Buat agan agan yang suka Gowes nih ada film bertema sepeda yang layak buat ditonton.
Biar gowes lebih semangat dan tambah cinta bersepedah.
-Breaking Away-
Working-class kids, restless in a college town, try to…we really don’t have to walk you through this one. All you need to know is that’s not just one of the best cycling films ever made, but one of the best films period. It won the 1980 Academy Award for Best Screenplay and was nominated for four other awards
Biar gowes lebih semangat dan tambah cinta bersepedah.
1. -Shakariki!-
“S "Shakariki!,” the first manga series by artist Masahito Soda, is being adapted as a live-action film, starring members of the acting group D-BOYS. Serialized in Shonen Champion from 1992 to 1995, the comic focused on high schoolers involved in the sport of bicycle racing. D-BOYS leader Yuya Endo stars as Teru, who is trying to revive his school’s defunct bicycle club. Yuichi Nakamura (“Kamen Rider Den-O”) plays the talented Poppo, and Hiroki Suzuki (“Juken Sentai Gekiranger”) plays Yuta, a racer from a rival school. The three actors began practicing in December, and last week they underwent more intensive training that included cycling for 60km every day. The rest of the cast includes Noriko Nakagoshi as Teru’s sister Sayuri, Miho Nakai as one of the team’s mothers, Akira Emoto as the school principal, Yoichi Nukumizu as vice principal, and Taizo Harada as the team’s coach.
“S "Shakariki!,” the first manga series by artist Masahito Soda, is being adapted as a live-action film, starring members of the acting group D-BOYS. Serialized in Shonen Champion from 1992 to 1995, the comic focused on high schoolers involved in the sport of bicycle racing. D-BOYS leader Yuya Endo stars as Teru, who is trying to revive his school’s defunct bicycle club. Yuichi Nakamura (“Kamen Rider Den-O”) plays the talented Poppo, and Hiroki Suzuki (“Juken Sentai Gekiranger”) plays Yuta, a racer from a rival school. The three actors began practicing in December, and last week they underwent more intensive training that included cycling for 60km every day. The rest of the cast includes Noriko Nakagoshi as Teru’s sister Sayuri, Miho Nakai as one of the team’s mothers, Akira Emoto as the school principal, Yoichi Nukumizu as vice principal, and Taizo Harada as the team’s coach.
1.
Pe -Pee-wee's Big Adventure-
The greatest movie ever made about cycling is the wildly creative, idiosyncratic masterpiece Pee-wee's Big Adventure. Stop rolling your eyes.
The movie, which turns 25 in 2010, is a polarizing cinematic curiosity. People love it or loathe it, mostly because of writer/actor Paul Reubens's deeply eccentric—or creepy, depending on how you see it—performance as a bow-tie-wearing man-boy who talks in a kiddie voice, utters inane phrases like "I know you are, but what am I?" and dances in white platform shoes to "Tequila."
The central plot device of PWBA is the traumatic theft of Pee-wee's prized bike: a customized, cherry-red vintage Schwinn with handlebar tassels, rearview mirrors, metal panniers and an enormous lion's face atop the head tube. It gets ripped off early in the film—while Pee-wee is visiting his local bike shop, no less—and the remainder of PWBA is a raucous, Bob Hope-style road movie in which the juvenile protagonist fends off an escaped prisoner, an outlaw motorcycle gang and a eyeball-popping ghost truck driver named Large Marge as he tries to find his cherished ride, which, thanks to a shady psychic—an homage to The Bicycle Thief—he believes is stashed in the basement of the Alamo.
The movie, which turns 25 in 2010, is a polarizing cinematic curiosity. People love it or loathe it, mostly because of writer/actor Paul Reubens's deeply eccentric—or creepy, depending on how you see it—performance as a bow-tie-wearing man-boy who talks in a kiddie voice, utters inane phrases like "I know you are, but what am I?" and dances in white platform shoes to "Tequila."
The central plot device of PWBA is the traumatic theft of Pee-wee's prized bike: a customized, cherry-red vintage Schwinn with handlebar tassels, rearview mirrors, metal panniers and an enormous lion's face atop the head tube. It gets ripped off early in the film—while Pee-wee is visiting his local bike shop, no less—and the remainder of PWBA is a raucous, Bob Hope-style road movie in which the juvenile protagonist fends off an escaped prisoner, an outlaw motorcycle gang and a eyeball-popping ghost truck driver named Large Marge as he tries to find his cherished ride, which, thanks to a shady psychic—an homage to The Bicycle Thief—he believes is stashed in the basement of the Alamo.
-Breaking Away-
Working-class kids, restless in a college town, try to…we really don’t have to walk you through this one. All you need to know is that’s not just one of the best cycling films ever made, but one of the best films period. It won the 1980 Academy Award for Best Screenplay and was nominated for four other awards
1.
-T -The Triplets of Belleville-
People before they see Triplets for the first time: “Am I really about to watch an animated French film?” Same people at end: “…” (They’re speechless.) This story of a determined grandmother trying to rescue her cyclist grandson after his kidnapping at the Tour de France—and really, that’s just the half of it—is an almost wordless, thoroughly unforgettable adventure. And a stunning homage to Fausto Coppi.
1. - American Flyers-
Pre-Bull Durham Kevin Costner in a mustache is one thing, but Rae-Dawn Chong’s wheel change is the real stunner in this fun story of two brothers who tackle the Hell of the West through the Rockies. Some of the details are ludicrous—the way the Russian pros bob and weave as they attack—but as celebration of the 1980s American cycling scene, with appearances by the 7-Eleven Team and the gone-but-missed Coors Classic, it’s worth your time.
Pre-Bull Durham Kevin Costner in a mustache is one thing, but Rae-Dawn Chong’s wheel change is the real stunner in this fun story of two brothers who tackle the Hell of the West through the Rockies. Some of the details are ludicrous—the way the Russian pros bob and weave as they attack—but as celebration of the 1980s American cycling scene, with appearances by the 7-Eleven Team and the gone-but-missed Coors Classic, it’s worth your time.
1. -The Bicycle Thief-
Th The unflinching tale of a poor father and son searching for the father’s stolen ride—a bike he needs to get a job—is a bleak but truthful story of survival. It’s also a rebuke to Hollywood slickness. It ushered in a new era of cinematic realism and is routinely listed as one of the greatest films of all time. Don’t let the subtitles scare you off.
Th The unflinching tale of a poor father and son searching for the father’s stolen ride—a bike he needs to get a job—is a bleak but truthful story of survival. It’s also a rebuke to Hollywood slickness. It ushered in a new era of cinematic realism and is routinely listed as one of the greatest films of all time. Don’t let the subtitles scare you off.
1. - A Sunday in Hell-
If you’ve ever struggled to explain the consuming passion of bike racing to civilians, refer them to this film instead. A chronicle of the 1976 Paris-Roubaix race—with riders like Eddy Merckx, Roger De Vlaeminck and Francesco Moser—it’s a transporting documentary that drops you into the cobblestone dust, soaks you in sweat and fetishizes the suffering of the world’s greatest one-day race.
If you’ve ever struggled to explain the consuming passion of bike racing to civilians, refer them to this film instead. A chronicle of the 1976 Paris-Roubaix race—with riders like Eddy Merckx, Roger De Vlaeminck and Francesco Moser—it’s a transporting documentary that drops you into the cobblestone dust, soaks you in sweat and fetishizes the suffering of the world’s greatest one-day race.
1. -Stars & Watercarriers-
Another documentary by Jorgen Leth (director of A Sunday in Hell), this one follows the 1973 Giro d’Italia, but it’s not a story about the race—there are few clues to the general classification, time differentials, stage winners or other facts. Instead, you get unforgettable images of Eddy Merckx, such as when he lets a hometown racer go off the front for a moment of glory then ferociously chases and passes him with a look that would give Lance Armstrong nightmares. And you get the watercarriers, the workers, whose images are perhaps more inspiring than Merckx’s—not to mention the somehow magic scene of glass bottles of water being opened with church keys and passed around the pack during the race.
Another documentary by Jorgen Leth (director of A Sunday in Hell), this one follows the 1973 Giro d’Italia, but it’s not a story about the race—there are few clues to the general classification, time differentials, stage winners or other facts. Instead, you get unforgettable images of Eddy Merckx, such as when he lets a hometown racer go off the front for a moment of glory then ferociously chases and passes him with a look that would give Lance Armstrong nightmares. And you get the watercarriers, the workers, whose images are perhaps more inspiring than Merckx’s—not to mention the somehow magic scene of glass bottles of water being opened with church keys and passed around the pack during the race.
1. - 2 Seconds-
After a moment of weakness in the start gate—the titular two seconds—a female downhill mountain biker is kicked off her team and, in a life crisis, becomes a bike messenger. Her job puts her in contact with a guru-like Italian bike shop-owner who helps her understand and appreciate the culture of road-bike racing. This Canadian film (in French, with English subtitles) is nearly too light and corny to leave an impact, but somehow gets the feeling of wanting to be a bike racer just right. It’s best when discovered without hype, so pretend we didn’t like it much and you just stumbled across it on your own.
After a moment of weakness in the start gate—the titular two seconds—a female downhill mountain biker is kicked off her team and, in a life crisis, becomes a bike messenger. Her job puts her in contact with a guru-like Italian bike shop-owner who helps her understand and appreciate the culture of road-bike racing. This Canadian film (in French, with English subtitles) is nearly too light and corny to leave an impact, but somehow gets the feeling of wanting to be a bike racer just right. It’s best when discovered without hype, so pretend we didn’t like it much and you just stumbled across it on your own.
-Key Exchange-
Daniel Stern—Breaking Away’s Cyril—returns in another cycling-related role in this movie adaptation of a successful off-Broadway play about the foibles and farces of relationships 1980s New York City. It’s fluffy, illogical and has cycling scenes of questionable verisimilitude. Yet there is something powerful about the naïve yearning of the two main male lead characters—Stern and Ben Masters—to be in the Tour de France that strikes the heart of committed cyclists. Even through the ’80s hairdos and wardrobes.
Daniel Stern—Breaking Away’s Cyril—returns in another cycling-related role in this movie adaptation of a successful off-Broadway play about the foibles and farces of relationships 1980s New York City. It’s fluffy, illogical and has cycling scenes of questionable verisimilitude. Yet there is something powerful about the naïve yearning of the two main male lead characters—Stern and Ben Masters—to be in the Tour de France that strikes the heart of committed cyclists. Even through the ’80s hairdos and wardrobes.
seru!...
BalasHapuskenapa tdk mengikutertakan jg list film2 dokumenter seru spt Klunkerz, Joe Kid on A Sting-Ray, Pedal, B.I.K.E dll
best regards,
http://sepeda-lintas-cakrawala.blogspot.com
itu semua film nya pernah ada di bioskop ga?
BalasHapusklo ditayang kan di tivi pasti asik tuh film..
salam blog..
Quicksilver 1986
BalasHapusbetul, coba klo ditayangkan di tv, pasti seru tuh film
BalasHapusSalam blogger