nora asks him for a favor, to which Rank reveals that he has entered the terminal stage of tuberculosis of the spine (a contemporary euphemism for congenital syphilis)[8] and that he has always been secretly in love with her. Nora tries to deny the first revelation and make light of it but is more disturbed by his declaration of love. She tries clumsily to tell him that she is not in love with him but that she loves him dearly as a friend.
Desperate after being fired by Torvald, Krogstad arrives at the house. Nora convinces Dr. Rank to go in to Torvald's study so he will not see Krogstad. When Krogstad confronts Nora, he declares that he no longer cares about the remaining balance of Nora's loan but that he will preserve the associated bond in order to blackmail Torvald into not only keeping him employed but promoting him as well. Nora explains that she has done her best to persuade her husband but that he refuses to change his mind. Krogstad informs Nora that he has written a letter detailing her crime (forging her father's signature of surety on the bond) and puts it in Torvald's mailbox, which is locked.
Nora tells Christine of her predicament. Christine says that she and Krogstad were in love before she married and promises that she will try to convince him to relent.
Torvald enters and tries to retrieve his mail but Nora distracts him by begging him to help her with the dance she has been rehearsing for the costume party, feigning anxiety about performing. She dances so badly and acts so childishly that Torvald agrees to spend the whole evening coaching her. When the others go in to dinner, Nora stays behind for a few minutes and contemplates suicide to save her husband from the shame of the revelation of her crime and (more importantly) to pre-empt any gallant gesture on his part to save her reputation.
[edit]Act three
Christine tells Krogstad that she only married her husband because she had no other means to support her sick mother and young siblings and that she has returned to offer him her love again. She believes that he would not have stooped to unethical behavior if he had not been devastated by her abandonment and in dire financial straits. Krogstad is moved and offers to take back his letter to Torvald. However, Christine decides that Torvald should know the truth for the sake of his and Nora's marriage.
After literally dragging Nora home from the party, Torvald goes to check his mail but is interrupted by Dr. Rank, who has followed them. Dr. Rank chats for a while so as to convey obliquely to Nora that this is a final goodbye, as he has determined that his death is near. Dr. Rank leaves, and Torvald retrieves his letters. As he reads them, Nora steels herself to take her life. Torvald confronts her with Krogstad's letter. Enraged, he declares that he is now completely in Krogstad's power—he must yield to Krogstad's demands and keep quiet about the whole affair. He berates Nora, calling her a dishonest and immoral woman and telling her she is unfit to raise their children. He says that from now on their marriage will be only a matter of appearances.
A maid enters, delivering a letter to Nora. The letter is from Krogstad, yet Torvald demands to read the letter, taking it from Nora. Torvald exults that he is saved as Krogstad has burned the incriminating papers. He takes back his harsh words to his wife and tells her that he forgives her. Nora realizes that her husband is not the strong and gallant man she thought he was and that he truly loves himself more than he does her.
Torvald explains that, when a man has forgiven his wife, it makes him love her all the more since it reminds him that she is totally dependent on him, like a child. He dismisses Nora's agonized choice made against her conscience for the sake of his health and her years of secret efforts to free them from the ensuing obligations and danger of loss of reputation, while preserving his peace of mind, as a mere mistake that she made owing to her foolishness, one of her most endearing feminine traits.
Nora tells Torvald that she is leaving him to live alone so she can find out who she is and what she believes and decide what to do with her life. She says she has been treated like a doll to play with, first by her father and then by him. Concerned for the family reputation, Torvald insists that she fulfill her duty as a wife and mother, but Nora says that her first duties are to herself and that she cannot be a good mother or wife without learning to be more than a plaything. She reveals that she had expected that he would want to sacrifice his reputation for hers and that she had planned to kill herself to prevent him from doing so. She now realizes that Torvald is not at all the kind of person she had believed him to be and that their marriage has been based on mutual fantasies and misunderstanding.
Torvald is unable to comprehend Nora's point of view, since it contradicts all that he had been taught about the female mind throughout his life. Furthermore, he is so narcissistic that it would be impossible for him to bear to understand how he appears to her, as selfish, hypocritical and more concerned with public reputation than with actual morality. Nora leaves her keys and wedding ring and, as Torvald breaks down and begins to cry, baffled by what has happened, Nora leaves the house, slamming the door behind herself.
Alternative ending
It was felt by Ibsen's German agent that the original ending would not play well in German theatres; therefore, for the play's German debut, Ibsen was forced to write an alternative ending for it to be considered acceptable. In this ending, Nora is led to her children after having argued with Torvald. Seeing them, she collapses, and the curtain is brought down. Ibsen later called the ending a disgrace to the original play and referred to it as a 'barbaric outrage'.