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吸血鬼猎人巴菲 第七季(Buffy The Vampire Slayer Season7)350M版本 更新到第22集[DVDRip]

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发表于 2021-7-30 20:39:46 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
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    转自P2PTV, Season 7 [DVDRIP] 【类 型】: 剧情/魔幻/动作 【影片长度】: 平均44分钟 【集 数】: 全季共22集 【字 幕】: 英文/中文(射手网) 【服 务 器】: IA MEDIA (请不要连美国的服务器,多半都是间谍服务器,只会阻碍P2P传输) 【分享时间】: 00:00--24:00 【格 式】: DVDRip by FoV/English Audio 【内容简介】: 1997年首播的《捉鬼者巴菲》是1990年代后期的经典剧集之一。讲述具有特异功能的少女巴菲,同来自地狱的各种吸血鬼及灵异恶魔战斗,完成天赋使命的故事。剧集在传统的捉鬼片中,加入了青春和爱情的元素。扮演巴菲的萨拉·米歇尔·盖勒是个美少女,连续数年垄断全美少年票选最佳电视女主角,此外,出色的特技场面、扑朔迷离的情节和眼花瞭乱的捉鬼场面引人入胜。内容简介:戴维·伯瑞纳扮演的安吉尔堪称吸血鬼王国最富有热情的成员,就连胆大貌美的巴菲都被他镊攘φ鄯。该片扣人心弦之处还在于观众摸不透戴维到底站在哪一边。因为他一会儿温情脉脉的跟女主角大跳贴面舞还帮她出谋划策对付其他的吸血鬼,一会儿又见他把一个老师从窗口扔了下去和咬掉过路人的脑袋?不过不管他是好是坏,安吉尔的受欢迎程度是前所未有的,以至于华纳公司决定在1999年的秋天为他单开一个系列剧来满足观众们看英俊吸血鬼的愿望。这是Joss Whedon的热门系列剧集最后一季....... "We don't know how to fight it. We don't know when it'll come. We can't run, can't hide, can't pretend it's not the end, 'cause it is. Something's always been there to try and destroy the world. We've beaten them back, but we're not dealing with them anymore. We're dealing with the reason they exist. Evil. The strongest. The First. . . . I'm standing on the mouth of hell, and it is gonna swallow me whole. And it'll choke on me. We're not ready? They're not ready. They think we're gonna wait for the end to come, like we always do. I'm done waiting. They want an apocalypse? We'll give 'em one. Anyone else who wants to run, do it now. 'Cause we just became an army. We just declared war. From now on, we won't just face our worst fears, we will seek them out . . . until The First shows itself for what it really is. And I'll kill it myself. There is only one thing on this earth more powerful than evil, and that's us. Any questions?" - Sarah Michelle Gellar laying down the law as Buffy the Vampire Slayer in "Bring on the Night" Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Complete Seventh Season DVD Review By Marlo Serritella I won't do it. I can't do it. I've been staring at a blank computer screen for close to a week now, hoping for divine inspiration. What's come instead is a deadline. Don't get me wrong; Season Seven of the greatest television show in history is chock full of inspiration. It's just that I know starting this commentary on the final season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer means ending it as well. And that is not a reality that I am ready to face. I am also more than a little ashamed of myself. You see, had I taken pen to paper immediately following the end of Buffy back a season or so ago, I may not have been too kind. Throughout this season's original run, I harbored some bitterness about plot twists, pacing and certain character developments (to name a few) that I wasn't quite willing to accept. In re-watching season seven on DVD, however, I figured out something important. I didn't give it a fair shot. When the season first aired, all I could think about every second of every episode was-how is it going to end? Or perhaps more precisely, how could these dirty SOBs end my Buffy? At the time, I didn't appreciate the progression and the really fine build-up that brings us to the most glorious of finales that I could have ever dreamed of. What I discovered is that, while it is not my favorite of the seven splendid seasons, this last installment in the Buffy epic is smart and funny and powerful. My best analogy is that Season Seven of Buffy is like a William Faulkner novel; I just didn't quite get it until the second time through. But the payoff is huge. Before I continue, I should pause and give a big ol' spoiler alert. I haven't done that in my other reviews because I figured that if you're reading this, chances are you've been snuggled on your couch every week for the past several years right there with me. So let's go there one more time. I think I'm finally ready. You can't approach this last season of Buffy without first talking about its themes. I don't think I'll get much argument if I take the position that the major theme of season seven is female power. Sure, the writers come out and tell us as much in the handy-dandy commentaries to the DVD. But, even without this insider knowledge, the message is not exactly subtle. Both the first and last lines of this season's premiere episode are identical: "it's about power" ("Lessons"). Giles (Anthony Head) tells Willow (Alyson Hannigan) that she is "connected to a great power" ("Lessons"). The word continues to be peppered throughout the entire first episode, not to mention the rest of the season. In this way, I think the seventh season of Buffy is its most literary. If you studied the scripts alone, you could deconstruct the language to uncover the chewy-center of chocolatey and painful subtext. Of course, there are several other themes at work as well. Willow learns that she can love again while still honoring Tara's (Amber Benson) memory ("The Killer in Me"). Dawn (Michelle Trachtenberg) moves towards acceptance of her strange place in the world ("Potential"). Anya (Emma Caulfield) faces her past to make a choice about her future ("Selfless"). And Xander (Nicholas Brendon) learns that it's all fun and games until someone loses an eye-by having it plucked out of its socket by an evil priest ("Dirty Girls"). I, however, continue to be most interested in Spike's (James Marsters) redemptive journey. This is not just because Spike tends to be at his most introspective when he is also at his most undressed. Simply put, there's a poignant message in wanting to be better than you think maybe you're meant to be. In watching Buffy you can't let your analytic guard down for a moment. The opening sequence of the season involves a terrified girl running from some monster-types who overpower and kill her ("Lessons"). In the world according to Joss Whedon, this can't be good. Remember way back in 1997, the very first opening sequence involved a virginal blond turning into a vampire and feasting on some poor, unsuspecting schlub. To launch the final season with an image of the very thing that the show was meant to subvert (girl needs to be saved), can only mean we've come to the end. It's been seven years since Buffy has been protecting the world, and her work isn't done. Boy still kills girl. Meanwhile, back in Sunnydale, Buffy gives Dawn her first official lesson in slaying a vampire. Willow is off in England with Giles learning to control the magic that now lives inside her. Anya is a vengeance demon again. And the new Sunnydale High School is open for business, reconstructed on the very ground where it originally stood four years ago-directly over the mouth of hell. The first episode introduces one new character, Principal Robin Wood (D.B. Woodside). My first impression of him is that he's a bit too charmingly mysterious. This can only mean that he has pointy weapons hidden behind his slide projector. (For the record, they end up being hidden behind the dry-erase board). By the end of the first episode, Principal Wood has offered Buffy a job as a guidance counselor to serve the troubled youth of her alma mater. (This was a choice in the story-line that I never managed to warm up to.) Finally, since returning from his quest to win back his soul, Spike is now

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