泪洒台北
台北嘉士集团年轻英俊的总经理高舜威,与“娴”服饰店貌美才高的女时装设计师林娴在憩园茶艺馆邂逅。高舜威告诉林娴她酷像他昔日的友陈倩倩。林娴托故离开后,一位年轻的日本便衣警察井上村来到了高舜威的身边。与此同时,跟踪林娴多时的井上村,已将拍摄林娴在各种场合活动的照片电传给日本警视厅,并告之:失踪6年,轰动朝野的著名歌星有板冬子,突然在台北出现,已开始跟踪。高舜威约林娴在西餐厅共进午餐,讲起他第一位女友陈倩倩的故事……五年前的一个雨天,高舜威在茶艺馆与陈倩倩相识,一见倾心,彼此相恋,但高舜威的父母坚决反对儿子的选择,他们要靠儿子与富家女王文琪的婚姻,来挽回嘉士衰败的局面。高家父母当面羞辱了陈倩倩。陈倩倩流着泪发狂似地冲出客厅,消失在雨帘之中。一个月后,高舜威从陈母那里得知,陈倩倩已经出国,并已嫁人,高舜威绝望了。林娴从与高舜威的谈话中了解到,高舜威与王文琪的婚姻并不幸福。林娴听后流出了爱怜的泪水。两人彼此相怜,身心融在一起。东京警视厅与台北警察局关注着林娴与高舜威的交往,他们证实了林娴不是有板冬子,却又对林娴与有板冬子模样相同感到不解,经过调查,终于查出五年前陈倩倩出国并非结婚,而是治伤。五年前,陈倩倩从高家开车冲入雨中,不幸发生车祸,身负重伤,为付昂贵的手术费,陈母接受了高母的钱,条件是保证陈倩倩不与高舜威再来往。医生是田冈国雄。日本警方查出林娴的护照是买的,且她买护照的时间正是有板冬子失踪的时间。但林娴对有板冬子却一无所知,并在无奈中说出了田冈国雄。田冈国证实是按有板冬子的照片为陈倩倩整的容。田冈爱有板冬子,是他把相貌平平的有板冬子变成美丽的歌星,他要永远占有她,他将有板冬子关起来,有板冬子在绝望中自杀。田冈终被警方逮捕。王文琪在与高舜威去律师所办理离婚的途中,将车冲向了高舜威为林娴买的别墅。林娴抱着奄奄一息的高舜威,满脸的泪水洒在台北的土地上。
死神假期
Because I could not stop for Death, he kindly stopped for me; the carriage held but just ourselves and immortality” – Emily Dickinson  If Death took a holiday, the guns would go silent in Iraq, the slaughter on our nation’s highways would cease, and the news media would be compelled to cover positive events in the humanities, arts, and sciences. Unfortunately, Death has not had a vacation in recorded history, but Mitchell Leisen’s 1934 fantasy, Death Takes a Holiday, allows us to consider the possibility. Co-written by Maxwell Anderson and Gladys Lehman and based on the play La Morte in Vacanza by Alberto Casella, Death Takes a Holiday stars Frederic March as the Grim Reaper who takes on human form in an attempt to discover why men fear him so much. Why he has waited 5,000 years to satisfy this curiosity is not explained.  [Spoiler] After a brief tryout as a shadowy figure who scares the daylights out of those that cross his path, Death shows up at, of all places, an upscale party at an Italian villa, posing as the mysterious Prince Sirki. Only one person knows who he really is, the host Duke Lambert (Guy Standing), and he is sworn to secrecy. Sirki proceeds to fascinate the guests. Given to bursts of wit and poetry, he can just as quickly turn sullen and threatening, and some soon find out that it is better not to look too deeply into his eyes. During the three days in which the Prince is at the villa, however, people all over the world miraculously escape death and potential suicides are doomed to frustration.  To see what’s behind all the conversation about love, the suave but naïve Prince Sirki falls for the irresistible Grazia (Evelyn Venable), the daughter of one of Duke’s friends. Grazia knows who Death is but does not fear him, much to the chagrin of her fiancé, Corrado (Kent Taylor) who has developed a strong disdain for Prince Charming.  More sinister than Brad Pitt in the 1998 remake Meet Joe Black, March turns in a very convincing performance as the creepy yet strangely appealing guest. Although the ending is melodramatic, the emotions are very real and the suggestion that Death may in reality be a friend disguised as a foe is quite touching.  (Howard Schumann, talkingpix.co.uk)  In this wearisome and predictable plot line, Death falls in love and bores us to death talking about it.  (Dennis Schwartz, homepages.sover.net)  I've heard DRACULA was advertised with the tag line The Weirdest Love Story ever told! (this is probably a paraphrase), but at heart, I've never felt that you could honestly call that movie a love story. The tag line would be much more appropriate for this one, since it ultimately boils down to what amounts to a love story. This movie is very good indeed, particularly if you consider that it is built around a concept that could have easily been handled in a cute or facile manner. Instead, it is handled as seriously as possible, with some real thought put into how death would try to come to terms with a life and an outlook that was to that point totally unfamiliar to him; much of the credit does go to Fredric March in the title role. It's quite scary when it needs to be, particularly during the first twenty minutes. From then on, it deals with its themes with subtlety, a quiet wit, an enduring sadness, and an everpresent tension on how Death might react if crossed. It's not perfect; some of the dialogue is self-conscious and artificial, as if the writers knew they were dealing with weighty issues and were trying to be profound. But I am certainly glad they didn't try to turn it into a musical comedy of sorts.  (Dave Sindelar, scifilm.org)  See also the remake Death Takes A Holiday (1971)
*
*