首页  软件  游戏  图书  电影  电视剧

请输入您要查询的电影:

 

电影 Deafula(1975)
内容
◎片名:Deafula
◎又名:
◎年份:1975
◎类型:恐怖
◎导演:PeterWolf
◎制片人:
◎编剧:
◎主演:PeterWolf/LeeDarel/DudleyHemstreet
◎制片国家/地区:美国
◎IMDB:tt0123790
◎语言:
◎片长:95 分钟
◎上映时间:1975
◎出品公司:
◎发行公司:
◎全球票房:
◎国内票房:
◎剧情简介:
Being a vampire movie shot in 1975, in black & white, spoken entirely in sign language.   The world’s first feature film in sign language and it HAD to be about a vampire. You’re not likely to have a chance to view this very low-budget effort, but it features a limited sound track for hearing audiences, a hunch-back servant with tin-can hands and a very theatrical-looking vampire. The director [Peter Wechsberg aka Peter Wolf] , who is deaf, started the first TV news program in sign language (in San Francisco).   The first nationally-distributed feature-length film presented entirely in American Sign Language, Deafula occupies a unique position as one of the rarest vampire movies of all time.   The story focuses on Steve Adams, a young theology student who just happens to turn into a vampire (complete with a flowing cape, pointy ears, a giant nose, and big pointy teeth) from time to time, but has no memory of doing so after the fact. After a chat with a friend who is investigating the bloodless corpses turning up around town, Adams begins to have flashbacks to his childhood - including one scene in which his bloodlust causes him to rip out the throat of his puppy. Having previously believed he had just been an unusually anemic youngster and the son of a simple minister, these memories prompt Adams to investigate his past; he finds that he is actually the son of no less than Count Dracula himself.   Filmed in and around Portland, Oregon in 1974, Deafula took advantage of the fact that ASL had been recognized as a formal language about ten years earlier. When the movie was released in 1975, though, it was still about thirteen years too early: the Deaf President Now movement of 1988 had not yet established the abilities of deaf individuals in the minds of the American public. Too unusual for most audiences, the movie failed at the box office.   When Deafula is reviewed by critics of camp films, it is generally depicted as one of the worst films of its genre. The special effects are often described as comical, and many insist the plot is almost worthless. While Adams's transformations are admittedly crude (and, one critic points out, can happen in daylight), it is probable that the plot seems so reduced because of the poor quality of the voiceovers. Although it was to be marketed nationally and therefore would have been seen mostly by hearing persons, the filmmakers were creating a film by deaf people and for deaf people - names of the hearing members of the cast and crew appear in italics during the closing credits. The film was shot without sound, and jolting, badly-dubbed dialogue was added later, probably providing glosses of the ASL conversations, rather than true translations.   While the voiceovers and plot may not have had the depth hearing audiences were accustomed to, the tables were finally turned for deaf viewers. The world of Deafula is entirely suited to the deaf: everyone from newscasters to police officers can sign - there are even TTYs attached to the radios of police cars. In fact, the film's only handicapped character is a hunchback witch...who is missing both her hands.
◎主题曲:
歌曲 歌手 在线试听

◎获奖情况:
标签
缩略图
片名 Deafula
又名
年份 1975
导演 PeterWolf
编剧
主演 PeterWolf/LeeDarel/DudleyHemstreet
剧情简介 Being a vampire movie shot in 1975, in black & white, spoken entirely in sign language.   The world’s first feature film in sign language and it HAD to be about a vampire. You’re not likely to have a chance to view this very low-budget effort, but it features a limited sound track for hearing audiences, a hunch-back servant with tin-can hands and a very theatrical-looking vampire. The director [Peter Wechsberg aka Peter Wolf] , who is deaf, started the first TV news program in sign language (in San Francisco).   The first nationally-distributed feature-length film presented entirely in American Sign Language, Deafula occupies a unique position as one of the rarest vampire movies of all time.   The story focuses on Steve Adams, a young theology student who just happens to turn into a vampire (complete with a flowing cape, pointy ears, a giant nose, and big pointy teeth) from time to time, but has no memory of doing so after the fact. After a chat with a friend who is investigating the bloodless corpses turning up around town, Adams begins to have flashbacks to his childhood - including one scene in which his bloodlust causes him to rip out the throat of his puppy. Having previously believed he had just been an unusually anemic youngster and the son of a simple minister, these memories prompt Adams to investigate his past; he finds that he is actually the son of no less than Count Dracula himself.   Filmed in and around Portland, Oregon in 1974, Deafula took advantage of the fact that ASL had been recognized as a formal language about ten years earlier. When the movie was released in 1975, though, it was still about thirteen years too early: the Deaf President Now movement of 1988 had not yet established the abilities of deaf individuals in the minds of the American public. Too unusual for most audiences, the movie failed at the box office.   When Deafula is reviewed by critics of camp films, it is generally depicted as one of the worst films of its genre. The special effects are often described as comical, and many insist the plot is almost worthless. While Adams's transformations are admittedly crude (and, one critic points out, can happen in daylight), it is probable that the plot seems so reduced because of the poor quality of the voiceovers. Although it was to be marketed nationally and therefore would have been seen mostly by hearing persons, the filmmakers were creating a film by deaf people and for deaf people - names of the hearing members of the cast and crew appear in italics during the closing credits. The film was shot without sound, and jolting, badly-dubbed dialogue was added later, probably providing glosses of the ASL conversations, rather than true translations.   While the voiceovers and plot may not have had the depth hearing audiences were accustomed to, the tables were finally turned for deaf viewers. The world of Deafula is entirely suited to the deaf: everyone from newscasters to police officers can sign - there are even TTYs attached to the radios of police cars. In fact, the film's only handicapped character is a hunchback witch...who is missing both her hands.
上映时间 1975
影片类型 恐怖
内地上映时间
出品国家/地区 美国
首映日期
首映地区
语言
时长 95 分钟
色彩
版本
声效
评分
制作机构
出品机构
发行机构
获奖信息
拍摄地
票房成绩
国内票房
制片人
其他机构
幕后花絮
演职人员
导赏
集数
单集片长
分集剧情
IMDb tt0123790
海报
剧照
档案影像
主题曲
歌曲 歌手 在线试听
原著
基本信息
角色介绍
幕后制作
预告片&花絮
改编来源
安全警示 适度休息有益身心健康,请勿长期沉迷于追剧。
随便看

 

兰台网电影档案馆全面收录中外各种电影,详细介绍电影的基本信息及剧情、剧照等电影资料。

 

Copyright © 2004-2025 xlantai.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/5/10 0:06:37