Martin Potter

Martin Potter

  • Born: 1944-10-4
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Vita 2022-03-13 08:01:01

      Can't Laugh: Italian Meat Futon

      Stage play style, or full of dramatic colors, exaggerated shapes, prominent tones, both rich and abstract paintings, and even a little flat Ukiyo-e and oriental eaves...Romantic and cruel, naked but without desire . It can be said that the language of the camera clearly shows the director's...

    • General 2022-03-13 08:01:01

      "The Myth of Love" in "The Director's Talk"

      "Satilicon" is a novel written in the first century AD. It is said to have been written by Petronius Albitero, a close friend of the reckless Roman emperor Nero. It describes Encor in a witty style. Pio's twists and turns are complex, with stories interconnected for the purpose of...

    • Lenny 2022-04-23 07:05:21

      A special symmetrical structure, a metaphor for the self-denial of love. Myth 1, a dead husband takes the place of a living lover; Myth 2, a witch who blasphemes love heals a youth with erotic defect. Otherwise, the same imagery recurs, such as the taciturn Guido and the female slave who speaks a mysterious language in the labyrinth, and the three-person structure reappears; the debauched rich man drives out the self-proclaimed noble wandering poet, and the latter is rich elsewhere. . Just a myth.

    • Russell 2022-04-24 07:01:25

      "There should be no illusions about the world of ancient Rome. The world view of ancient Rome developed to the end, showing cruelty and depravity." (Xue Hua)

    Fellini Satyricon quotes

    • Encolpio: Ascilto... what does the poet say? Each moment presented may be your last, so fill it up until you vomit... or something such?

    • Soldier at Tomb: They've stolen the hanged man! While I was with you, the thief's family took him away! I know what punishment I'll get... a horrible death. Why should I wait for it? I'd rather die by my own hands.

      [pulls his sword out and is about to stab himself]

      Wife of Ephesus: [stops him] No! No, my dear... To lose the two men in my life, one after the other, would be too much...

      Wife of Ephesus: [looks at the corpse of her husband] Better to hang a dead husband than to lose a living lover.

      [the couple replace the missing hanged corpse with the corpse of her husband]