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Format : 1 CD Total Time : 01:00:21
Recording : 2004 Location : Londres Country : Royaume-Uni Sound : Studio / Stereo
Label : Altus Catalog No. : ALU0005 EAN : 5038046000420
Publishing Year : 2015 Release Date : 01/07/2015
Genre : Ambiance
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Richard Harvey (1953-)Musique du film documentaire de Francis Gerard "The Great Within Forbidden City" Sons of Heaven Dynasty Omens 1582 Eclipse The Dragon Throne Memorials Concubines The Eunuch's Story Myriad Treasures The Death of Kangxi The Sun at Noon Parting at Yuang Guan The Unwelcome Tribute The Dragon Wall The Last Emperor The Forbidden City Katherine Hopper, voix Harry Gregson-Williams, voix Brian Gulland, voix Benedict Cruft, violon Roger Chase, alto Richard Morgan, hautbois Pingxin Xu, yangqin Mardalin Young, guzheng Chen Dachan, ehru Richard Harvey, instruments à vent chinois, percussion, direction
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 Filmed in Beijing by Discovery Channel Pictures Instead of a simple tour of Beijing’s Forbidden City, Discovery uses what’s now the Imperial Palace Museum to illustrate the architectural treasure by displaying it in historical perspective , resurrecting its last 150 years concluding with Pu Yi, the Last Emperor, in the 1920s. Francis Gerard’s account of the final four leaders under the Ming and Ch’ing dynasties fuses verbal history and visual replay to indicate secrets of Chinese imperialism; it’s a beautiful tease. Couriers, spies and dedicated ministers had kept the world of the emperors from commoners’ understanding, beyond their reach; by the end of the 19th century, interventions of foreign powers, public awareness and the rise of the Boxers began picking at the old system. The imperial palace became, eventually, simply a refuge. Covering the final 150 years of imperial rule, spec views four leaders and their lives, observes concubines and eunuchs, the customs and foods, but ignores religion. Using actors from China’s Beijing Film Studio and Xian Film Studio to act out wordlessly but expertly daily living among the nabobs, this docu handsomely enacts how the Sons of Heaven ruled from their 178-acre, 9,999-room palace. Richard Harvey’s rich score weaves a mood as narrator Rod Steiger eloquently reports on palace doings. If the script skips more personal aspects of day-to-day living in the Forbidden City, it does give an account of the discipline, isolation and purposefulness of the emperors and their followers.

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