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暗地的孩子本是茁壮生长的季节,却在春天花蕾初放之时,败絮纷飞. October 12 I Don't Believe You 我梦到坐在学校的后山上,看漫山遍野的枯草和变黄的树叶。
....可是。回不去了。
We are gonna be Ok.
We are gonna be Ok.
September 30 其实离开意味着很多事情 从下定决心离开公司那天, 就幻想着当这一切终将结束我会是多么高兴. 但是当这一天终于来临的时候, 发现离开其实比接近更难. 可能是在TimeOut工作了一段时间, 让我认识到更多的事情。 也许是三个多月天天只和她接触的原因,直到离开的这一刻才发现心里流淌下的竟是悲伤。
我不知道自己怎么了,在看到别人工作的样子之后,才发现自己差的那么多,才知道她的要求虽然很高,但并不过分,是我做得不够好。所有她为我做的,English Tea, the gift, CDs, Magazines, Chocolate Bars, Recommendation Letter. 所有的事情,大大小小,我也都记得住。 今天中午在Face我俩吃的泰餐,聊了好多。突然觉得了解她了好多,不再是那个不可理喻的女人了。她的野心,对经营的理念,和对以后生活的打算都让我觉得她是这么一个具有鲜明个性的外国人。第一个与我相处这么长时间的外国人。
就像是每个人都要走向他下一段路程一样,这段磨合的过程我们走得并不轻松,但至少结果是好的。连她老公TimeOut的老板都不当了,也不能怪我辞职啊。她是个聪明的女人,我想她完全能够知道我走的原因。但令人欣慰的是我们还能保持朋友的关系。
走的时候她抱了我一下。其实拥抱有时候感觉特别温暖。
以下是写给她的道别信:
Hi Sarah, I attached BB People database. and I just want to thank you for everything you did for me. I leant so many things from you during these months and you are one of the most amazing people I've met in my life. I wish all the best for you and Tom. I hope I can see you again, but in case I don't, have a nice life.
Olive 背景是Amy Winehouse. 原来并不喜欢,但因为是她给的CD之一,现在发现非常有味道。
September 02 狂爱P!nk |没想到我老板还采访过吴宇森
Woo-ing the audienceSarah Keenlyside talks to legendary director John Woo about faith, the death on the Red Cliff set, and his next pet project. The sound of a thundering drumbeat quickly followed by the roar of a thousand men charging into battle fills the small room in an office block ‘We’re still have about 600 CGI effects to do on the second half of the movie,’ he says of Red Cliff Part two’s progress. Despite his workload, Woo seems relaxed; much more relaxed than he was two months ago when he declined an interview with this magazine after a stuntman died and six others were injured in a fire on set. Since then, the huge box office success of Red Cliff an ambitious, sprawling two-part epic that marks his triumphant return to Chinese cinema after 15 years in Hollywood – has been of great comfort to Woo. ‘[The death] made everybody so sad,’ he confides after enjoying a well-deserved cigarette. ‘At the time I just wanted to keep everyone’s morale up, to try to encourage them, but it was hard. We won’t forget the people who died and were injured, but the public’s] reaction to the movie made us very happy, because it made us feel as though it was a film worth making.’ It’s clear that Red Cliff – an accurate portrayal of one of Chinese history’s defining battles – is a pet project of Woo’s; a film he’s been trying to get made for years. It was also the film he no doubt hoped would silence the critics who have been whispering that he had lost his mojo. After going Stateside in 1993 and making a string of successful Hollywood actioners including Face/Off and Mission Impossible 2, by the time Windtalkers came around his fans were claiming he hadn’t made a good film in years. What’s perhaps sad about that is he fact that when you meet Woo, it’s clear that he is a kindly, sensitive soul. When one of his previous babies, the highly personal and political morality tale Bullet in the Head, was badly received, he was said to be crushed. Just as well, then, that Red Cliff has made over 300 million RMB to date, and can now stand tall as the biggest grossing film of all time in China. ‘I could have continued working in Hollywood,’ he says, ‘because I did pretty well in Hollywood. But I learned so much from working in the US that I felt I should give something back to China, to the young people here.’ The idea, he says, was not only for the film’s US contingent to understand Asia better, but to give the Mainland’s budding directors and producers a chance to work with Americans, and to be inspired by their methods. And if anyone understands the importance of giving young people opportunities, it’s Woo. After his family fled China for Hong Kong in the ’50s, his childhood became characterised by gang violence and extreme hardship. ‘I was attacked a lot and had to fight back,’ he says with a hint of retrospective pride. ‘I was always bleeding, but I had to fight to survive, you know?’ Finding shelter in either the church (Woo is still a practicing Catholic) or the movie theatre after those fights was what prevented him losing hope, he says candidly. ‘The church took care of me and put me through school.’ His next film, Calibre (as in Excalibre), will be a Western in partnership with Johnny Depp’s production company Infinitum Nihil, and is based on a comic novel.Arthur and his nights retold in the American West seems a perfect fit for a gun loving Americanophile like Woo. So much so it’s a wonder it’s taken him this long… ‘For me to make a Western or a musical has been one of my dreams for years,’ he admits. Er, hang on a cotton picking minute, a musical?! ‘Hollywood’. And the name? ‘The Dancer’. ‘I’ve been working on that script for almost eight years because it’s so hard to get the studio to take a risk. But I think this project will work because it’s my type of movie.’ The look on my face must let on that I’m struggling to make the connection between the musical lover and the man who likes to drench his actors in blood onscreen. ‘When I was younger, the first colour movie I saw was a musical,’ he elaborates. ‘In a musical I found the beauty and joy of life, I found happiness. They reminded me that there was still a lot of good people and beautiful people in the world.’‘It’s hard to get people to believe in ‘Some people say “oh John, John’s just an action director”. But I just love human stories.’
发一篇Feature在这里也帮她宣传宣传Timeout的影响力...算是在辞职前做一点能做的慈善事业。什么时候也能让我掺和掺和采访? 咱不要吴宇森,李雨春就成。
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