Classic Mac OS game covers (493 F) Pages in category 'Classic Mac OS games' The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 1,154 total. Files for Mac can be run on all versions of OS X. You need to uncompress the 7z archive using the proper software (please use Keka to avoid problems). If the archive contains a DMG, double click it to mount the disk. Action film based on the Captain Blood books. Very good swashbuckler adventure with Louis Hayward, George McCready and Patricia Medina. Intro by film/music l. Files for Mac can be run on all versions of OS X. You need to uncompress the 7z archive using the proper software (please use Keka to avoid problems). If the archive contains a DMG, double click it to mount the disk.
Capitán Blood | |
---|---|
Ficha técnica | |
Título orixinal | Captain Blood |
Director | Michael Curtiz |
Produtor | |
Guión | Casey Robinson |
Baseado en | Captain Blood de Rafael Sabatini |
Intérpretes | |
Música | Erich Wolfgang Korngold |
Fotografía | |
Montaxe | George Amy |
Estudio | Cosmopolitan Productions |
Distribuidora | Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. |
Estrea | 28 de decembro de 1935 24 de setembro de 1988 (TVG) |
Duración | 119 minutos |
Orixe | |
Xénero | Aventuras |
Orzamento | 1 242 000 dólares[1] ou 995 000 dólares[2] |
Recadación | 2 475 000 dólares (internacional)[2][3] |
Capitán Blood (en inglés: Captain Blood) é un filme estadounidense de 1935 en branco e negro dirixido por Michael Curtiz. Trátase dun filme de piratas de First National Pictures e Warner Bros. Pictures, producido por Harry Joe Brown e Gordon Hollingshead (con Hal B. Wallis como produtor executivo). Está protagonizado por Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Basil Rathbone e Ross Alexander.
Peter Blood, an Irish physician, had a wide ranging career as a sailor and as a soldier, before settling down to practice medicine in the town of Bridgewater. The town begins to fight for the Duke of Manmouth, and though Peter wants no part in the rebellion, he tends to the wounded soldiers.
Estreouse en galego o 24 de setembro de 1988 a través da TVG.[4]
Personaxes[editar | editar a fonte]
- Errol Flynn como Peter Blood
- Olivia de Havilland como Arabella Bishop
- Lionel Atwill como Coronel Bishop
- Basil Rathbone como Levasseur
- Ross Alexander como Jeremy Pitt
- Guy Kibbee como Henry Hagthorpe
- Henry Stephenson como Lord Willoughby
- Robert Barrat como John Wolverstone
- Hobart Cavanaugh como Dr. Bronson
- Donald Meek como Dr. Whacker
- Jessie Ralph como Mrs. Barlow
- Forrester Harvey como Honesty Nuttall
- Frank McGlynn Sr. como Rev. Uriah Ogle
- Holmes Herbert como Capitán Gardner
- David Torrence como Andrew Baynes
- J. Carrol Naish como Cahusac
- Pedro de Córdoba como Don Diego
- George Hassell como Gobernador Steed
- Harry Cording como Kent
- Leonard Mudie como Barón Jeffreys
- Ivan F. Simpson como prosecutor
- Mary Forbes como Mrs. Steed
- Edward E. Clive como membro da corte
- Colin Kenny como Lord Chester Dyke
- Vernon Steele como James II
Notas[editar | editar a fonte]
- ↑John Sedgwick, Mike Pokorny, 'Hollywood's foreign earnings during the 1930s', 83 TRAC 1 (1) pp. 83–97 Intellect Limited 2010 p92
- ↑ 2,02,1Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1-31 p 15 DOI: 10.1080/01439689508604551
- ↑Glancy, H Mark (1995). 'Warner Bros Film Grosses, 1921–51: the William Schaefer ledger'. Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television15.
- ↑La Voz de Galicia, 24 de setembro de 1988. Páx. 71
Véxase tamén[editar | editar a fonte]
Wikimedia Commons ten máis contidos multimedia na categoría: |
Bibliografía[editar | editar a fonte]
- Thomas, Tony (1969). The Complete Films of Errol Flynn. Nova York: Citadel Press. ISBN978-0806502373.
- Thomas, Tony (1983). The Films of Olivia de Havilland. Nova York: Citadel Press. ISBN978-0806509884.
Ligazóns externas[editar | editar a fonte]
Captain Blood Mac Os Download
- Capitán Blood na IMDb(en inglés).
- Ficha en AllMovie(en inglés)
Captain Blood Mac Os 11
In this scene we are introduced to Duncan, his two sons Malcolm and Donblain and Lennox. Duncan greets the bleeding captain with 'What bloody man is that?'(I.ii line 1), in Macbeth ‘blood' is a symbol throughout, blood represents the guilt that Macbeth and Lady Macbeth feel but also the brutality of murder. Moreover Duncan will become the ‘bloody man' and it could foreshadow his eventual death. Another point that could be considered is the context in which blood and butchery was used in the 16th century, as described by Neil MacGregor 'Human butchery was a part of life, strolling across London Bridge to a play at the Globe or the Rose, you would sometimes pass rows of traitors heads impaled on spikes'. MacGregor is implying that life under the King was a state of fear and Shakespeare through Macbeth was exploring the reality of regicide, for example the gun powder plot of 1605 would have had an impact upon society concerning over leaping ambition.
Notas[editar | editar a fonte]
- ↑John Sedgwick, Mike Pokorny, 'Hollywood's foreign earnings during the 1930s', 83 TRAC 1 (1) pp. 83–97 Intellect Limited 2010 p92
- ↑ 2,02,1Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1-31 p 15 DOI: 10.1080/01439689508604551
- ↑Glancy, H Mark (1995). 'Warner Bros Film Grosses, 1921–51: the William Schaefer ledger'. Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television15.
- ↑La Voz de Galicia, 24 de setembro de 1988. Páx. 71
Véxase tamén[editar | editar a fonte]
Wikimedia Commons ten máis contidos multimedia na categoría: |
Bibliografía[editar | editar a fonte]
- Thomas, Tony (1969). The Complete Films of Errol Flynn. Nova York: Citadel Press. ISBN978-0806502373.
- Thomas, Tony (1983). The Films of Olivia de Havilland. Nova York: Citadel Press. ISBN978-0806509884.
Ligazóns externas[editar | editar a fonte]
Captain Blood Mac Os Download
- Capitán Blood na IMDb(en inglés).
- Ficha en AllMovie(en inglés)
Captain Blood Mac Os 11
In this scene we are introduced to Duncan, his two sons Malcolm and Donblain and Lennox. Duncan greets the bleeding captain with 'What bloody man is that?'(I.ii line 1), in Macbeth ‘blood' is a symbol throughout, blood represents the guilt that Macbeth and Lady Macbeth feel but also the brutality of murder. Moreover Duncan will become the ‘bloody man' and it could foreshadow his eventual death. Another point that could be considered is the context in which blood and butchery was used in the 16th century, as described by Neil MacGregor 'Human butchery was a part of life, strolling across London Bridge to a play at the Globe or the Rose, you would sometimes pass rows of traitors heads impaled on spikes'. MacGregor is implying that life under the King was a state of fear and Shakespeare through Macbeth was exploring the reality of regicide, for example the gun powder plot of 1605 would have had an impact upon society concerning over leaping ambition.
Captain Blood Mac Os X
Macbeth in Act 1 Scene 2 is presented as a valiant war hero. The Captain declares 'for brave Macbeth – well he deserves that name' (I.ii line 16), it reveals that Macbeth is a hero on the battle field, moreover the title is not self-proclaimed displaying that it is well deserved and implying that Macbeth is worthy of the praise given to him. The purpose of the captains speech could be that it sets Macbeth up to become the ‘tragic hero' of the play, once being a dauntless and loyal subject, described by Duncan as 'O valiant cousin, worthy gentleman' (I.ii line 24), to one who falls from grace into decite and deception. His fatal flaw is debatable, on one hand it could be his belief in the supernatural yet it could also be his determined ambition to gain power and become King.
Rubber man mac os. Moreover Macbeth is displayed to be a violent character, 'He unseamed him from the nave to th'chops' (I.ii line 22), it could foreshadow his brutality that he will display towards others. In addition, Shakespeare also uses convoluted syntax and a hyperbolic metaphor during the Captain's speech, not only to display the greatness of Macbeth but also the high flown rhetoric of the classical messenger, which deteriorates arguably to demonstrate the retrogression of the Captain thus implying that he may be an unreliable source, and not a good test of the nobility of Macbeth, with the loss of his coherence.
Herosimulator mac os. Religious imagery is used also in Act 1 scene 2, 'Except they meant to bathe in reeking wounds, Or memorise another Golgotha', the reference to the place of the death of Christ would not only highly resonate with a deeply religious audience but also that Macbeth is being likened to Christ, suggesting again his good character. Moreover leading to sympathy at his death because he was once a noble respectable man who succumbed to evil. It could also foreshadow that like Christ who had a sword put in his side, Macbeth will suffer the same death by the sword.
Another interesting use of foreshadowing is through the speech of Ross, he declares 'disloyal traitor, The Thane of Cawdor'(I.ii line 2-3), in effect the title of The Thane of Cawdor will be bestowed upon Macbeth ('And with is former title greet Macbeth' I.ii line 6) and much like the current Thane he too will become a traitor to the King. It could suggest a circular structure to the play, that once the divine rights of kings/ nature is disrupted by unnatural events they will rise and then fall from grace. In an sense that although Macbeth kicks against fate (e.g the murder of Banquo) his destiny of death because of treachery will always come back concluding in his death.