Ëóöåíêî Ðîìàí Èâàíîâè÷
Ìèð ìóçûêè è êèíî... (òîì 1)

Ñàìèçäàò: [Ðåãèñòðàöèÿ] [Íàéòè] [Ðåéòèíãè] [Îáñóæäåíèÿ] [Íîâèíêè] [Îáçîðû] [Ïîìîùü|Òåõâîïðîñû]
Ññûëêè:
Øêîëà êîæåâåííîãî ìàñòåðñòâà: ñóìêè, ðåìíè ñâîèìè ðóêàìè Òèïîãðàôèÿ Íîâûé ôîðìàò: Èçäàòü ñâîþ êíèãó
 Âàøà îöåíêà:
  • Àííîòàöèÿ:
    Ýêñïåðèìåíòàëüíûé ñïðàâî÷íèê-êîëëåêöèÿ î ìóçûêå è êèíî 20 âåêà.

King Richard (2024)

| Aspect | Richard III (Historical) | Richard Williams (Film Subject) | |--------|--------------------------|----------------------------------| | Era | 15th century | 20th–21st century | | Notoriety | Last Plantagenet king, accused of usurpation and murder (Princes in the Tower) | Father of tennis champions | | Cultural Depiction | Shakespeare’s Richard III (villain) | King Richard (flawed hero) | | Legacy | Controversial; modern scholars debate his guilt | Largely positive; pioneering coach | King Richard transcends the traditional sports biopic by focusing not on the champions but on the visionary father who believed in them before anyone else. It presents a nuanced portrait of ambition, love, and the price of greatness. While the title borrows royal imagery, the film ultimately argues that true kingship lies not in birthright but in the courage to defy expectations and uplift one’s family.


 Âàøà îöåíêà:

Ñâÿçàòüñÿ ñ ïðîãðàììèñòîì ñàéòà.

Íîâûå êíèãè àâòîðîâ ÑÈ, âûøåäøèå èç ïå÷àòè:
Î.Áîëäûðåâà "Êðàäóø. ×óæèå äóøè" Ì.Íèêîëàåâ "Âòîðæåíèå íà Çåìëþ"

Êàê ïîïàñòü â ýòoò ñïèñîê

Êîæåâåííîå ìàñòåðñòâî | Ñàéò "Õóäîæíèêè" | Äîñêà îá'ÿâëåíèé "Êíèãè"

King Richard