engmus-f1010
"Tehran-43" (Non-Morricone's music)
The
movie provided by Gaozhiqing. Thanks web friend
Gaozhiqing
E-mail
of Gaozhiqing:
gzq@founder.com.cn
English
dub, Chinese subtitles,
92 minutes edition.
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A
brief about the movie
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This
story starts in 1980 in Paris as the memories
of Andrei Borodin (Igor Kostolevsky), a Soviet
agent, take the action back to 1943 during
the Teheran meetings of Stalin, Roosevelt
and Churchill. A high-ranking Nazi officer
developed a plan to assassinate the three
world leaders in order to undermine the Allied
forces. He commissioned the German agent Max
Richard (Armen Dzhigarkhanian) to carry out
his plan, but it failed miserably due to the
quick action and thinking of Andrei. While
in Teheran, Andrei met a French woman, Marie
Louni (Natalia Belokhvostikova), living in
the city and they had a brief but intense
affair. Nearly four decades later, the Nazi
officer has been captured - but not for long.
Freed by terrorists, the officer is hunting
down the German agent who failed to carry
out the planned assassinations. Max lives
at Françoise (Claude Jade), a young
French woman, who hides him. He trusts her
and shows her all the documents. Max don't
know, that Françoise works for
the officer Scherner (Albert Filozov). In
the meantime, the Soviet agent is in Paris
to meet his lover from years ago, and modern
terrorists pose threats that seem to have
been carried across the decades... |
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A
good news: A higher bit rate with
AVI format of the movie was provided
download from Oct.6, 2006
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Tehran
43 Two parts Chinese dub AVI
format
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Part A 73'55" 626M 1184Kbps
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Part B 70'44" 599M 1183Kbps
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Honorary
Oscar 2006 goes to composer Ennio Morricone
congratulations
Morricone most heartily
Ennio Morricone Mini biography:
A classmate of director Sergio Leone with
whom he would form one of the great director/composer
partnerships (right up there with Eisenstein
& Prokofiev, Hitchcock & Herrmann,
Fellini & Rota), Ennio Morricone studied
at Rome's Santa Cecilia Conservatory, where
he specialised in trumpet. His first film
scores were relatively undistinguished,
but he was hired by Leone for Per un pugno
di dollari (1964) on the strength of some
of his song arrangements. His score for
that film, with its sparse arrangements,
unorthodox instrumentation (bells, electric
guitars, harmonicas, the distinctive twang
of the jew's harp) and memorable tunes,
revolutionised the way music would be used
in Westerns, and it is hard to think of
a post-Morricone Western score that doesn't
in some way reflect his influence. Although
his name will always be synonymous with
the spaghetti Western, Morricone has also
contributed to a huge range of other film
genres: comedies, dramas, thrillers, horror
films, romances, art movies, exploitation
movies -making him one of the film world's
most versatile artists. He has written nearly
400 film scores, so a brief summary is impossible,
but his most memorable work includes the
Leone films, Gillo Pontecorvos _Battaglia
di Algeri, La (1965)_ , Roland Joffé's The
Mission (1986), Brian De Palma's The Untouchables
(1987) and Giuseppe Tornatore's Nuovo cinema
Paradiso (1988), plus a rare example of
sung opening credits for Pier Paolo Pasolini's
Uccellacci e uccellini (1966). It must be
stressed that he is *not* behind the work
of the entirely separate composers Bruno
Nicolai and Nicola Piovani despite allegations
made by more than one supposedly reputable
film guide!
(see
here)
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