2008/07/27 08/09 베르더 브레멘 단체 사진
2008/07/24 리암 니슨, [Eh Joe] 2008/07/24 필름 포럼, 두기봉 특별전 2008/07/17 미하엘 발라크 결혼, 2008-07-14 2008/07/12 이반 클라스니치, FC 낭트와 계약 완료
+ http://www.snapfactory.de/fussball.html
+ http://www.daylife.com/photo/06fb8MA6bB4cJ 2008-07-22 촬영. 원본 크기가 3744x2136 이니 클릭해서 봐야 함. ![]() (뒤에서 2번째 줄, L-R) Said Husejinovic (Bosnia), Mesut Özil, Dusko Tosic (Serbia), Niklas Andersen, Frank Baumann, Jurica Vranjes (Croatia), Markus Rosenberg (Sweden), Clemens Fritz, Torsten Frings. (뒤에서 3번째 줄, L-R) General manager Klaus Allofs, head coach Thomas Schaaf, assistant coach Matthias Hönerbach, assistant coach Wolfgang Rolff, goalkeepers' coach Michael Kraft, fitness coach Yann-Benjamin Kugel, physiotherapist Stefan Wolters, technical assistant Uwe Behrens, physiotherapist Florian Lauerer, team doctor Götz Dimanski, technical assistant Detlef Kollra. (맨 앞줄, L-R) Diego (Brazil), Martin Harnik (Austria), Petri Pasanen (Finland), Nico Pellatz, Tim Wiese, Christian Vander, Sebastian Mielitz, Max Kruse, Daniel Jensen (Denmark), Kevin Artmann. ~ 판더 옆의 골키퍼 Sebastian Mielitz는 처음 보는 얼굴인데 요새 평가전에 계속 나오고 있음. 작년에 브레멘 II 골키퍼였더라. ~ snapfactory.de에 가면 선수별 개인 사진 및 촬영장 사진도 있는데 무려 플래시로 되어 있어서 다운로드하기 귀찮음 -_- Temporary Internet Files 폴더에 가 보면 다 들어가 있긴 함. ~ 클라스니치와 24번이 빠지니 팀 전체의 미모 지수가 급격히 하락 -_-; 거기다 오보모옐라까지 없구나. # by 파이 | 2008/07/27 00:31 | Pastime
요새 뭐 하고 사시나 했더니 이런 예술을 하고 있었다.
[Eh Joe], 베케트 작, 아톰 에고이안 연출. + http://theater2.nytimes.com/2008/07/19/theater/reviews/19joe.html [기사 백업] THEATER REVIEW | 'EH JOE'MORE ON 'Eh Joe'Words Fail Him, but Memories Can't Be Silenced Liam Neeson is the title character in "Eh Joe," one of three works by Samuel Beckett at the Lincoln Center Festival. By CHARLES ISHERWOOD Published: July 19, 2008 Hey there, fans of those nasty "Saw" movies. Wanna come see a big-time movie star, Liam Neeson, get eaten alive onstage? Oh, not literally, of course. The Lincoln Center Festival, ever in search of groundbreaking international theater, has not imported a tribe of cannibals to feast on Mr. Neeson while well-heeled patrons nod politely in the seats. It is those familiar spiritual afflictions — guilt, loneliness, existential horror — that gnaw mercilessly at Mr. Neeson's character in Samuel Beckett's "Eh Joe," which is being presented in repertory with two other evenings devoted to that Irish writer at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater, all produced by Dublin's Gate Theater. Although it lasts just half an hour, this staging of a Beckett piece originally written for television is one of the most wholly satisfying nights I've spent at the theater this year. Remarkably, Mr. Neeson draws a transfixing portrait of a man on the edge of emotional collapse without speaking a single word. The Canadian film and theater director Atom Egoyan created this production for the Gate, which has long made a specialty of Beckett's work. (The company took its complete cycle of Beckett's stage works to the first Lincoln Center Festival in 1996.) "Eh Joe" appears alongside a dramatization of excerpts from Beckett's novels, performed by Barry McGovern, and Ralph Fiennes in "First Love," based on a Beckett novella. All three will also performed in succession at marathons on July 26 and 27. Mr. Neeson's unseen co-star in "Eh Joe" is the marvelous British actress Penelope Wilton. Her role is recorded and does not begin until we have watched Mr. Neeson, shoulders hunched furtively, close himself up in the shabby room in which the play is set. (Its oppressively drab design is by Eileen Diss.) The man onstage is a visibly haunted one. He nervously yanks open a closet door to make sure nothing lurks inside and gets down on his knees to peer under the bed before throwing himself down upon it. But of course the bedclothes can become a suffocating shroud for unquiet souls. Just as this antsy fellow is settling down in relief, a voice emerges from the dark of his anxious mind, calling him to a quiet reckoning with his past. In cadences smooth as water lapping gently at a night shore, the voice begins by mocking his anxiety. "What's wrong with that bed, Joe?" It coolly taunts him with its ineluctable presence. "Ever think of that? ... If it went on ... The whisper in your head." It is the voice of a former lover, come to lead Joe through a gantlet of memories of a life lived with too little care for the damage he inflicted on the women in his past. "Anyone living love you now, Joe?" the voice asks dispassionately, just a hint of laughter in its tone. "Anyone living sorry for you now?" When this tender assault begins, a magnified image of Mr. Neeson's face appears on a scrim at the front of the stage. As the minutes squeeze past, the image grows larger as the camera closes in, clinical and cruel as fate. The face does not move, but beneath its surface we can see the words carving a path into Joe's psyche. The eyes become black hollows at times, eerie vacancies in the livid flesh. At other moments they shine with vigilant horror, seethe with blind fury, send forth beseeching flashes of desperation. When the pain is too great, they squeeze tightly shut. Occasionally, the cheeks seem to quiver with rage or the lips begin a silent trembling, as if preparing to jabber a protest against the sound inside. But the voice will not be stilled; the guilt-ravaged mind must confront the worst. Mr. Egoyan has called the role of Joe "the longest reaction shot that an actor can imagine." It is surely the most demanding. Mr. Neeson's concentrated intensity, from start to finish, is a breathtaking feat, all the more impressive for the minimal tools at his disposal — nary a word or movement — and the lack of histrionics. (My only quibble is with a late-coming gesture that suddenly breaks the hushed spell.) The technical sheen of Mr. Egoyan's production enhances its effectiveness. The image on the screen has a richness of texture that lends it an eerie glow under the precise lighting design by James McConnell. Mr. Neeson's anguished face comes to resemble a drawn, tortured figure in an El Greco painting made flesh, both terrible and beautiful to behold. It all adds up to an unforgettable experience, 30 spellbinding minutes that seem to transport you to a timeless dimension. But whether it is Beckett's words, Ms. Wilton's insidious voice or Mr. Neeson's agonized image that will haunt me most profoundly I cannot predict. GATE/BECKETT Eh Joe By Samuel Beckett; directed by Atom Egoyan; designed by Eileen Diss; lighting by James McConnell. Presented by Dublin's Gate Theater, Michael Colgan, artistic director; as part of the Lincoln Center Festival 08, Nigel Redden, director. At the Gerald W. Lynch Theater at John Jay College, 899 10th Avenue, at 58th Street, Clinton; (212) 721-6500. Through July 26. Running time: 30 minutes. WITH: Liam Neeson (Joe) and Penelope Wilton (Woman's Voice). [닫기] + 오디오 슬라이드 쇼 http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2008/07/20/theater/liamneeson-ehjoe2/index.html # by 파이 | 2008/07/24 17:54 | Pastime
http://cafe.naver.com/artpluscn/1396
[미션] 상영한다더니 [PTU]로 바뀌었다. 두기봉 팬이라면 진작 DVD로 다들 본 영화겠지만 [미션]은 특히나 극장에서 보게 되었다고 기뻐한 사람이 많았을 텐데 아쉽게 되었다. 우리는 [미션]이 2000년 한국에서 개봉되었을 때 극장에서 봤다 :-P 우리의 몇 안 되는 자랑거리 중 하나. [미션]이 세상에 나왔던 그 때, 두기봉에 대해 글을 쓴 평론가나 기자가 우리 나라에 한 명이라도 있었나? 홍콩 영화라고는 왕가위 밖에 읊을 줄 모르는 게으른 평론가/기자들에게 실망해서 욕깨나 했었다. 여러 가지 이유로 영화 잡지 키노를 싫어했는데, 두기봉을 개무시했다는 것도 한 몫 했다. 니들이 두기봉을 무시해? 우리도 니들 무시해주겠어. # by 파이 | 2008/07/24 17:32 | Pastime
올해 우리의 소원이 겨우 하나는 이루어졌다. 7월 14일~16일 오전에 걸쳐서 뮌헨에서 지모네와 결혼식을 올렸다. ![]() ![]() 행복해야 해~ 너의 행복이 이 누나들의 행복. # by 파이 | 2008/07/17 22:36 | Pastime
http://werder.egloos.com/1854418 에 이어서.
http://www.fcnantes.com/articles/20082009/flash-klasnic110708.php http://www.fcnantes.com/articles/video.php?video=http://tv.fcnantes.com/20072008/Klasnic110708 계약서에 서명했다. 4년 계약. 등번호는 브레멘에서와 같이 17번. 우리가 너 때문에 프랑스 리그까지 신경쓰게 생겼구나 ^_^ 경기를 챙겨보진 못 하겠지만 라이브스코어에서 낭트 경기 결과는 꼬박꼬박 확인하마. ![]() ![]() 도저히 미워할 수 없는, 아니 사랑하지 않을 수 없는 선수. 앞날에 좋은 일만 가득하길. * 생각나서 클라스니치 공식 사이트에 가 보니 언제 올라온 글인지는 모르겠는데 이렇게 써 있다. Hallo Fußballfans, die Zeit ist gekommen, sich von meinen Werder Fans zu verabschieden. Ich danke Euch für die tolle Zeit und Unterstützung. Euer Ivan 새삼 또 아쉽다. 으앙 ㅠㅠ # by 파이 | 2008/07/12 21:37 | Pastime
|