'Ovid' is featured as a movie character in the following productions:
Cloud Atlas (2012)
Actors:
Hugh Grant (actor),
Jim Broadbent (actor),
Keith David (actor),
Jim Broadbent (actor),
Jim Broadbent (actor),
Jim Broadbent (actor),
Jim Broadbent (actor),
James D'Arcy (actor),
James D'Arcy (actor),
James D'Arcy (actor),
James D'Arcy (actor),
Keith David (actor),
Keith David (actor),
Keith David (actor),
Hugh Grant (actor),
Plot: Everything is connected: an 1849 diary of an ocean voyage across the Pacific; letters from a composer to his lover; a thriller about a murder at a nuclear power plant; a farce about a publisher in a nursing home; a rebellious clone in futuristic Korea; and the tale of a tribe living in post-apocalyptic Hawaii, far in the future.
Keywords: 1850s, 1930s, 1970s, 19th-century, 20th-century, 2140s, 21st-century, actor-playing-multiple-roles, actress-playing-multiple-roles, ageing
Genres:
Adventure,
Drama,
Sci-Fi,
Taglines: Everything Is Connected
Quotes:
[from trailer]::Isaac Sachs: Yesterday, I believe I would never have done what I did today. I feel like something important has happened to me. Is this possible? I just met her, and yet... I have fallen in love with Luisa Rey.
[from trailer]::Javier: What are you reading?::Luisa Rey: Old letters.::Javier: Why do you keep reading them?::Luisa Rey: I don't know. Just trying to understand why we keep making the same mistakes... over and over.
[from trailer]::Robert Frobisher: A half-finished book is, after all, a half finished love affair.
[from trailer]::Vyvyan Ayrs: That's it! The music from my dream.::Robert Frobisher: I call it the "Cloud Atlas Sextet".
[from trailer]::Robert Frobisher: I believe there is a another world waiting for us, Sixsmith. A better world. And I'll be waiting for you there.
[repeated line]::Mr. Meeks: I know, I know!
Sonmi-451: ...from womb to tomb, our lives are not our own...
Timothy Cavendish: I will not be subjected to criminal abuse.
Timothy Cavendish: We cross and re-cross our old paths like figure-skaters.
Haskell Moore: There is a natural order to this world, and those who try to upend it do not fare well. This movement will never survive; if you join them, you and your entire family will be shunned. At best, you will exist a pariah to be spat at and beaten-at worst, to be lynched or crucified. And for what? For what? No matter what you do it will never amount to anything more than a single drop in a limitless ocean.::Adam Ewing: What is an ocean but a multitude of drops?
Some Girls Never Learn (2011)
Actors:
Jerzy Rose (writer),
Jerzy Rose (director),
Chris Sullivan (actor),
Julia Zinn (actress),
Jared Larson (actor),
Sue Klaus (actress),
Joshua Dumas (composer),
Mike Lopez (actor),
Jordan Scrivner (actor),
John Harris (actor),
Lyra Hill (actress),
Halle Butler (actress),
Adam Strohm (actor),
Logan Gagnepain (actor),
Emma Morris (actress),
Plot: A university has found the leg bone of Amelia Earhart. A high school science teacher travels to the underworld to bring back his girlfriend. Animals are organizing into concentric circles and helium has escaped into the luminiferous aether.
Genres:
Comedy,
Yüregine sor (2010)
Actors:
Ayla Algan (actress),
Taner Barlas (actor),
Tomris Oguzalp (actress),
Yesim Ceren Bozoglu (actress),
Yüksel Arici (actor),
Levent Can (actor),
Civan Canova (actor),
Selda Özer (actress),
Yusuf Kurçenli (writer),
Nihat Ileri (actor),
Yusuf Kurçenli (director),
Sevval Sam (actress),
Mahmut Gökgöz (actor),
Hakan Karahan (actor),
Emin Gümüskaya (actor),
Plot: A love affair threatened by a barrier as great as itself... Can differences of faith stand in the way of an innocent love affair? Two young people, Esma and Mustafa, fall in love. For them, the future only has meaning if they are together. Failing this, life is meaningless. However, overhanging their love is a barrier unique to the period and location: Mustafa is a clandestine Christian, when everyone including Esma thinks he is Muslim. In the meantime, the Ottoman Empire introduces a series of reforms giving Christians the same rights as Muslims. From this point on, the Church urges secret Christians to reveal their faith. This poses a dilemma for Mustafa: he is caught between his love and the Church.
Genres:
Romance,
Erza: Fear of a Faceless God (2009)
Actors:
Annet Mahendru (actress),
Adam Henry Garcia (actor),
Christopher Dimitrov (producer),
Hugo Fernandez (composer),
Hugo Fernandez (director),
Pablo V. Chirinos (director),
Jamie Rabinaw (actor),
Christopher Loggia (actor),
Blene Assefa (producer),
Jennifer Hebert (actress),
Jake Technique Rinaldo (editor),
Hugo Fenandez (writer),
Andrea Kayda (actress),
Joan Maxine (actress),
Mike Irizarry (actor),
Plot: From New York's unsuspecting Long Island community to a dark decrepit hospital in Hungary, Davin Cortes searches for the truth behind his father's bizarre past. He unveils a debauched world of perverse bliss and sexual terror depicted in a gore fest of horrid videos found in the archives of his father's hidden lair. He gathers the possibility that his father may have been a Long Island serial killer with a trail of death submersed in the bloodletting of an unbeknownst cultic network of vampire serial killers. Davin finds that the mystery of his father's past is vividly detailed behind the lips of a hard hearted young girl, a sociopath vampiric vixen named Erza. She goats him into her psyche while simultaneously haunting his sensibilities with taunts of her wretched vice for blood and butchery.
Keywords: blood, horror-art
Genres:
Thriller,
Dante's Inferno (2007)
Actors:
Tony Hale (actor),
Tony Hale (actor),
James Cromwell (actor),
Scott Adsit (actor),
Scott Adsit (actor),
Matt Besser (actor),
John Fleck (actor),
Matt Besser (actor),
Matt Besser (actor),
Matt Besser (actor),
Scott Adsit (actor),
Scott Adsit (actor),
Scott Adsit (actor),
Dermot Mulroney (actor),
Tony Hale (actor),
Plot: Melding the seemingly disparate traditions of apocalyptic live-action graphic novel and charming Victoria-era toy theater, Dante's Inferno is a subversive, darkly satirical update of the original 14th century literary classic. Retold with the use of intricately hand-drawn paper puppets and miniature sets, and without the use of CGI effects, this unusual travelogue takes viewers on a tour of hell. And what we find there, looks a lot like the modern world. Sporting a hoodie and a hang-over from the previous night's debauchery, Dante wakes to find he is lost - physically and metaphorically - in a strange part of town. He asks the first guy he sees for some help: The ancient Roman poet Virgil, wearing a mullet and what looks like a brown bathrobe. Having no one else to turn to, Dante's quickly convinced that his only means for survival is to follow Virgil voyage down, down through the depths of Hell. The pair cross into the underworld and there Virgil shows Dante the underbelly of the Inferno, which closely resembles the decayed landscape of modern urban life. Dante and Virgil's chronicles are set against a familiar backdrop of used car lots, strip malls, gated communities, airport security checks, and the U.S. Capitol. Here, hot tubs simmer with sinners, and the river Styx is engorged with sewage swimmers. Also familiar is the contemporary cast of presidents, politicians, popes and pop-culture icons sentenced to eternal suffering of the most cruel and unusual kind: Heads sewn on backwards, bodies wrenched in half, never-ending blow jobs, dancing to techno for eternity, and last, but certainly not least, an inside look at Lucifer himself, from the point of view of a fondue-dunked human appetizer. Each creatively horrific penance suits the crime, and the soul who perpetrated it. As Dante spirals through the nine circles of hell, he comes to understand the underworld's merciless machinery of punishment, emerging a new man destined to change the course of his life. But not, of course, the brand of his beer.
Keywords: allegory, anger, astrologer, based-on-novel, catholic, dante's-inferno, dick-cheney, divine-comedy, fraud, gluttony
Genres:
Animation,
Comedy,
Taglines: The epic film of a lost young man's journey through hell. Dante. Virgil. Hell. Puppets. Questions? To Hell and back through the streets of America: a journey in toy theater.
Quotes:
Virgil: This is Hell, Dante. Not your personal fantasy.
Ulysses - Strom Thurmond: I'm not Mrs. Butterworth, God Dammit. I'm Senator Strom Thurmond.
Bob Steel (2004)
Actors:
Mike Kimmel (actor),
Joe Stevens (actor),
Joe Stevens (actor),
Patrick Warburton (actor),
Will Wallace (director),
Will Wallace (producer),
Will Wallace (actor),
Matthew Montgomery (actor),
Shawn David Thompson (editor),
Emanuel Gironi (actor),
Jack Kyle (actor),
Ruben Pla (actor),
Kat Castaneda (actress),
Tess Hunt (actress),
Robert Hensley (actor),
Genres:
Action,
Thriller,
Ars amandi (1983)
Actors:
Walerian Borowczyk (writer),
Massimo Girotti (actor),
Philippe Lemaire (actor),
Elide Cortesi (miscellaneous crew),
Michele Placido (actor),
Walerian Borowczyk (editor),
Laura Betti (actress),
Walerian Borowczyk (director),
Milena Vukotic (actress),
Walerian Borowczyk (writer),
Luis Bacalov (composer),
Luciana Marinucci (costume designer),
Ugo Tucci (producer),
Pier Francesco Aiello (actor),
Jacques Nahum (producer),
Genres:
Drama,
Fantasy,
Who was Ovid? | Metamorphosis: Titian 2012 | The National Gallery, London
Join historian Bernadine Corrigan as she delves into the life of
Roman poet
Ovid, the inspiration for
Titian's 'poesie' paintings.
Discover how Ovid became a
...
Join historian Bernadine Corrigan as she delves into the life of
Roman poet
Ovid, the inspiration for
Titian's 'poesie' paintings.
Discover how Ovid became a poet and uncover the scandal that banned his books and banished him from
Rome.
Ovid's 'Metamorphoses' are central to the spectacular multi-arts project at the
National Gallery, London.
Find out more about the exhibition
Metamorphosis: Titian
2012:
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/metamorphosis
Watch more on our
Channel:
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/channel/
Explore the life and work of Titian, including a special Titian playlist: http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/titian
Follow us on Twitter @nationalgallery and use #Titian2012 in your tweets
wn.com/Who Was Ovid | Metamorphosis Titian 2012 | The National Gallery, London
Join historian Bernadine Corrigan as she delves into the life of
Roman poet
Ovid, the inspiration for
Titian's 'poesie' paintings.
Discover how Ovid became a poet and uncover the scandal that banned his books and banished him from
Rome.
Ovid's 'Metamorphoses' are central to the spectacular multi-arts project at the
National Gallery, London.
Find out more about the exhibition
Metamorphosis: Titian
2012:
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/metamorphosis
Watch more on our
Channel:
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/channel/
Explore the life and work of Titian, including a special Titian playlist: http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/titian
Follow us on Twitter @nationalgallery and use #Titian2012 in your tweets
- published: 23 Aug 2012
- views: 6501
2,000 Year-Old Advice On Picking Up Chicks
According to
Ovid, the first rule of seduction is hitting the SUBSCRIBE button.
Click to become a well-educated balla:
http://goo.gl/N4Fse9
Published in 2
A.D....
According to
Ovid, the first rule of seduction is hitting the SUBSCRIBE button.
Click to become a well-educated balla:
http://goo.gl/N4Fse9
Published in 2
A.D.,
Ars Amatoria (or the
Art of Love) is Ovid's guide to courting that special someone.
Heed this masterful poet's advice to have yourself a very
Happy Valentine's Day.
Welcome to Wisecrack, where you'll learn your ass off. We've got shows including
THUG NOTES, 8-BIT PHILOSOPHY, and EARTHLING
CINEMA.
Get Email
Alerts: http://eepurl.com/bcSRD9
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/WisecrackEDU
Twitter: http://twitter.com/wisecrack
Visit us at: http://www.wisecrack.co
Learn More About Literature with THUG NOTES: http://goo.gl/mXRVIh
Check out our Merch!: http://www.wisecrack.co/store
--
Written by:
Lindsay Golder
Directed by:
Jacob S. Salamon
Starring:
Greg Edwards,
Nathan Lowe
Edited by:
Ryan Hailey
Produced by:
Jared Bauer
Artwork by: Jacob S. Salamon
©
2015 Wisecrack,
Inc.
wn.com/2,000 Year Old Advice On Picking Up Chicks
According to
Ovid, the first rule of seduction is hitting the SUBSCRIBE button.
Click to become a well-educated balla:
http://goo.gl/N4Fse9
Published in 2
A.D.,
Ars Amatoria (or the
Art of Love) is Ovid's guide to courting that special someone.
Heed this masterful poet's advice to have yourself a very
Happy Valentine's Day.
Welcome to Wisecrack, where you'll learn your ass off. We've got shows including
THUG NOTES, 8-BIT PHILOSOPHY, and EARTHLING
CINEMA.
Get Email
Alerts: http://eepurl.com/bcSRD9
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/WisecrackEDU
Twitter: http://twitter.com/wisecrack
Visit us at: http://www.wisecrack.co
Learn More About Literature with THUG NOTES: http://goo.gl/mXRVIh
Check out our Merch!: http://www.wisecrack.co/store
--
Written by:
Lindsay Golder
Directed by:
Jacob S. Salamon
Starring:
Greg Edwards,
Nathan Lowe
Edited by:
Ryan Hailey
Produced by:
Jared Bauer
Artwork by: Jacob S. Salamon
©
2015 Wisecrack,
Inc.
- published: 10 Feb 2015
- views: 118516
Ovid - Metamorphoses Book I ,I read in Latin, then again with an interlinear text.avi
Please visit my pages at https://sites.google.com/site/latiumredivivum/
Ovid Metamorphoses,
Book 1, fable 1.
Read once in
Latin in metre, then re-read a second time in the ordo, with an Hamiltonian interlinear text, and then re-read a second time in metre.
Please read (use a google search to find it)
Latin Verse-Ictus and Multimodal Entrainment by
Robert P. Sonkowsky
wn.com/Ovid Metamorphoses Book I ,I Read In Latin, Then Again With An Interlinear Text.Avi
Please visit my pages at https://sites.google.com/site/latiumredivivum/
Ovid Metamorphoses,
Book 1, fable 1.
Read once in
Latin in metre, then re-read a second time in the ordo, with an Hamiltonian interlinear text, and then re-read a second time in metre.
Please read (use a google search to find it)
Latin Verse-Ictus and Multimodal Entrainment by
Robert P. Sonkowsky
- published: 10 Jan 2012
- views: 12085
Ovid | Niklas Holzberg
Abonniert hier unseren
Channel:
http://bit.ly/subscribeuniauditorium
Besucht unseren
Shop: http://www.komplett-media.de/
Folgt uns auf
Facebook: http://bit.ly/f
...
Abonniert hier unseren
Channel:
http://bit.ly/subscribeuniauditorium
Besucht unseren
Shop: http://www.komplett-media.de/
Folgt uns auf
Facebook: http://bit.ly/fbuniauditorium
Hier geht’s zum vorherigen Kapitel: http://youtu.be/C0h86kZq-Kg
und hier zum ersten Kapitel: http://youtu.be/x8kO32ZRhS0
NACH
DER JAHRHUNDERTFEIER 17 v. Chr.
Während des augusteischen
Friedens entstehen noch Gedichtbücher des Horaz und Properz, in denen die Politik des Kaisers begrüßt wird. Gleichzeitig aber schreibt
Ovid seine unpolitischen, erotischen Werke, unter denen die „Metamorphosen" am bekanntesten sind.
Prof. Dr.
Niklas Holzberg
ist
Professor für Klassische Philologie am
Department IV der
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, München.
wn.com/Ovid | Niklas Holzberg
Abonniert hier unseren
Channel:
http://bit.ly/subscribeuniauditorium
Besucht unseren
Shop: http://www.komplett-media.de/
Folgt uns auf
Facebook: http://bit.ly/fbuniauditorium
Hier geht’s zum vorherigen Kapitel: http://youtu.be/C0h86kZq-Kg
und hier zum ersten Kapitel: http://youtu.be/x8kO32ZRhS0
NACH
DER JAHRHUNDERTFEIER 17 v. Chr.
Während des augusteischen
Friedens entstehen noch Gedichtbücher des Horaz und Properz, in denen die Politik des Kaisers begrüßt wird. Gleichzeitig aber schreibt
Ovid seine unpolitischen, erotischen Werke, unter denen die „Metamorphosen" am bekanntesten sind.
Prof. Dr.
Niklas Holzberg
ist
Professor für Klassische Philologie am
Department IV der
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, München.
- published: 16 Oct 2014
- views: 2417
Metamorphoses Part 1, Creation Mythology of the Ancient Greece and Rome, Audiobook
The Metamorphoses of
Ovid is probably one of the best known, certainly one of the most influential works of the
Ancient world. It consists of a narrative poem in fifteen books that describes the creation and history of the world through mythological tales, starting with a cosmogony and finishing with the deification of
Julius Caesar. Published around 8 AD, the
Metamorphoses are a source, sometimes the only source, for many of the most famous ancient myths, such as the stories of
Daedalus and Icarus,
Arachne or Narcisus.
Ovid works his way through his subject matter often in an apparently arbitrary fashion; however, the connection between all the seemingly unconnected stories is that all of them talk about transformation.
Change as the only permanent aspect of nature is the certainty that underlies the work of Ovid, who jumps from one transformation tale to another, sometimes retelling what had come to be seen as central events in the world of
Greek myths and sometimes straying in odd directions. The poem is often called a mock-epic. It is written in dactylic hexameter, the form of the great heroic and nationalistic epic poems, both those of the ancient tradition (the Iliad and
Odyssey) and of Ovid's own day (the Aeneid). It begins with the ritual "invocation of the muse," and makes use of traditional epithets and circumlocutions. But instead of following and extolling the deeds of a human hero, it leaps from story to story sometimes in very cunning ways, and, because of the clever ways in which it connects the stories, the Metamorphoses were once called the "
Thousand and One Nights of the
Ancient World". (Summary adapted from
Wikipedia by
Leni).
Metamorphoses Part 1,
Creation Mythology of the
Ancient Greece and
Rome, Audiobook by by
Publius (Ovid)
Ovidius Naso.
wn.com/Metamorphoses Part 1, Creation Mythology Of The Ancient Greece And Rome, Audiobook
The Metamorphoses of
Ovid is probably one of the best known, certainly one of the most influential works of the
Ancient world. It consists of a narrative poem in fifteen books that describes the creation and history of the world through mythological tales, starting with a cosmogony and finishing with the deification of
Julius Caesar. Published around 8 AD, the
Metamorphoses are a source, sometimes the only source, for many of the most famous ancient myths, such as the stories of
Daedalus and Icarus,
Arachne or Narcisus.
Ovid works his way through his subject matter often in an apparently arbitrary fashion; however, the connection between all the seemingly unconnected stories is that all of them talk about transformation.
Change as the only permanent aspect of nature is the certainty that underlies the work of Ovid, who jumps from one transformation tale to another, sometimes retelling what had come to be seen as central events in the world of
Greek myths and sometimes straying in odd directions. The poem is often called a mock-epic. It is written in dactylic hexameter, the form of the great heroic and nationalistic epic poems, both those of the ancient tradition (the Iliad and
Odyssey) and of Ovid's own day (the Aeneid). It begins with the ritual "invocation of the muse," and makes use of traditional epithets and circumlocutions. But instead of following and extolling the deeds of a human hero, it leaps from story to story sometimes in very cunning ways, and, because of the clever ways in which it connects the stories, the Metamorphoses were once called the "
Thousand and One Nights of the
Ancient World". (Summary adapted from
Wikipedia by
Leni).
Metamorphoses Part 1,
Creation Mythology of the
Ancient Greece and
Rome, Audiobook by by
Publius (Ovid)
Ovidius Naso.
- published: 18 Feb 2014
- views: 10495