告密者美版

HD中字

主演:西德妮·斯威尼,约什·汉密尔顿,玛昌特·戴维斯,Benny Elledge,Allan Anthony Smith,约翰·维伊

类型:电影地区:美国语言:英语年份:2023

 非凡

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 剧照

告密者美版 剧照 NO.1告密者美版 剧照 NO.2告密者美版 剧照 NO.3告密者美版 剧照 NO.4告密者美版 剧照 NO.5告密者美版 剧照 NO.6告密者美版 剧照 NO.13告密者美版 剧照 NO.14告密者美版 剧照 NO.15告密者美版 剧照 NO.16告密者美版 剧照 NO.17告密者美版 剧照 NO.18告密者美版 剧照 NO.19告密者美版 剧照 NO.20

 长篇影评

 1 ) 我们的世界坏至如此,没有一个人是无辜的。

我们的世界坏至如此,没有一个人是无辜的。力荐此片,真实改编而来。
人与制度的纠葛或许要贯穿整个人类文明的始终,没有绝对的公平,但必须有一个相互牵制的权利分配和制衡机制——即便它不完善。
有一颗还会流泪的心在,人性即不灭。
新闻是所有博弈的最后一条路,一个连新闻都没有的地方,所谓司法、正义、公平便是皇帝的新装。
那些为此新装沉默的人们,你怎么敢说自己是无辜的?
你怎么敢说你还有温暖的人性盛装在你灵魂深处?
你还以为在路边给乞丐抛几个零钱就能赎罪、丢叠钞票就代表的善良如初吗?
NO!或许你仅仅是需要借此行为装饰自己的优雅和高贵,而人性已然逃离于你言不由衷、裹得热乎发烫的躯壳之外,在瑟瑟寒风中濒临死亡。
而在中国这片神奇的土地上,它们作为一个复数已近濒临灭绝。
——《告密者》观后。

 2 ) 整部电影一直在克制,它的实际情况还要惨上百倍

制片人希望能让观众受到片中那些被迫卖淫女性受到残暴对待的镜头影响,所以增加了拉亚一角,来给予这些受害人一张真实的面孔。
电影首次在多伦多放映期间,一位观众因片中的暴力镜头晕倒,大部分强奸的镜头因此遭到删减。

对此薇兹表示:
我完全理解,让人看这些东西的确太痛苦了。
真实情况还要惨烈得多。
我的意思是,第一个接触这些青年女性的人的故事中我能够告诉你的还只有这个“低调”的版本,如果你能够接受这样的内容。
不过,这不是纪录片,你不希望(在里面)毁掉谁。
你只想阐明一些事情,它的实际情况还要惨上百倍。

联合国秘书长潘基文主持了电影的一次放映,并承诺会采取措施,防止联合国工作人员参与色情人口贩卖活动。
对此波克瓦克回应:“不幸的是,恐惧已经广泛散布。纠正之路将会很复杂,并且无法速战速决。”她还表示,除波斯尼亚外,维和人员在尼日利亚、科索沃、布隆迪、塞拉利昂、刚果、利比里亚、柬埔寨、伊拉克、阿富汗、海地、哥伦比亚、几内亚和苏丹都存在侵犯人权的行径。
康达基对此表示自己打算保持乐观,希望电影的放映能够“让人们对联合国参与性交易人口贩卖及其它犯罪活动展开真正的讨论和思考。”但她也担心电影可能不会产生预期的持久影响:“我知道我们会听到很多说法,说自本片上映以来都已经采该了哪些措施,但到目前为止这些都还只是说辞。实际情况已经出现升级。

”《告密者》在院线上映后,《卫报》报道称有联合国官员试图淡化电影中描绘的事件,并且打击波斯尼亚境内人口贩卖的行动已遭中止。

戴阳国际发言人阿什利·伯克(Ashley Burke)称:

我没看过那部电影,所以无法对其内容作出评价,但是我可能告诉大家,我们联系影片发行商试图了解电影的更多信息时得知,影片不是改编自波克瓦克女士的著作,而是是受到她经历启发所做的‘虚构戏剧化呈现’。我们也没有威胁采取法律行动来要求他们不得在片中使用公司的真实名称。

很抱歉,以上是我转载的内容,我觉得这更有一定的说服力
首先,电影里出现的公司名称戴阳国际是真实存在的,并且戴阳国际也一直在参与联合国的各种事物(业务),最终联合国秘书长潘也组织观看了此片,相信会有所动作!

但.....弱肉抢食

 3 ) 转一份背景资料


Talking With Kathryn Bolkovac About Her Experience as The Whistleblower

Posted: 08/16/11 07:48 PM ET

 

After seeing (and reviewing) The Whistleblower, I contacted Kathryn Bolkovac, whose story is the basis of the movie, and interviewed her. Her answers speak for themselves, but also give such a sense of her persona, grit and determination.

FOSTER: You were faced with a situation where the people you worked with were engaged in something very shocking. Do you have any insight as to how or why they got involved with trafficking?

I really do not think there is clear cut answer for this. Everyone is an individual and is accountable to their individual behavior and potential illegal actions they committed and continue to commit in current missions. I think most people are truly just plain complicit in their thinking and tend to not get involved or look the other way to avoid any form of accountability, especially if they think that something does not directly affect them for their position. Then there is the group of people who can easily be swayed to join in on a pack mentality, who are morally and mentally weak or ignorant. When conditions are right as they have been and still are in many overseas missions around the world, or if they think they will not be caught or judged then it is easy for them to engage in illegal and corrupt behavior. They try to justify and minimize their actions. Finally, there are individuals who are just plain evil and corrupt, they see the money making potential of preying on the helpless and needy, and exploit every opportunity they can to make a buck, especially in an industry that involves sex. They are very good at dehumanizing, denial, and lying about what is going on.

FOSTER: What do you think needs to be done to address the trafficking issue? What can government do?

The trafficking issue at large is too complex to tackle with sweeping reform. There are so many different types of human trafficking each with different dynamics of funding the corruption. Obviously, many adults choose to be trafficked... or illegally transported across many borders to escape horrendous conditions in their own countries. These issues cannot be convoluted with organized criminal syndicates who are providing services to internationals all over the world, in the form of trafficking for forced prostitution. They are involved in the recruitment, abuse, desensitization, and sale of human flesh, into international missions as sex workers. This is what I want to discuss and what I think we can make a huge impact on based on my experiences as a former law enforcement officer, former UN employee, former representative of our U.S. government overseas, and as a former employee of one of the largest private government contractors in the world DynCorp.

FOSTER: What can our government do?

First, in the short term, the United States needs to take a serious look at why we are willing to allow private companies to engage in the profession of law enforcement. Government contractors are a needed and viable means to get many logistical and re-construction efforts accomplished. They are not a viable means for a protection force or as a mechanism for the use in training law enforcement officers in emerging democracies. Law enforcement is not a business. Policing is a calling. Does anyone really believe that private corporations are in this policing and operational mission business for anything but the money? We need to set an example with our own federal police selection units, perhaps via the Department of Justice as an example, why can we not recruit and most importantly train our own community police officers before we send them into these missions? My book accurately describes the pathetic training offered by the private company who sent me overseas, which I am sure was heavily subsidized with my tax dollars. It was a disgrace; none of us had even the minimum knowledge or idea of what we were supposed to be doing once we got into Bosnia.

If we are to continue to send "rent a cops " overseas with inadequate knowledge and inadequate protections from corrupt private companies, some of whom had serious questionable policing backgrounds we might want to stop and think about how this damages our reputation and our goals. The private company who fired me had free reign to treat me however they saw fit, no one was in authority to stop them. They were exempt from all U.S. government accountability and have never been held accountable for what they did to me to this day. How has this changed? It has not.

Second, get the Civilian Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act (CEJA) out of committee and get it passed. It has been more than 12 years overdue. [NOTE: CEJA would allow the U.S. Justice Department to prosecute government contractors and employees for certain crimes committed overseas. It would complement the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act (MEJA), which provides similar criminal jurisdiction over Department of Defense employees and contractors but does not clearly apply to U.S. contractors working overseas for other federal agencies.]

Third, make government contractors accountable for their employee actions, by putting a clause in their contracts that require them to facilitate and allow oversight of both external and internal investigations by outside government agencies, when probable cause exists that employees are suspected, or implicated in criminal offenses. They must cooperate in the facilitation of prosecutions. They can no longer just fire people, and hope the problem goes away, which automatically curtails any further investigation.

Fourth, set examples by having the means available to prosecute and convict with meaningful sentences.

FOSTER: What can individuals do?

Learn, read, report, and stop burying your heads in the sand. Many of the people involved in these crimes could be your next door neighbor.

Get local law enforcement initiatives started, and ask your police chiefs this question. What kind of training is being offered to your new recruits and officers on the streets to recognize and investigate all forms of human trafficking?

Do you think a local police chief in the hills of Northern New Mexico, or in the farming community of southern Illinois, is even going to know what we are talking about? Does the local hotel have young female Hispanics working in the housekeeping department? They do not speak English, they have no documents, does he know what wage they are being paid and in what form? Think about it. I have been in these places have you?

 FOSTER: Many of the women and girls who are trafficked are promised jobs that don't materialize. What do you think would be effective to get the word out to them so that fewer of them fall prey to these types of promises?

The only effect we can have on this is to stop the demand.

FOSTER: How did you sustain yourself?

Continued faith in our justice system, lots of hard workouts and sweat, many tears and my husband would make me a strong gin tonic with lots of lemon and ice once in a while.
 



 

 Follow Stephenie Foster on Twitter: www.twitter.com/StephenieFoster

 4 ) 又扯远了

   对于一个纪录电影来说,挖掘的深度已经到达了对人性拷问的程度。印象最深的是女主问女孩子你到底和不和我走的时候。剧情在两个女人的对峙下达到情绪的高潮。用女性主义的角度去剖析它是很简单的。无论是开头女主因为热爱工作,而没能得到女儿的监护权;还是故事发生地点是一个男性占大多数的公司;被虐待女孩的照片成为缺失女性权利最有力的佐证。对,我说这是很简单的观点因为我觉得女性主义已经被用烂了。研究生什么都可以套上一套理论。即使有理有据,但只是乘前人之荫。所以对于女主和女二的对峙上升到对人性懦弱的展现,作为观众表示十分惊喜。
  要说主旨精神,这部片子和真探的基调十分相似。都是质疑人类在罪恶面前是否会屈服于权利和诱惑。描绘的人性阴暗面又和处女之死挺像的。处女们和妓女们在影片的最后都没有得到拯救。所以这就是为什么我看完这片子心情非常低落。
  最让我惊讶的是看完这个发生在完全不一样世界里的故事居然让我想到了发生在我身边的事。这种屈服于权利,为了暂时的安全而放弃自己的自尊的情节屡屡皆是。最明显的例子就是装逼了。最近又和朋友们讨论起了优越感的来源与生成。来到这辈子读过的第三个大学,我越来越发现人性的弱点都是相似的。好像贬低别人变成了一种天经地义的事情。做什么说什么都可以成为划分自己与他人界限的理由。而因为害怕被孤立和不认可,更是可以牺牲自己的灵魂和自尊与现实世界的既定价值做交换。在电影是用灵魂交换命,那还可以理解。至少女孩子还曾经有勇气站出来指认凶手。我是不懂身边的男男女女。电影里女孩子的代价是生命啊。在极度的恐惧之下做出不明智的决定会让人觉得是一种悲剧的美。换作是我,自问也不一定能把握住自己最后仅存的理智。但身边衣食无忧的年轻人的心理状态我就不甚了解了。牺牲自己牺牲得毫无价值和美感。
   是不是我挖掘出他们的美感我就能写出剧本了。想到这个就心好累。不想再写影评了。不知道还要读多少书才能理解他们。还要担着有生之年都可能理解不了的准备。不多说了。我看书去了。

 5 ) 短评居然放不下-_-‖

莫妮卡在里面看着好老啊,皱巴巴的T_T
嗯,其实类似题材的电影看过不少,无非是一个有正义感的人敢于冒着生命危险揭露某些阴暗面,并且以正义最终战胜邪恶为结局,一句话,煞笔,但是这部片子亮就亮在结尾处的几行字啊,Kathy揭露了丑陋的现实,却没有人为这样的罪恶买单,这个邪恶的组织并没有受到惩罚,不过是把公司解散了而已,换个名字照样接单干活,鬼知道他们是不是继续这样的勾当,并且Kathy从此没有能再参与类似的工作,再一次证明“未被同化”的人是为体制所不容的啊!!!哪里都有黑暗啊摔!!!

 6 ) 讲述权力机构犯罪组织的缩影故事。

这个片子告诉了我们,只要人的存在是为了欲望,那么当他有了权力了以后就会利用自己的权力来满足自己的欲望。
如果没有一个国家体制来制约这种权力那么必将形成有组织的犯罪集团。
光靠政策来说服大众,只是一个美丽的谎言!

 短评

我的心被打爆拉娅头的那颗子弹撕碎了。so fucking unfire.

5分钟前
  • 川总
  • 推荐

Strongly recommend, you should go to watch to find what the fuckup happened in our world, it's the shame of humanity and human.

7分钟前
  • 我怀念的
  • 力荐

如果我们都生活在那个人性泯灭的少数人当权的社会结果会怎样。答案是:我们已经生活在那样的社会了。

8分钟前
  • 宅拾叁
  • 推荐

Despite the impression left by the film, the failure of peacekeeping missions to protect the local population is not simply because of a lacck of integrity of UN staff.

11分钟前
  • UrthónaD'Mors
  • 推荐

毫无亮点。导演没什么风格,剧本又过于中庸,主题也过于老套了,就连蕾切尔薇兹的一个人的表演也没有强大到成撑起这部电影,毕竟这就是她一个人的独角戏。故事题材不错,但切入点还是太老土了,前半部分节奏紊乱,后面高潮戏份的节奏还行,但故事的结尾让人很失落,归于现实便无解了吧。★★★

15分钟前
  • 亵渎电影
  • 还行

真实而残酷,看过的关于人口贩卖的片子中,这部是情节最丑陋的结局是最无奈的了,谁叫你斗争的对象是整个国家甚至联合国呢。。。做着这样龌龊事情的竟然是打折和平旗号的维和部队,这世界还有什么是可以相信的吗。。。这部片完全是雷切尔的个人秀,发现她越来越适合这种独立干练的角色了。。。

18分钟前
  • 一贫
  • 推荐

3.5 适合给那些喜欢把 ‘你怎样,你的中国就怎样’ 挂在嘴边的人看看,并且问问他们以此类推能否得到 ‘你怎样,你的世界就怎样’ 的结论 。 顺便扯点儿有的没的,人类对于女性的不尊重远比对gay的歧视要严重得多...

22分钟前
  • LOL
  • 还行

影片开篇有点沉闷 后三分之一渐渐给力。一句话:你知道的太多了。【制服缺爷露脸约一分半钟,酱油打的得心应手。

27分钟前
  • A L E X
  • 还行

写实片 对人口贩卖有了重新认识。看到最后感觉很绝望。

32分钟前
  • 蜷蜷
  • 力荐

Kathryn的独角戏,正义永远无法击败利益。以前怎样,现在还是那样。真实改编,心里承受力不强者勿看。

33分钟前
  • Chaouki
  • 力荐

那些禽兽不把女人当人看,当畜生!!!贩卖人口来虐待,被卖的女孩实在是太可怜了。。。揪心!

35分钟前
  • 老实人楷模
  • 推荐

为真实

39分钟前
  • 三淡发
  • 力荐

任何缺乏监督的权力都必然会孳生对权力的滥用。有良知的好电影。莫妮卡·贝鲁奇老得让人触目惊心!

40分钟前
  • 安东
  • 推荐

挺好的题材拍弱了

43分钟前
  • 桃桃林林
  • 还行

好片!

48分钟前
  • mark
  • 力荐

比恐怖片还恐怖的现实世界,真实事件改编的官方参与女性人口贩卖案件,而最后也只是媒体曝光了一下而已!女主发现真相后行走,路过那些知道真相甚至是贩卖参与者的男性的那一段,拍出了女性的绝望,文明、法律的窗户纸下,联合国又怎样,人类对女性的奴役没有停止过,并且像是公开的秘密。

53分钟前
  • Xingxing ZHANG
  • 力荐

非常有震撼力的片子,开场貌似很商业片,但中段起到最后高潮让我完全入戏,结局看得很压抑~坐到字幕完全放完电影院亮灯才离场,发现还有十来人也还未退场,回家的路上有给五星的冲动~~非要说拍摄手法剧本确实没有什么特别的,但叙事清晰表演出彩故事本身很有意义,这个人觉得足够了~~推荐此片~~

55分钟前
  • Woodring
  • 推荐

其实看到BC有接这部片子就大概知道这一定是个好题材。的确好题材,可惜导演真是烂到让人倒胃口,虽然没学过导演拍摄这种东西,但是以一个观看者的角度来说,这尼玛都想把镜头扯出屏幕外扔在地上用脚跺碎好么!两颗星全给好题材,一颗星给演员们,不偏不倚。剪辑的人你直接死五分钟去吧。

58分钟前
  • 桑下
  • 还行

看得很难受的一部电影,直到最后她们也没有解脱出来。同时看到生命的差异性,我们生活在歌舞升平中,还有那么多人生活在水深火热中,要好好珍惜生活。

59分钟前
  • 蒜 | BOY A 🌈
  • 推荐

开头有些闷,但随后剧情变得越来越紧凑深刻,看了让人心情十分沉重的电影,那些表面光鲜的人性背后隐藏着极其恶劣的兽性,一个黑暗到无以复加的世界!蕾切尔·薇兹的演技好的没得说!

60分钟前
  • 天蝎小猪
  • 力荐