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再生時間: 75 秒 | ヌード: yes | 作成者: shiloh |
新ファイルサイズ: N/A | 音声: yes | 旧ファイルサイズ: 7 mb |
ファイル形式: AOMedia Video 1 (WebM/AV1) | 解像度: 628x468 | 追加日: 2008-Jan-16 |
別名: Hedwig Kiesler, Hedy Kiesler, Хеди Кислер, Хеди Ламарр, هدی لامار, 海蒂·拉玛
身体的特徴: N/A
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キャリアハイライト:
Hedy Lamarr, born Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler on November 9, 1914 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary (now Austria), was an actress who gained fame during Hollywood's Golden Age. After a brief career in Czechoslovakia, including the controversial film 'Ecstasy' (1933), she fled to Paris and then Hollywood, where she signed with MGM. She became a star with films like 'Algiers' (1938) and her most notable role as Delilah in 'Samson and Delilah' (1949). During World War II, Lamarr co-invented a radio guidance system for torpedoes using spread spectrum technology. She was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960.
公開年: 1933
別題: Ekstase, Ecstasy, Ekstasis, Estasi, Exstase, Extasis, Hurmio, Rhapsody of Love, Symphonie der Liebe, Symphony of Love
監督: Gustav Machatý
脚本: Robert Horky, Frantisek Horký, Jacques A. Koerpel, Gustav Machatý, František Horký
プロデューサー:
制作会社: Elektafilm
ジャンル: Drama, Romance, romance film, drama film, independent film, erotic film, sexploitation film
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Ekstase (1933) follows Eva (Hedy Lamarr), a young woman who marries a much older man, Baron Saazum (Zvonimir Rogoz), but quickly finds their life together lacking in passion and dominated by his obsession with order. Despondent, Eva leaves him and returns to her father's house. While bathing in a lake one day, she meets and falls in love with a young man named Emil (Slavik John). Fate brings Eva's estranged husband together with Emil, leading to tragic consequences for all involved.
Ekstase is a 1933 Czech film directed by Gustav Machatý and starring Hedy Lamarr in her breakthrough role. The film, originally titled 'Extase' without the umlaut, is a drama centered around Eva, a young woman struggling to find fulfillment in her loveless marriage. The story explores themes of passion, repression, and the destructive consequences of obsession. Ekstase was controversial upon its release due to its explicit content, but it gained international acclaim for Lamarr's performance and Machatý's innovative camera work.