浮生一日(2011)

Life in a DayUP:2022-04-20

《浮生一日》(英语:Life in a Day)是一个drama纪录片。它采用众包的形式,选取了公众自行上传并拍摄的影片并加以剪辑,展示了在2010年7月24日这一天世界各地人们的生活。电影总时长94分53秒, YouTube一共收到了来自192个国家和地区的超过81,000份视频素材,总时长超过4500小时。 《浮生一日》在2011年1月27日于圣丹斯电影节首映并在YouTube上进行了直播 。2011年10月31日, YouTubeYouTube宣布可以在其网站上免费观看。

浮生一日

评分:8.8 导演:凯文·麦克唐纳 / 娜塔莉娅·安德烈亚斯 / Joseph Michael 编剧:
主演:辛迪·巴尔 / Moica / Caryn Waechter / Hiroaki Aikawa / Drake Shannon
类型:剧情 / 纪录片
片长:95分钟地区:美国
语言:英语
影片别名:活在这一天(台) / 一日人生(港) / 同一天的生活
上映:2011-07-24(美国)
IMDb:tt1687247

制作

电影由史考特自由制片公司(英语:Scott Free Productions)与YouTube联合制作,由国家地理影业进行分发。视觉特效由Lip Sync Post制作

The film was the creation of a partnership among YouTube, Ridley Scott Associates and LG electronics, announced on 6 July 2010. Users sent in videos supposed to be recorded on 24 July 2010, and then Ridley Scott produced the film and edited the videos into a film with Kevin Macdonald and film editor Joe Walker, consisting of footage from some of the contributors. All chosen footage authors are credited as co-directors.

2010年7月6日,YouTube、雷利·史考特与LG电子共同宣布制作该电影。

The film's music was written by composer and producer Harry Gregson-Williams, along with Matthew Herbert(英语:Matthew Herbert). The film's opening song, written by Herbert, was performed by English singer-songwriter Ellie Goulding. The film also features the song "Jerusalem" by Kieran Leonard(英语:Kieran Leonard) and "Future Prospect" by Biggi Hilmars.

Macdonald told The Wall Street Journal that the project was initially conceived as a way to commemorate the fifth birthday of YouTube, and that he wanted to "take the humble YouTube video, ... and elevate it into art." Editor Joe Walker said that as he understood it, the concept for the crowdsourced documentary came from Ridley Scott's production company "Scott Free U.K." and from YouTube, while Macdonald explained more specifically that "the inspiration for me was a British group from the 1930s called the Mass Observation(英语:Mass Observation) movement. They asked hundreds of people all over Britain to write diaries recording the details of their lives on one day a month and answer a few simple questions. ... These diaries were then organised into books and articles with the intention of giving voice to people who weren't part of the "elite" and to show the intricacy and strangeness of the seemingly mundane."

Macdonald began his "Around the world in 80,000 clips" article in The Guardian by posing the questions, "What do you love? What do you fear? What's in your pocket?" and explaining that "one day last summer, I asked ordinary people around the world to answer those three questions and spend a day filming their lives." The 80,000 individual clips received amounted to 4,500 hours of electronic footage. Macdonald explained that about 75% of the film's content came from people contacted through YouTube, traditional advertising, TV shows, and newspapers; the remaining 25% came from cameras sent out to the developing world, Macdonald pointing out "It was important to represent the whole world." At a reported cost of £40,000, "we did resort to snail mail for sending out 400 cameras to parts of the developing world – and getting back the resulting video cards." Macdonald later remarked that he regretted not sending out a far smaller number of cameras but providing training in camera operation and desired type of content: "Naively, I hadn't realised how alien, not only the concept of a documentary is to a lot of people (in the developing world), but also the idea that your own opinions are worth sharing."

Macdonald expressed to The Wall Street Journal that the film "could only be made in the last five years because ... you can get enough people who will have an understanding of how to shoot something." Walker told Wired magazine's Angela Watercutter that the film "couldn't have been made without technology. Ten years ago it would've been impossible." Macdonald explained that YouTube "allowed us to tap into a pre-existing community of people around the world and to have a means of distributing information about the film and then receiving people's 'dailies.' It just wouldn't have been organizationally or financially feasible to undertake this kind of project pre-YouTube."

The filmmaking team "used YouTube's ability to collect all of this material and then we had this sort of sweatshop of people, all multilingual film students, to sift through this material. It couldn't have been done any other way. Nobody had ever done a film like this before, so we had to sort of make it up as we went along." "To put (the 4500 hours of raw footage) in context, I just cut a feature film for Steve McQueen and there's 21 hours of [film] for that."

Walker, whose team edited the whole film over seven weeks, remarked to Adam Sternbergh of The New York Times that "The analogy is like being told to make Salisbury Cathedral, and then being introduced to a field full of rubble. You have to start looking for buttresses and things that connect together." Walker indicated that a team of roughly two dozen researchers, chosen both for a cinematic eye and proficiency with languages, watched, logged, tagged, and rated each clip on a scale of one to five stars. Walker remarked that "the vast amount of material was two stars," and that he and director Kevin Macdonald reviewed the four-star and five-star rated clips.

In addition to the star rating system, the editing/selecting team also organised the 80,000 clips according to countries, themes and video quality as part of the selection process, and further had to convert from 60 different frame rates to make the result cinematically acceptable. All the logging and researching was done using the CatDV(英语:CatDV) media asset management software.

Themes and content

Macdonald said that the film focused on a single day "because a day is the basic temporal building block of human life—wherever you are," with Walker adding that the particular day, 24 July 2010, was chosen because it was the first Saturday after the World Cup.

Concerning the chronology of the film and the order of the clips, Macdonald explained that he let the 300 hours of "best bits" tell him what the themes and structure of the film should be, likening the material to a Rorschach test—"you will see in it what you want to see in it." Joe Walker further explained that "We always wanted to have a number of structures, so it's not just midnight to midnight, but it's also from light to dark and from birth to death. ... bashing things together and making them resonate against each other and provoking thought."

Macdonald said he saw the movie "as a metaphor of the experience of being on the Internet. ... clicking from one place to another, in this almost random way…following our own thoughts, following narrative and thematic paths." Betsy Sharkey wrote in the Los Angeles Times that "this fast-paced documentary is shaped as much by Internet savvy as traditional filmmaking, which doesn't make the experience of it any less satisfying, or the implications any less provocative." "The story is told through the voices of the contributors, but mostly it's the images that do the heavy lifting."

Macdonald explained that the film "doesn't have a traditional story or a traditional narrative, but it has thematic movement…and ... recurring characters." He praised certain specific contributions, including "the most technically amazing skydiving shot I have ever seen in any film" and "a hand going up to a window pane and picking a fly off and filming the hand walking through the house and letting the fly go—and you see the fly take off in the distance." Asked if there any particular submission crystallised the film's theme, Macdonald cited "the family who had been going through cancer." More generally, Macdonald praised the immediacy that a handycam permits.

Ian Buckwalter of Washingtonian(英语:Washingtonian (magazine)) magazine said that "the familiar beats of the day (were) cut together to show that we're actually far more similar than we are different." The Washington Post's Michael O'Sullivan similarly noted that "the people whose lives form the spine of Life feel familiar... Their hopes and joys, disappointments and fears are our own." Liz Braun, writing in the Toronto Sun(英语:Toronto Sun), said that "The overall sense of the project appears to be: It's good to be alive. ... According to the film, there are things that divide us as humans, but far more things that unite us." Toronto Star critic Peter Howell was in accord, observing that the "film shows things (what) billions of us do every day, perhaps thinking that we are somehow alone in our pursuits. Yet we couldn't be more connected." However, The Boston Globe's Tom Russo gave director "Macdonald and crew credit for picking out good, clear, telling contrasts, and not sweating potential heavy-handedness," citing contrasts between "one smug contributor pull(ing) a set of Lamborghini keys from his pocket, ... then mov(ing) on to ragged-looking Third Worlders amusedly scoffing at the idea that they'd have anything in their pockets," and a Westerner "quietly worries about losing his hair, while an older Afghan man quietly worries about getting through the day alive."

Sharkey described the progression of the film: "Beginning with videos that start pre-dawn then moving through morning, afternoon and evening, ... the rituals that define a day begin to emerge. Beyond an extraordinary range of cultures, terrain and styles reflected, which are captivating on their own, the film stands as a stirring reminder of how ordinary and yet eclectic humanity can be. If "Life in a Day" is any measure, we are a quirky, likeable, unpredictable and yet predictable bunch."

Yumi Goto of TIME LightBox remarked that "the most striking aspect of this documentary is that it's the first crowdsourced, user-generated content to hit the big screen." O'Sullivan said that, being "alternately funny, scary, boring, moving, amateurish and gorgeous, it is a pretty spectacular thing: a crowdsourced movie that manages to feel singular and whole." Anthony Benigno wrote in Filmcritic.com that the film "is pretty much the first social-media movie ever made."

The New York Times' Adam Sternbergh wrote that "the film's most memorable moments are the ones of unexpected intimacy. ... The film aims to tell the story of a planet, but it's the vulnerability of these individual moments, contributed as part of a larger project, that lingers." The Los Angeles Times' Betsy Sharkey wrote that "The fact that we all experienced that day is part of what gives the documentary an unusual kind of relatability."

Sharkey characterised the film as being "the most hopeful yet from Macdonald, a director who's made his reputation by digging into the more corrupted and conflicted side of human nature with One Day in September(英语:One Day in September), his Oscar-winning documentary on the 1972 Munich massacre of Israeli Olympic athletes... (T)he lightness (Macdonald has) unearthed in "Life in a Day" has an earthy and at times euphoric appeal."

Reception

Life in a Day has received generally positive reception from film critics. Rotten Tomatoes reports that 82% of 52 critics have given the film a positive review, with a rating average of 7.1 out of 10. Metacritic gave the film a rating average of 58/100, indicating "mixed or average reviews".

Helen O'Hara from Empire stated that the film was "moving and insightful. Not a classic by any means, but a fascinating glimpse of the way we live today." Michael O'Sullivan of the Washington Post gave the film three and a half stars out of four, saying that "Life in a Day is, without exaggeration, a profound achievement." Peter Howell, a critic of the Toronto Star, gave the film three out of four stars, saying "the vast majority of the film feels undeniably real and incredibly inspiring." Wired magazine's Angela Watercutter wrote that the film "brims with intimacy and urgency."

CNN's Mark Rabinowitz wrote that the film is "a rousing success of an experiment: quite possibly the first large-scale, global use of the Internet to create meaningful and beautiful art," with CNN Newsroom(英语:CNN Newsroom)'s Josh Levs(英语:Josh Levs) remarking that the film is "the best time capsule in the history of the world." Ian Buckwalter of Washingtonian(英语:Washingtonian (magazine)) magazine called the condensed experiences "breathtaking" and "as riveting as any narrative."

Liz Braun, writing in the Toronto Sun(英语:Toronto Sun), said that "a lot is predictable" and "It's all familiar for the most part, and it's all mildly interesting," but also cited several "sequences that fully engage a viewer emotionally." Andrew Schenker from Slant Magazine criticised the film by stating "Only a few snippets escape the uncritical narcissism that the film celebrates." Contentions such as Schenker's were contradicted by The New York Times' Adam Sternbergh who wrote that "if the knock against the Internet... is that it stokes our collective narcissism, this film, in its best moments, proves the opposite: not a global craving for exposure but a surprising universal willingness to allow ourselves to be exposed."

Though saying Life in a Day "isn't a bad movie" and there are "fits and spurts" in which the film is "actually quite beautiful," "funny" and "moving," Anthony Benigno from Filmcritic.com asserted that documentaries should have a point, narrative, conflict and goal, but called this film "scattershot" and "at its worst, veering closer into exploitation...and even voyeurism." V.A. Musetto, a critic of the New York Post, said about the film: "Judging by the National Geographic doc "Life in a Day," a lot of nothing happened on 24 July 2010." A counterpoint was expressed by the Los Angeles Times' Betsy Sharkey: "the world community had a lot of interesting things on its mind, but it still took filmmakers like Macdonald and Walker to help us say it with feeling."

Two writers for The New York Times adopted opposing opinions. Mike Hale's review asserted that "much of the material is interesting in its own right... but... the problem is the resolutely conventional and soft-headed way in which that material has been assembled," and that "the overall tone remains gee-whiz." In contrast, Adam Sternbergh concluded that "the montages of ordinary acts, repeated from Japan to Dubai to Las Vegas, take on a kind of profundity."

Criticism of free labour

The film has been criticised for its use of free labour. In the film industry, the production teams required to produce images and sounds are normally paid. However, in the case of Life in a Day, the labour undertaken by YouTube users to shoot the content used in film was not compensated, even though the film was screened in traditional cinema venues for a profit.

Follow-on projects and legacy

In October 2011, BBC News announced that Britain in a Day(英语:Britain in a Day) would be funded by BBC Learning(英语:BBC Learning) as part of BBC's "Cultural Olympiad," with the Britain in a Day(英语:Britain in a Day) YouTube channel accepting video contributions from the public about their lives on a specific day: 12 November 2011. Scott oversaw the project with executive producer Macdonald (both from Life in a Day) and director Morgan Mathews(英语:Morgan Matthews (filmmaker)).

In 2012 directors Philip Martin and Gaku Narita teamed up to create Japan in a Day which accounts of the aftermath from Japan's devastating tsunami in 2011 featuring YouTube videos shot by survivors living in and near the affected areas.

Macdonald and Scott also created Christmas in a Day (November 2013) a 48-minute YouTube documentary on which a 3.5-minute advertisement for UK supermarket Sainsbury's was based. The film constituted crowdsourced clips recorded on Christmas 2012.

Italy in a Day(英语:Italy in a Day) (September 2014), directed by Gabriele Salvatores(英语:Gabriele Salvatores), included clips selected from 45,000 crowdsourced video submissions recorded on 26 October 2013, and premiered during the 71st Venice International Film Festival.

The production house behind Italy in a Day is teaming with Scott Free Productions to produce Israel in a Day, with Germany and France also working on their own versions in the format.

India in a Day(英语:India in a Day) was released in 2015.

Spain in a Day by Isabel Coixet was released in 2016.

Canada in a Day(英语:Canada in a Day) was released in 2017.

Panama in a Day was released in 2019.

Life in a Day 2020(英语:Life in a Day (2021 film)) will be released in 2021.

See also

  • Love Parade disaster英语Love Parade disaster

References

  1. ^ LIFE IN A DAY | British Board of Film Classification. bbfc.co.uk. 
  2. ^ Box Office Mojo上《Life in a Day》的资料(英文)
  3. ^ Macdonald, Kevin. Life in a Day: Around the world in 80,000 clips. The Guardian. 2011-06-07 [2020-07-17]. ISSN 0261-3077 (英国英语). 
  4. ^ Life in a Day | Kevin Macdonald. The Sydney Morning Herald. 24 July 2010 [27 January 2011]. 
  5. ^ YouTube's 'Life in a Day' Project – CBS News Video. CBS News. 22 July 2010 [27 January 2011]. (原始内容存档于24 July 2010). 
  6. ^ Howell: Tears flow during Sundance's 'Life in a Day'. Toronto Star (Toronto). 25 January 2011 [27 January 2011]. 
  7. ^ Life in a Day now available on YouTube. 31 October 2011 [31 October 2011]. (原始内容存档于31 October 2011).  无效|dead-url=bot: unknown (帮助), YouTube's official blog ().
  8. ^ Barrett, Brian, Life in a Day: Watch the Beautiful YouTube-Fueled Epic Right Now (WebCite archive), Gizmodo, 31 October 2011.
  9. ^ 'Life in a Day' to get theatrical release. United Press International. [27 January 2011]. 
  10. ^ Fernandez, Jay A. National Geographic Films picks up Life in a Day. Reuters. 24 January 2011 [27 January 2011]. 
  11. ^ Life in a Day –通过www.imdb.com. 
  12. ^ Still from Life in a Day credits, director Kevin Macdonald and. [21 February 2011]. (原始内容存档于3 May 2012). 
  13. ^ Still from Life in a Day credits, co-directors list part 1. [21 February 2011]. (原始内容存档于3 May 2012). 
  14. ^ Still from Life in a Day credits, co-directors list part 2. [21 February 2011]. (原始内容存档于3 May 2012). 
  15. ^ Goulding, Ellie. Brits/Film Studios/Showbiz!. Cherrytree Records. 19 January 2011 [27 January 2011]. (原始内容存档于8 July 2011). 
  16. ^ Leonard, Kieran. Kieran Leonard. kieranleonardmusic.co.uk. 
  17. ^ Dodes, Rachel, "‘Life in a Day' Director Aims to Elevate YouTube Videos Into Art" (WebCite archive), edited interview transcript in The Wall Street Journal's "SpeakEasy" section, 22 July 2011.
  18. ^ Watercutter, Angela, "Life in a Day Distills 4,500 Hours of Intimate Video Into Urgent Documentary" (WebCite archive), Wired magazine, 29 July 2011.
  19. ^ Macdonald, Kevin, "Life in a Day: Around the world in 80,000 clips" (WebCite archive), The Guardian, 7 June 2011.
  20. ^ Sternbergh, Adam, "Around the World in One Day" (WebCite archive), The New York Times, 22 July 2011.
  21. ^ Fox, David. Metadata Mashup: Life in a Day on camera. TVBEurope. [19 August 2017]. 
  22. ^ Sharkey, Betsy, "Movie review: 'Life in a Day'" (WebCite archive), the Los Angeles Times, 29 July 2011. (Sharkey slightly misstates the "love/fear/pockets" quotation.)
  23. ^ Buckwalter, Ian, “Another Earth,” “Life in a Day,” and “Cowboys & Aliens”: Movie Tickets (WebCite archive), "Arts and Events" section of Washingtonian英语Washingtonian (magazine) magazine online, posted 27 July 2011.
  24. ^ O'Sullivan, Michael, "Life in a Day" (Critic's Pick) (WebCite archive), The Washington Post, 29 July 2011.
  25. ^ Braun, Liz, (QMI Agency), "'Life in a Day' a free-wheeling look at human events" (WebCite archive), Toronto Sun英语Toronto Sun, 29 July 2011.
  26. ^ Howell, Peter, "Life in a Day: A brief, shining moment on Planet Earth" (WebCite archive), The Toronto Star, 28 July 2011.
  27. ^ Russo, Tom, "Life in a Day: From trivial to beautiful in ‘Life'" (WebCite archive), The Boston Globe, 5 August 2011.
  28. ^ Goto, Yumi, "From Midnight to Midnight: Life in a Day" (WebCite archive), feature of TIME LightBox (photo editors section), 1 August 2011.
  29. ^ Benigno, Anthony, "Review in Theaters, Life in a Day" (WebCite archive), filmcritic.com, 28 July 2011.
  30. ^ Life in a Day (2011). Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster英语Flixster. [20 July 2011]. 
  31. ^ Life in a Day. Metacritic. [30 July 2011]. 
  32. ^ https://www.empireonline.com/reviews/reviewcomplete.asp?FID=137267/
  33. ^ Rabinowitz, Mark, "Review: 'Life in a Day' an inspiring snapshot of planet Earth" (WebCite archive), CNN.com, 29 July 2011.
  34. ^ Levs, Josh, "CNN NEWSROOM Scrambling to Make a Deal; World Worries about U.S. Debt; "Life in a Day" Opens in Theaters; ... Aired July 30, 2011 – 12:00 ET" (WebCite archive), transcripts.CNN.com, 30 July 2011.
  35. ^ Review: Life in a Day. 
  36. ^ Musetto, V.A. Life in a Day. New York Post. 31 July 2011. 
  37. ^ Hale, Mike, "Movie Review: Life in a Day (2011): The World as YouTube Knows It" (WebCite archive), The New York Times Movie Review, 28 July 2011.
  38. ^ Undercompensated Labor in Life in a Day William J. Moner / FLOW Staff – Flow. 
  39. ^ Artistic Labour, Enclosure and the New Economy • 30 - Summer 2012 • Afterall. www.afterall.org. 
  40. ^ "London 2012 Britain in a Day project launched" (WebCite archive), BBC News Entertainment and Arts, 6 October 2011.
  41. ^ "Ridley Scott to help create a portrait of Britain in a Day" (WebCite archive), Radio Times, 5 October 2011.
  42. ^ Gray, Richard, "Battle of the Christmas adverts put to the test" (WebCite archive), The Telegraph, 9 December 2013.
    • Sainsbury's short video: "Sainsbury's Christmas Advert 2013 – Full Length".
    • Full length YouTube documentary: "Christmas in a Day – the full film – directed by Kevin Macdonald (Official)"
  43. ^ Ide, Ella, "Italy's ills, hopes laid bare in new crowdsourced film" (WebCite archive), Business Insider, 3 September 2014.
  44. ^ "CTV's Canada in a Day debuts June 25". Toronto Star, June 13, 2017.
  45. ^ Acerca de | Panama in a Day. 15 August 2019. (原始内容存档于15 August 2019). 
  46. ^ Kevin Macdonald, Ridley Scott to Reunite for 'Life in a Day 2020,' 10 Years on From Crowdsourced Original. The Hollywood Reporter. [2020-07-09] (英语). 

External links

  • YouTube上的Life in a Day频道
  • Full-length film on YouTube (WebCite archive)
  • 互联网电影数据库(IMDb)上《Life in a Day》的资料(英文)
  • AllMovie上《Life in a Day 》的资料(英文)
  • Box Office Mojo上《Life in a Day》的资料(英文)
  • 烂番茄上《Life in a Day》的资料(英文)
  • Metacritic上《Life in a Day》的资料(英文)

简评

实在是很喜欢这个纪录片的名字,浮生一日,浮生,弱小如微尘的生命漂浮在浩瀚宇宙,一日,在没有尽头的时间流里,停留二十四小时,八万六千四百秒,视线落在世界的很多个角落里,很多种人生里。不论是怎样的人生,不论正经历着怎样的故事,好像都可以从那里看到自己长久以来一直思考的问题的解题思路,关于我们为什么要活着,关于爱和信仰。尽管仍然没有办法书写一个确切的答案,但是似乎人生就算戛然而止也不会有什么遗憾,不去努力向生命赋予意义,只是单纯的感恩呼吸的感觉,不信上帝的人也应该过虔诚的生活,阳光、雨露、枯萎的蒲公英和梦想的分量没有两样。

这部纪录片和《人类》给我的感觉差不多,但是场景更多,更贴近我们的生活,通过场景让你看,让你听,让你去体会浮云众生。《浮生一日》这个名字取的特别好。每个人的生活片段在影片里就像一个蜉蝣,相似却又不同,短,小,却又互相构造,很和谐。每个人的人生都值得认认真真过,都值得尊敬,它交予我们敬畏生命。这是其他人的生活,也是我们的生活,很治愈很适合没有生活目标的人看。不知道这么说恰不恰当,我觉得它回答了,人为什么活着这个问题。每个人通过这个影片能得到不同的答案。我认为《浮生一日》比《人类》好。但它没有给现在的我带来新的东西或者启发,所以我给三星。

宿醉的男人,摇橹的女人,妻子去世照顾独自照顾年幼的儿子的男人,患上癌症不得不让儿子接受母亲生病的女人,逐渐走向不可避免死亡的老者,破腹而出的新生儿,表白被拒绝的男人,求婚成功的情侣,自我的丈夫的疲惫的妻子,历经岁月仍微笑说出“We do”的老夫妇,在街头擦鞋向大家展示自己电脑的男孩,坚定而缓慢地登上人山之顶的女孩,骑着自行车环游世界的男人,工作了一整天什么事也没发生的女人……影片的剪辑非常棒,穿插着不同国家不同宗教不同工作不同性格的男男女女的一天,每个人的生活都那么不同,但每个人都只是在过自己平凡的一天。浮生一日,芸芸众生。

不能说很喜欢。最大的收获是从来自世界各地的footage的再次编排叙事中学到了剪辑和讲故事的技巧。大量的篇幅用灰暗悲伤的基调讲述底层民众的日常,在后半程讲述快乐开怀大笑的片段多半来自于中产。偏差处理后给人感觉是中产没有悲伤,底层不配快乐。ending在一位开车上班的白领姐姐哭着说“周六还上了一天班你们没想到吧,我好惨;以及本来期待今天能有什么特殊的经历发生,结果平平淡淡就过完了啊不能接受”。有班上不用给人擦鞋打渔你还嘤嘤嘤啥呢。想要超出朝九晚五的体验就要自己走出去去让事情发生,不是等着美好光怪陆离的事件砸到你的工位。

因为小何推荐,来看这部纪录片,看来我这几年可能真的是有些浮躁了,竟然对一部纪录片产生了快进的想法。整体看下来,我能够懂得一些比较浅的道理,可能就是我们需要珍惜每一天吧,浮生一天,每一天都是不一样的你,可以把每一天都过得非常棒的你。可能对于我们来说这一天只是普通的一天,但是另一个人可能会很艰难。只是平平淡淡,普通过完一生,已经很难了,但是我们也绝不可以这样放任自己。世界上有好多人,他们选择了不同的生活方式,而我们自己,就是最独特的自己。过好每一天吧,浮生一日。

因为疫情的关系,很多人被迫回归和反思个人生活。在提及到个人生活的匮乏与贫瘠时,会有关于这部电影的展开。久闻大名的我,在20210109这天得以和朋友一起拉上窗帘默默完成观看。我们交付出自己的笑声与眼泪,也对某观看平台的马赛克表示无语。这平凡世间普通人烟火气的一天,这看似随意但用心的镜头语言,这恰到好处的草蛇灰线与音乐铺陈,这不跌宕不狗血甚至没有剧情更不涉及剧透与感觉丧失的主题,让人很难不动容。这是我们在一起看的第一部影片,以后会一起看很多很多作品,走去很多很多地方,并且做好彼此自我生活的实践。我写这些在这里,做一个标记,希望回头来看,我们会记得20210109,会记得一起观看一起讨论之后的我们在第二天确认彼此的心意,会记得20210110是我们在一起的第一天。

看过各色的人的生活了,很平凡,此时此刻想着别的国家发生的种种事情,以前觉得自己有使命,生来就是做什么,做不成就会自我怀疑,怀疑自己的价值,不能容忍错误的发生,但慢慢想想生活而已嘛,求得太多总会错过生活本身的鲜活,我对色彩光影着迷不代表我只能一辈子和绘画打交道,我也喜欢体验别人的生活了解他们的心情故事和感受,我也想感受风和草,星星和海,我也想学学那些会让人闪闪发光的技能和特长,做些有趣的工作和兼职或者把我难哭的软件和项目,说这么多就是希望活在生活里不被完美和不平凡禁锢,因为这本身就和自由对立,和生活对立

这部电影揭示了未来短视频流行的一些属性:快速的剪辑、煽情的音乐(没有音乐就好像没法调动情绪了),以及涵盖了短视频所有的垂类,可以说是短视频集合的鼻祖,也可以说是被时代抛弃的电影。还有很多老掉牙的比喻:用初升的太阳与初生的婴儿指代一天的开始,再用夜晚的烟花结束电影。一部电影分成三块来叙述是不入流的手法,分成一百块也是一样的。如果说《人生七年》是用时长让观众逐渐进入受访人的世界,那么这部片子用十秒的时间完成了肤浅而猎奇的呈现。还得吐槽他提问的形式,真没想到的偷懒…偶尔也要看一两部烂片。

被“浮生一日”这个译名吸引到,这个名字让我感觉一生很短很轻,而一日却很长很重。整部纪录片由真实人物拍摄真实事件,当一切喜怒哀乐生老病死和各种第一次,以及世间的至善与残酷逐一排在眼前,心里是无限的震撼。我想这是因为我看到了生活本身。有人住在路旁一个偌大奇怪的房里,有人住在庙宇青葱之间,有人却“我们家14个人住在这个地方,没有水和电,但我们依旧活着。”;有人爱上帝,有人爱妻子,仿若森林之女的女子爱“Mamihlapinatapai”这个单词;有人怕昆虫,有人怕鬼兽,叠罗汉的小女孩怕“如果上帝不存在,那么我们就要永远躺在冰冷的墓里。” 人间百态,聚集一日,谁不震撼? 看到他放生一只苍蝇,看到一只困惑的奶牛过完困惑的一生被枪杀,一日结束,我喉咙仿佛又快东西堵着,无法呼吸。 第500部,留给这部佳作。

.19大三的我最近在迷茫未来的选择,大体希望继续升学深造,但是能否保研,要不要考研,或者是出国,好迷茫好迷茫,顾东顾西,总有东西牵扯着,需要顾及。喜欢看这样真实的人类记录,它让人感知自己的悲欢置于人类的广度下是那么的渺小,让人庆幸自己其实是人类中幸运的一份子,最最重要的是,这些稀碎的生活点滴在我身体里掀起的喜怒哀乐就足以告诉我人类是多么的神奇,生活是多么的丰富,世界是多么的广博。每一个理由都值得让我珍惜当下的每一秒属于自己的时间,值得我去喜爱、去丰盈、去感受。随便一说,记录在我的眼里不再只是美好的行为,记录这个动作本身就很伟大。

好看!巧妙!看前很担心导演处理不好杂乱的故事线和素人拍摄的素材,但事实上,没有把大家的故事硬凑,只是简单的归类,把平凡生活中的闪光点放在一起。其实很多片段甚至算不上闪光点,只是一件事,几分钟,或许没有拍摄的话,当事人第二天就会忘记,但平凡的事,就像盐水煮毛豆,没啥特别的,但是好吃。要说不足,就是素材还是单一了一点。不知道是不是特意减少了欧美国家的素材,很多片段都是来自第三世界国家,底层,但又没有那么接地气,感觉有点怪怪的,看起来很像欧美强国对第三世界国家的惯用视角。中间出现了一个开lambo的哥们儿,也是几十秒就结束了,加入一些让人嫉妒的片段应该会更有意思!有钱人的一日也是浮生一日。

浮生一日,万千世界中,我们什么也不是,可是我们又为世界增光添彩,每个人的一天都是平凡的,可是每个人的平淡的一天又组成了缤纷色彩的世界。这个片子里我们可以看到,有的地方都在讲究男女平等,而有的地方女人则根深蒂固的认为自己应该给男人下跪。同一天中在世界的不同角落,有的人在人群中狂欢,有的人独自在角落里落寞。我们每天按部就班的进行着自己的生活,世界好像与我们无关,又好像与我们紧密相连。我们渺小的好像除了我们身边的人,就不会有其他人关注我们,但是我们却又是这个世界的主角,上演着一出又一出精彩的故事。

获得奖项

  • 第14届英国独立电影奖
    第14届英国独立电影奖
    提名:最佳纪录片
浮生一日演员表