野蛮的印度电影免费观看 高清

评分:
9.0 推荐

分类: 欧美剧 2006

导演:

剧情介绍

INDIA is an exotic mixing pot of iconic wildlife, secret locations, epic landscapes and colourful beauty. This iconic and landmark series is a celebration of India’s most spectacular locations and incredible wildlife. From the "home of snow" in the epic Himalayan Mountains we travel to the mighty River Ganges, lifeblood of India as it carves out its dramatic path across the subcontinent. We also reveal Thar, the “Great Indian Desert”. Its territory includes much of Rajasthan (“the desert state”), where the bleakness of its environment is juxtaposed with the striking colours of traditional Rajasthani dress and amazing wildlife spectacles Also featured is India's lost world of the north east, home to head hunting tribes, tiger infested forests, mountains not yet climbed, rivers waiting to be fished. And finally to the Western Ghats. This biodiversity hotspot is home to epic waterfalls, hill tribes, hidden caves and stunning wildlife.. Part 1: Thar Desert Sacred Sands Covering 200,000 square kilometres, India’s Thar Desert is one of the harshest places on the planet. Baking heat, desiccating winds and near permanent drought has earned this unforgiving land another name – “the region of death.” As we explore India’s great desert we unveil its hidden secrets, and ultimately shed light as to how the Thar has become the most crowded desert in the world. Part 2: Ganges River of Life The Ganges is the longest river in India. It flows from the glaciers of the world’s highest mountains, the Himalayas, to the largest bay in the world, the Bay of Bengal. Human pollution threatens to overwhelm the river, but somehow wild animals survive. Hindus believe that Ganges water has the power to purify, and it seems there is some scientific evidence to support this conviction: microscopic organisms actually eat bacteria that could cause disease, and uniquely high level levels of oxygen break down organic waste faster than any in other river. This self-cleaning property of Ganges water helps support some of the last remaining true wilderness in the world – the Sundarbans swamp. Here, India’s largest population of wild tigers have never learned to fear man, making them very dangerous neighbours. Part 3: Himalayas Surviving the Summits Outside Asia, no peak reaches above 7000 metres, but along the Himalayan range, over 100 mountains exceed this height by at least 200 metres, making it the tallest mountain range on the planet.As Earth meets the sky along this hostile terrain, powerful winds, sub-zero temperatures, and a lack of oxygen oppose virtually all forms of life, but remarkably, this immense geological feature somehow supports one of the largest and most diverse collections of creatures on the planet – including man. While the Himalayas rugged highlands offer little direct refuge to humans, in the shadow below, over a billion people in India rely on the mountains for survival. Part 4: Western Ghats Monsoon Mountains Stretching for a thousand miles along India’s west coast, the Western Ghats are a spine of mountains that lay claim to being one of the most bio-diverse places in the world. Mountains rear their heads into the path of monsoon clouds, intercepting rains and making the western slopes some of the wettest places in India. Tropical rainforests thrives, and explode with life. The Western Ghats hold the key to life across southern India. Rainwater harvested by the mountains washes down to the coast, feeding Kerala’s backwaters; huge rivers flow east across India’s dry interior, a lifeline to animals and people. Part 5: Indias Lost World Imagine a lost world – head hunting tribes, tiger-infested forests, unclimbed mountains, pristine rivers. Known as the Seven Sisters of India, there are seven relatively unexplored and isolated Indian states. What mysteries lie within this secretive land and why have they remained untouched for so long? North-east India is an anthropological paradise; there is no other place on Earth with so many different ethnic groups. The forest slopes are filled with mysterious tribes whose lives are dictated by the ebb and flow of the rain and the seasonal fruits of the forest. In these largely unexplored and isolated areas people scarcely known to the Western world continue a way of life steeped in ancient rituals.

评论:

  • 接雨真 4小时前 :

    比起海报上女王大人的飙泪一声吼,全片只有配乐和字幕比较有趣,对霓虹当下老龄化的探讨也过于肤浅。

  • 允冬梅 4小时前 :

    前半段的喜剧感拉满,最后又转向政治式的缓解焦虑工具,成为了四不像的宣传片。

  • 合绮晴 5小时前 :

    最喜欢的天海佑希松重丰,不难看但有点失望…

  • 士玉龙 9小时前 :

    没有养老的资金,养老需要准备上佰万,不然你将只能过低配戚苦的晚年世界,当下的你,准备好了吗?

  • 卫镕宽 1小时前 :

    其实天海女士很在意这些养老啊 婚姻这种完全她没烦恼但大家都会烦恼的事情 上次她的一个采访也讲过 讲过以后把自己的房子其他的房间分出去给其他年轻人住 可能中国人觉得我五十多我把房子卖了 我没根了 我给孩子没东西留了 国情不同吧

  • 寿幻桃 2小时前 :

    笑死,棺材打折是对佛祖不尊重。 结局的合租不评论,毕竟社会背景不同。 家人相处,少些猜忌多些关爱这倒是真的。人在死后什么都听不见了,还不如生前让大家把话讲出来欢乐地一聚。

  • 卫建 1小时前 :

    蛮搞笑的,剧情中规中矩,就是讲经济萧条也要保持好心态保持希望。天海这个身高233这么多年笑容依旧阳光灿烂。

  • 佘易槐 4小时前 :

    不愧是《小猪教室》的导演(最喜欢的日影之一啦),属于演员的影片,观影过程轻松愉快,即便是进入他人悲惨的人生,也能够在负担不是很重的前提下获得重要的启示

  • 塞雨信 1小时前 :

    出发点是现实的,过程是轻松娱乐的,结果是乌托邦的。

  • 妍桂 5小时前 :

    霓虹国的人都不会老么?影片只展现了生活中还算美好的片段。但是,但是啊,生活中,还有太多太多的鸡零狗碎。偶尔看看乌托邦还行,但是不可全信。

  • 妍倩 3小时前 :

    看来在日本也是老年人养大了孩子,但是自己确面对晚年的孤独生活,确实对于老年人过于悲惨,影片中妈妈被接到自己孩子家住的兴奋表情,渴望亲情。多令人感动

  • 彦月 4小时前 :

    就挺好玩儿的 不过他们后来住那种sharehouse真的有吗

  • 伯芦雪 3小时前 :

    虽然编导不过是想营造喜剧冲突,但是让女主面对一群吸血虫配角也够让人吐槽的了,最后也不知道怎么安排的伏笔就让这群配角善解人意。霓虹国的老百姓可能普遍都挺听话的,合租养老这事真就这样推广出去了。

  • 以山菡 7小时前 :

    其实是sharehouse的广告吧 //编剧到底在做什么梦//4000万日元,约人民币202万,呵,我选择跳海。

  • 嘉栋 9小时前 :

    用喜剧的方式呈现了非常现实的问题。个人觉得生前葬礼很不错可以有,不过老后share house的话可能有点理想化,还会有比较多的问题。

  • 哀博艺 6小时前 :

    谈不上有多好,但也不难看,亮点只在于天海佑希、松重丰、草笛光子三个人精彩的表演上面,3.5星吧

  • 伊南风 9小时前 :

    剧情牵强附会,看女王和松重丰的夫妇生活就好。

  • 姜晓彤 2小时前 :

    故事还算顺,用不到这么大的女主,老太太真专业,撑的很满

  • 侍晋鹏 2小时前 :

    结局发现竟然是合租房子的广告片,根本就是让国民从还房贷的坑进入另一个坑,还是苦哈哈为资本家赚钱

  • 戈晗昱 5小时前 :

    一般,天海女王和大叔的演技当然在线,最后强行HE有些强颜欢笑啊。卖了房子还只有70w存款,这是日本底层民众吧,太惨了啊。

加载中...

Copyright © 2015-2023 All Rights Reserved