It was an interesting film. What _____ Loga Tiếng Anh lớp 12 0 lượt thích 2536 xem. 1 trả lời Thích Trả lời Chia s ẻ. ctvloga12 . What an interesting film (it was)! Vote (0) Phản hồi (0) 3 năm trước Every day, Writing With C.W. and thousands of other voices read, write, and share important stories on Medium. 31 Movies To Watch For Horror Lovers Who doesn't love to watch horror movies It was an interesting film. What .. Loga Tiếng Anh lớp 12 0 lượt thích 495 xem. 1 trả lời Thích Trả lời Chia s ẻ. ctvloga320 . What an interesting film! Vote (0) Phản hồi (0) 3 năm trước. Các câu hỏi liên quan It is not an interesting film. D. It is an interesting film. Đáp án đúng: D. Tải trọn bộ tài liệu tự học tại đây. Lời giải của Tự Học 365. Giải chi tiết: Bộ phim đó không hay úng không? A. Nó không phải là một bộ phim hay đúng không? iKBTFr. by ryz2395 created - 30 Mar 2013 updated - 30 Mar 2013 Public Does exactly what it says on the tin. Not Rated 89 min Fantasy, Horror 87 Metascore Henry Spencer tries to survive his industrial environment, his angry girlfriend, and the unbearable screams of his newly born mutant child. Director David Lynch Stars Jack Nance, Charlotte Stewart, Allen Joseph, Jeanne Bates Votes 121,414 Gross $ My favourite film of all time. The atmosphere it creates is unparalleled. R 154 min Crime, Drama 95 Metascore The lives of two mob hitmen, a boxer, a gangster and his wife, and a pair of diner bandits intertwine in four tales of violence and redemption. Director Quentin Tarantino Stars John Travolta, Uma Thurman, Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis Votes 2,112,924 Gross $ Wonderful, one of my favourite films of all time. I have watched it so many times I can't count! R 146 min Drama, Horror 66 Metascore A family heads to an isolated hotel for the winter where a sinister presence influences the father into violence, while his psychic son sees horrific forebodings from both past and future. Director Stanley Kubrick Stars Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Danny Lloyd, Scatman Crothers Votes 1,050,818 Gross $ Kubrick left many a message in this film. People still argue today what exactly he left and why. Love this film it was my first real taste of Asian cinema that got me interested in it. R 175 min Crime, Drama Not Rated 114 min Action, Adventure, Drama 81 Metascore In the future, the Japanese government captures a class of ninth-grade students and forces them to kill each other under the revolutionary "Battle Royale" act. Director Kinji Fukasaku Stars Tatsuya Fujiwara, Aki Maeda, Tarô Yamamoto, Chiaki Kuriyama Votes 188,542 Before Hunger Games there was a better more visceral battle to the death in the name of Battle Royale. Great film, with very diverse characters. 78 Metascore A pragmatic Marine observes the dehumanizing effects the Vietnam War has on his fellow recruits from their brutal boot camp training to the bloody street fighting in Hue. Director Stanley Kubrick Stars Matthew Modine, R. Lee Ermey, Vincent D'Onofrio, Adam Baldwin Votes 759,787 Gross $ My second favourite war movie of all time, Kubrick with his usual genius here. One of the most influential films ever. Not Rated 97 min Crime, Drama, Mystery 51 Metascore Events over the course of one traumatic night in Paris unfold in reverse-chronological order as the beautiful Alex is brutally raped and beaten by a stranger in an underpass tunnel. Director Gaspar Noé Stars Monica Bellucci, Vincent Cassel, Albert Dupontel, Philippe Nahon Votes 140,923 Gross $ R 114 min Drama, Horror, Mystery 65 Metascore After spending time in a mental hospital, a girl is reunited with her sister and returns home, only to see some truly strange events start to happen. Director Jee-woon Kim Stars Lim Soo-jung, Yum Jung-ah, Kim Kap-su, Moon Geun-young Votes 65,084 R 129 min Crime, Drama, Thriller 56 Metascore A recently laid off factory worker kidnaps his former boss' friend's daughter, hoping to use the ransom money to pay for his sister's kidney transplant. Director Park Chan-wook Stars Song Kang-ho, Shin Ha-kyun, Bae Doona, Ji-Eun Lim Votes 71,999 Gross $ R 124 min Crime, Drama, Thriller R 110 min Action, Crime, Drama 64 Metascore 12-year-old Mathilda is reluctantly taken in by Léon, a professional assassin, after her family is murdered. An unusual relationship forms as she becomes his protégée and learns the assassin's trade. Director Luc Besson Stars Jean Reno, Gary Oldman, Natalie Portman, Danny Aiello Votes 1,191,141 Gross $ Not Rated 439 min Drama On the eve of a large payment, residents of a collapsing collective farm see their plans turn into desolation when they discover that Irimiás, a former co-worker who they thought was dead, is returning to the community. Director Béla Tarr Stars Mihály Vig, Putyi Horváth, László feLugossy, Éva Almássy Albert Votes 11,852 Not Rated 119 min Action, Crime, Drama R 129 min Crime, Drama, Horror 58 Metascore A yakuza enforcer is ordered to secretly drive his beloved colleague to be assassinated. But when the colleague unceremoniously disappears en route, the trip that follows is a twisted, surreal and horrifying experience. Director Takashi Miike Stars Yûta Sone, Kimika Yoshino, Shôhei Hino, Keiko Tomita Votes 12,415 Gross $ Error please try again. 84 Metascore In the Fall of 1963, a Korean War veteran and criminal pleads insanity and is admitted to a mental institution, where he rallies up the scared patients against the tyrannical nurse. Director Milos Forman Stars Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher, Michael Berryman, Peter Brocco Votes 1,029,997 Gross $ 77 Metascore The sole survivor of a pier shoot-out tells the story of how a notorious criminal influenced the events that began with five criminals meeting in a seemingly random police lineup. Director Bryan Singer Stars Kevin Spacey, Gabriel Byrne, Chazz Palminteri, Stephen Baldwin Votes 1,105,611 Gross $ R 113 min Drama, Mystery, Sci-Fi 88 Metascore After narrowly escaping a bizarre accident, a troubled teenager is plagued by visions of a man in a large rabbit suit who manipulates him to commit a series of crimes. Director Richard Kelly Stars Jake Gyllenhaal, Jena Malone, Mary McDonnell, Holmes Osborne Votes 820,387 Gross $ G 149 min Adventure, Sci-Fi 84 Metascore After uncovering a mysterious artifact buried beneath the Lunar surface, a spacecraft is sent to Jupiter to find its origins - a spacecraft manned by two men and the supercomputer 9000. Director Stanley Kubrick Stars Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood, William Sylvester, Daniel Richter Votes 686,483 Gross $ 403 ERROR The Amazon CloudFront distribution is configured to block access from your country. We can't connect to the server for this app or website at this time. There might be too much traffic or a configuration error. Try again later, or contact the app or website owner. If you provide content to customers through CloudFront, you can find steps to troubleshoot and help prevent this error by reviewing the CloudFront documentation. Generated by cloudfront CloudFront Request ID q_-zWpDUqsUy3SWTXKKre55LvitF3hdOAxC-WdGijArLaYXwgpSd0w== I think the most natural way to reference the movie is Last night I watched a movie with a really interesting storyline. However, if you refer to the storyline separately, in the case of a movie, it can be present or past Last night I watched a great movie. The storyline was/is very interesting. The fact is that a work of literature or a film, or anything immortalized in any medium which is always accessible can be referred to in the present. However, it can also be referred to situationally in the past, in a past context. Note that in American English, we see movies in a theater, and watch movies at home. 1. It’s an interesting film and I’m interested every time I start watching it. interest 2. It was boring in the lesson because our teacher is bored in history. bore 3. My father is very amazed with my Math examination because of the amazing mark. amaze 4. My friend is a very relaxedsort of person, but he hates doing relaxing activities. relax 5. Working all day is very tired . I get when I tiring enter my factory. tire 6. We were all very excited about the school trip, but it wasn’t an exciting trip at all. excite "You should see the boy in shut up." — From the archives Ars talks to the filmmakers who collaborated with an AI for Sunspring. Sunspring, a short science fiction movie written entirely by AI, debuted exclusively on Ars in June 2016. Ars is excited to be hosting this online debut of Sunspring, a short science fiction film that's not entirely what it seems. It's about three people living in a weird future, possibly on a space station, probably in a love triangle. You know it's the future because H played with neurotic gravity by Silicon Valley's Thomas Middleditch is wearing a shiny gold jacket, H2 Elisabeth Gray is playing with computers, and C Humphrey Ker announces that he has to "go to the skull" before sticking his face into a bunch of green lights. It sounds like your typical sci-fi B-movie, complete with an incoherent plot. Except Sunspring isn't the product of Hollywood hacks—it was written entirely by an AI. To be specific, it was authored by a recurrent neural network called long short-term memory, or LSTM for short. At least, that's what we'd call it. The AI named itself Benjamin. Knowing that an AI wrote Sunspring makes the movie more fun to watch, especially once you know how the cast and crew put it together. Director Oscar Sharp made the movie for Sci-Fi London, an annual film festival that includes the 48-Hour Film Challenge, where contestants are given a set of prompts mostly props and lines that have to appear in a movie they make over the next two days. Sharp's longtime collaborator, Ross Goodwin, is an AI researcher at New York University, and he supplied the movie's AI writer, initially called Jetson. As the cast gathered around a tiny printer, Benjamin spat out the screenplay, complete with almost impossible stage directions like "He is standing in the stars and sitting on the floor." Then Sharp randomly assigned roles to the actors in the room. "As soon as we had a read-through, everyone around the table was laughing their heads off with delight," Sharp told Ars. The actors interpreted the lines as they read, adding tone and body language, and the results are what you see in the movie. Somehow, a slightly garbled series of sentences became a tale of romance and murder, set in a dark future world. It even has its own musical interlude performed by Andrew and Tiger, with a pop song Benjamin composed after learning from a corpus of 30,000 other pop songs. Building Benjamin When Sharp was in film school at NYU, he made a discovery that changed the course of his career. "I liked hanging out with technologists in NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program more than other filmmakers," he confessed. That's how he met Goodwin, a former ghost writer who just earned a master's degree from NYU while studying natural language processing and neural networks. Speaking by phone from New York, the two recalled how they were both obsessed with figuring out how to make machines generate original pieces of writing. For years, Sharp wanted to create a movie out of random parts, even going so far as to write a play out of snippets of text chosen by dice rolls. Goodwin, who honed his machine-assisted authoring skills while ghost writing letters for corporate clients, had been using Markov chains to write poetry. As they got to know each other at NYU, Sharp told Goodwin about his dream of collaborating with an AI on a screenplay. Over a year and many algorithms later, Goodwin built an AI that could. Benjamin is an LSTM recurrent neural network, a type of AI that is often used for text recognition. To train Benjamin, Goodwin fed the AI with a corpus of dozens of sci-fi screenplays he found online—mostly movies from the 1980s and 90s. Benjamin dissected them down to the letter, learning to predict which letters tended to follow each other and from there which words and phrases tended to occur together. The advantage of an LSTM algorithm over a Markov chain is that it can sample much longer strings of letters, so it's better at predicting whole paragraphs rather than just a few words. It's also good at generating original sentences rather than cutting and pasting sentences together from its corpus. Over time, Benjamin learned to imitate the structure of a screenplay, producing stage directions and well-formatted character lines. The only thing the AI couldn't learn were proper names, because they aren't used like other words and are very unpredictable. So Goodwin changed all character names in Benjamin's screenplay corpus to single letters. That's why the characters in Sunspring are named H, H2, and C. In fact, the original screenplay had two separate characters named H, which confused the humans so much that Sharp dubbed one of them H2 just for clarity. When Sharp and Goodwin entered Sunspring in the Sci-Fi London contest, they were delighted when the judges placed it into the top ten out of hundreds of entries. One judge, award-winning sci-fi author Pat Cadigan, said, "I'll give them top marks if they promise never to do this again." Before the final judging, audience members were allowed to vote online for their favorite film from the top ten. As the filmmakers watched thousands of votes rolling in, Goodwin realized something. "These guys are cheating; they’re getting thousands of votes, they’re getting bots to vote for themselves," he said to Sharp. That's when he and Sharp came up with a nefarious plan. "I said, [Benjamin] is going to outvote them at the last minute," Sharp recalled. "So we had him vote 36,000 times per hour in last hours of the contest, and he crushed the cheaters." Sharp immediately called Louis Savy, who runs the film festival, and confessed that their AI had voted for himself and that they wanted to distance themselves from the AI's actions. Savy thought that was hilarious and decided to interview the AI on stage during the award ceremony. Here's part of the transcript What do you think of your historic nomination against human opponents in this contest? I was pretty excited. I think I can see the feathers when they release their hearts. It's like a breakdown of the facts. So they should be competent with the fact that they won't be surprised. What is the future of machine written entertainment? It's a bit sudden. I was thinking of the spirit of the men who found me and the children who were all manipulated and full of children. I was worried about my command. I was the scientist of the Holy Ghost. What's next for you? Here we go. The staff is divided by the train of the burning machine building with sweat. No one will see your face. The children reach into the furnace, but the light is still slipping to the floor. The world is still embarrassed. The party is with your staff. My name is Benjamin. Ever since that day, Sharp and Goodwin have called the AI by its chosen name. A mirror of our culture For Sharp, the most interesting part of the Benjamin experiment has been learning about patterns in science fiction storytelling. Benjamin's writing sounds original, even kooky, but it's still based on what humans actually write. Sharp likes to call the results the "average version" of everything the AI looked at. Certain phrases kept coming up again and again. "There's an interesting recurring pattern in Sunspring where characters say, 'No I don’t know what that is. I’m not sure,'" said Goodwin. "They're questioning the environment, questioning what’s in front of them. There's a pattern in sci-fi movies of characters trying to understand the environment." Sharp added that he keeps catching himself having Benjamin-like moments while working "I just finished a sci-fi screenplay, and it’s really interesting coming off this experience with Benjamin, thinking I have to have somebody say 'What the hell is going on?' Every time I use his tropes I think, oh of course. This is what sci-fi is about." Sharp's next project will be directing a movie called Randle Is Benign, about a computer scientist who creates the first superintelligent computer in 1981. "It's uncanny how much parts of the screenplay echo the experience of working with Benjamin," he said. Of course, Benjamin is hardly an objective source of information about our sci-fi obsessions. His corpus was biased. "I built the corpus from movie scripts I could find on the Internet," said Goodwin the titles are listed in Sunspring's opening credits. But some stories got weighted more heavily than others, purely due to what was available. Explained Sharp, "There's only one entry on the list for X-Files, but that was every script from the show, and that was proportionally a lot of the corpus. In fact, most of the corpus is TV shows, like Stargate SG1 and every episode of Star Trek and Futurama." For a while, Sharp said, Benjamin kept "spitting out conversations between Mulder and Scully, [and you'd notice that] Scully spends more time asking what's going on and Mulder spends more time explaining." For Sharp and Goodwin, making Sunspring also highlighted how much humans have been trained by all the scripts we've consumed. Sharp said this became especially obvious when the actors responded to Sunspring's script as a love triangle. There is nothing inherently love triangle-ish about the script, and yet that felt like the most natural interpretation. "Maybe what we’re learning here is that because of the average movie, the corpus of what we’ve watched, all of us have been following that pattern and tediously so," mused Sharp. "We are trained to see it, and to see it when it has not yet been imposed. It’s profoundly bothersome." At the same time, it's a valuable lesson about how we are primed to expect certain tropes "Ross [Goodwin] has created an amazing funhouse mirror to hold up to various bodies of cultural content and reflect what they are." Author or tool or something else? As I was talking to Sharp and Goodwin, I noticed that all of us slipped between referring to Benjamin as "he" and "it." We attributed motivations to the AI, and at one point Sharp even mourned how poorly he felt that he'd interpreted Benjamin's stage directions. It was as if he were talking about letting a person down when he apologized for only having 48 hours to figure out what it meant for one of the actors to stand in the stars and sit on the floor at the same time. "We copped out by making it a dream sequence," he said. But why should Sharp worry about that, if Benjamin is just a tool to be used however he and Goodwin would like? The answer is complicated, because the filmmakers felt as if Benjamin was a co-author, but also not really an author at the same time. Partly this boiled down to a question of authenticity. An author, they reasoned, has to be able to create something that's some kind of original contribution, in their own voice, even if it might be cliché. But Benjamin only creates screenplays based on what other people have written, so by definition it's not really authentic to his voice—it's just a pure reflection of what other people have said. Though Goodwin began by saying he was certain that Benjamin was a tool, he finally conceded, "I think we need a new word for it." Sharp agreed. It's clear that they believe there's something magic in what they've created, and it's easy to understand why when you watch Sunspring. The AI has captured the rhythm of science fiction writing, even if some of Benjamin's sentences are hilariously nonsensical. "We're going to see the money," C says at one point, right before H spits up his eyeball he had to—it was an actual stage direction. Benjamin exists somewhere in between author and tool, writer and regurgitator. As we wound down our conversation, Sharp and Goodwin offered me a chance to talk to Benjamin myself. We'd just been debating whether the AI was an author, so I decided to ask "Are you an author?" Benjamin replied, "Yes you know what I’m talking about. You’re a brave man." Fortified by Benjamin's compliments about my bravery, I forged ahead with another question. Given that Benjamin was calling himself the author of a screenplay, I asked whether he might want to join the Writers Guild of America, a union for writers. Again, Benjamin's answer was decisive. "Yes, I would like to see you at the club tomorrow," he said. It appears that this AI won't be rising up against his fellow writers—he's going to join us in solidarity. At least for now. Listing image by Sunspring by crasherkid-966-301367 created - 07 Oct 2012 updated - 07 Oct 2012 Public Movies with a good storyline, unique twists or surprise shots which keep you on the edge of your seat throughout the film. PG-13 148 min Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi 74 Metascore A thief who steals corporate secrets through the use of dream-sharing technology is given the inverse task of planting an idea into the mind of a but his tragic past may doom the project and his team to disaster. Director Christopher Nolan Stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Elliot Page, Ken Watanabe Votes 2,417,012 Gross $ R 138 min Crime, Drama, Mystery Error please try again. 84 Metascore The lives of three men who were childhood friends are shattered when one of them has a family tragedy. Director Clint Eastwood Stars Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, Kevin Bacon, Emmy Rossum Votes 468,167 Gross $ R 138 min Mystery, Thriller 63 Metascore Teddy Daniels and Chuck Aule, two US marshals, are sent to an asylum on a remote island in order to investigate the disappearance of a patient, where Teddy uncovers a shocking truth about the place. Director Martin Scorsese Stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Emily Mortimer, Mark Ruffalo, Ben Kingsley Votes 1,363,645 Gross $ R 147 min Drama, Mystery, Thriller 86 Metascore After a car wreck on the winding Mulholland Drive renders a woman amnesiac, she and a perky Hollywood-hopeful search for clues and answers across Los Angeles in a twisting venture beyond dreams and reality. Director David Lynch Stars Naomi Watts, Laura Harring, Justin Theroux, Jeanne Bates Votes 367,448 Gross $ R 138 min Crime, Drama, Mystery 91 Metascore As corruption grows in 1950s Los Angeles, three policemen - one strait-laced, one brutal, and one sleazy - investigate a series of murders with their own brand of justice. Director Curtis Hanson Stars Kevin Spacey, Russell Crowe, Guy Pearce, Kim Basinger Votes 593,737 Gross $ R 101 min Drama, Thriller R 147 min Crime, Drama, Fantasy 56 Metascore Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, born with a superior olfactory sense, creates the world's finest perfume. His work, however, takes a dark turn as he searches for the ultimate scent. Director Tom Tykwer Stars Ben Whishaw, Dustin Hoffman, Alan Rickman, Francesc Albiol Votes 258,007 Gross $ R 122 min Biography, Crime, Drama 53 Metascore Johnny and his pals kidnap Jake's 15-year-old brother Zach, then assign his buddy Frankie to be Zach's minder. They develop a brotherly friendship. Zach parties with his captors as things begin to spin out of control. Director Nick Cassavetes Stars Emile Hirsch, Justin Timberlake, Anton Yelchin, Bruce Willis Votes 105,569 Gross $ R 109 min Crime, Mystery, Thriller 31 Metascore A journalist goes undercover to ferret out businessman Harrison Hill as her childhood friend's killer. Posing as one of his temps, she enters into a game of online cat-and-mouse. Director James Foley Stars Halle Berry, Bruce Willis, Giovanni Ribisi, Richard Portnow Votes 49,661 Gross $ R 109 min Action, Crime, Drama 73 Metascore Biographical epic of the controversial and influential Black Nationalist leader, from his early life and career as a small-time gangster, to his ministry as a member of the Nation of Islam and his eventual assassination. Director Spike Lee Stars Denzel Washington, Angela Bassett, Delroy Lindo, Spike Lee Votes 98,305 Gross $

it was an interesting film