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    神马影视评分9.04集全

    和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季

    • 主演:苏·帕金斯 
    • 导演:不详 
    • 分类:纪录片
    • 地区:英国 
    • 年份:2014 
    • 更新:09.11
    • 简介:  Sue Perkins embarks on a life-changing, 3,000-mile journey up the Mekong, South East Asia's greatest river, exploring lives and landscapes on the po

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    2014英国纪录片电影免费在线观看网站【神马影院】【神马影视】为您特别推荐由苏·帕金斯等主演的电影《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》未删完整版免费高清在线观看,不详监制,于2014年在英国开播,和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季电影4集全,精彩剧情:  Sue Perkins embarks on a life-changing, 3,000-mile journey up the Mekong, South East Asia's greatest river, exploring lives and landscapes on the point of dramatic change.   The Mekong is South East Asia's greatest river, the Mother of Water that brings life to millions of people from the paddy fields of Vietnam to the mountains of the Tibetan Plateau. In this series, Sue Perkins goes on an extraordinary journey, spanning nearly 3,000 miles, to explore lives and landscapes on the point of enormous change. Across four episodes, she travels upstream through Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and China, towards the Mekong's source high in the Himalayan glacier.   Episode1 of 4:   Sue's epic journey begins in Vietnam, on the vast Mekong Delta, where she joins Si Hei, the queen of the noodle. Starting at dawn, Si Hei and her eager new apprentice head out to sell noodle soup at the Delta's largest floating market - Cai Rang, a centre of commerce on the river that's endured for centuries. But communist Vietnam has one of the fastest growing economies in South East Asia, and change is coming to millions of people who live along the river. Vietnam is the world's second largest exporter of rice, so Sue moves upstream to work with farmers Hung and Tuk in the paddy fields and finds out how their lives are changing with the prospect of capitalism.   Travelling up river, Sue crosses into Cambodia and its capital Phnom Penh, which lies at the confluence of the Mekong and the Tonle Sap River. It's a place tainted by the horrific genocide carried out by Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge. At the S21 detention centre, Sue meets one of only two of its prisoners still alive today, Chum Mey, before visiting the infamous genocide centre, known as the Killing Fields.   To complete this first leg of her journey, Sue immerses herself in the lives of the people of Kuampang Pluk, an extraordinary village of stilted houses on the largest freshwater lake in Asia, Tonle Sap Lake.   Episode 2 of 4   Sue Perkins continues her epic journey up the Mekong, south east Asia's greatest river. In this second episode, Sue embarks on the most emotional leg of her journey along the Mekong. Having learnt how people are struggling to recover from the legacy of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge, animal lover Sue continues through Cambodia to witness how deforestation and wildlife crime are stripping the country of it last wild places. She goes on a raid with the Wildlife Rapid Response Rescue team, in search of trafficked wild animals and bush meat. It's a disturbing experience, and Sue is thrust into the complicated and conflicting world of animal welfare and conservation versus the poverty and greed that drives the trade. She also takes part in the more positive aspect of the team's work, as they release macaques and a slow loris back into the wild. And further upstream she sees the efforts to protect the Mekong's endangered river dolphins.   But Cambodia also brings some of her happiest encounters, as Sue's ability to make friends is epitomised in her meetings with a mobile-touting hermit and the women of the Krung people. The Krung live in the remote highlands of Ratanakiri and are one of the tribes most affected by rapid deforestation. Having witnessed the devastation of the forest from the air, Sue makes a deep bond with these women, as she sees how they live from the bounty of the remaining forest and learns of their struggle to protect it.   Episode 3 of 4   In this third episode, Sue reaches Laos, one of the poorest and least developed of all the Mekong nations. It's a country shaped by both Buddhism and Communism and has hardly changed for centuries. Today, the beauty of its landscapes and people is bringing in foreign tourists - backpackers in search of unspoilt Asia. Sue spends time with Bounsom, a fisherman who's turned to tourism, setting up a restaurant on the beach. And she visits Luang Prabang, a beautiful town which was once the Royal City of Laos and is now a Unesco World Heritage site, famed as the centre of Buddhism. Thought to be the home of more monks than anywhere else in Asia, Sue spends a day with the novice monks and gives a surprising English lesson in the temple's school.   Laos is on the verge of huge and irreversible change - massive dams are being built to harness the power of the river. After months of access negotiation, Sue films at the Xayaburi hydroelectric dam, SE Asia's biggest and most controversial engineering project. It's the first dam to be built across the Lower Mekong and will completely block the flow of the river, changing water levels, blocking fish migration and destroying fish stocks. Under strict supervision, Sue is told about the merits of the dam by the vice minister for energy and mines, Mr Viraphonh Varavong. When the waters rise, thousands of people will be forced to leave their traditional homes, so she is given a tour of their new village, complete with electricity. Having seen the effects of damming in Vietnam and Cambodia, Sue grapples with the complexities of projects such as this. While the Xayaburi Dam will bring economic benefits to Laos and beyond, the industrialisation of the Mekong will harm the livelihoods of tens of millions of people downstream.   Foreign investment is coming to Laos on projects beyond the dams. The government has tempted Chinese developers with tax incentives to create tourist playgrounds in an area branded as the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone. At the river's bank, Sue is met by a stretch limo to take her to a Las Vegas-style casino, built for Chinese VIPs who aren't allowed to gamble in their own country. It's a world away from the charm and serenity of the Laos she's fallen in love with.   Episode 4 of 4   In this fourth and final episode, Sue reaches her final destination - China, home to the source of the Mekong. Here, change is sweeping through faster than any other Mekong nation, as China's economic miracle transforms even the remotest regions.   Arriving in Yunnan's tropical south western region of Xishuangbanna, Sue discovers how this once remote and sleepy region is now home to a booming tourist industry, with the indigenous Dai tribe at its heart. To the Dai, water is holy, the physical and spiritual source of life. Thousands of Han Chinese - who make up 92% of China's population - flock to the Dai Minority Park, a Disneyfied version of an ancient Dai village, where they take part in a traditional water splashing ceremony. After decades of communism, the park represents China's renewed interest in the colourful melting pot of peoples that actually make up modern China, providing a must-see holiday destination for its burgeoning middle class.   Leaving the Dai Park, Sue climbs higher into the foothills of Xishuangbanna to discover how the Aini tribe are adapting to a changing China. The Aini have farmed Pu'er tea for two thousand years; suddenly they can become rich from its harvest, as China's newly wealthy professionals buy up this now fashionable delicacy.   But as China tries to work out what is significant from its past and what it should take into its future, some people feel this rush to modernity is threatening what little remains of ancient traditions and beliefs. Sue meets Li Jin Mei, who is desperately trying to preserve what is left of her Aini culture.   Travelling further along the river's valleys and foothills, Sue reaches the town of Baisha under the shadow of the Himalayas. Home to the Naxi people, this region is famous for its botanists and herbalists, made popular by Victorian plant hunters such as Joseph Rock. Sue attends a consultation with the renowned Naxi Chinese herbalist Dr Ho and explores his magnificent herbal garden.   Climbing higher and ever closer to the source, Sue encounters her first taste of Tibetan life in the village of Cizhong. French missionaries came here in 1850, bringing the Catholic gospel and converting, over time, 80% of this village to Catholicism. Sue meets Mr Xiao Jie Yi, whose humbling story relates how his Catholic faith carried him through thirty years of hard labour during Mao's Cultural Revolution.   In modern China, Cizhong is facing a new, even more dramatic change - a hydroelectric dam is being built close by, bringing with it construction along the river's banks, landslides and the prospect of flooding. Six mega dams are already in service on the Mekong in Yunnan, generating the equivalent of enough electricity to light up London for three years. But the human and ecological cost here and downstream is yet to be calculated - already more than 100,000 ethnic people were displaced to make way for the dams.   Finally, after nearly 3,000 miles, Sue embarks on the last leg of her epic journey, arriving high up on the Tibetan Plateau in Qinghai province, close to the source of the Mekong. In a life-changing experience, she is immersed in the lives of a family of Tibetan yak herders, and joins a group of nuns as they make an offering to the water gods for their protection. Here, at the point where the Mekong's waters first filter into the lives of people, Sue reveals the eternal bond between humans, gods and this mighty river.

    神马影院申明:本站属于互联网自由分享,电影《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》资源均来自互联网,分享于互联网,本站服务器未保存《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》资源或文件,且本站并不属于《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》的提供者、制作者、所有者,因此本站不承担任何法律责任!若有相关资源涉及您的版权或知识产权或其他利益,请及时联系我们,确认后,我们会尽快处理。

    常见问题

    1.请问哪个平台可以免费在线观看纪录片《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》

    电影天堂网 网友:《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》免vip在线观看地址:https://www.osx9.com

    2.电影纪录片《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》是什么时候上映/什么时候开播的?

    80s电影网网友:2014年,详细日期可以去百度百科查一查。

    3.《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》都有哪些演员?

    爱奇艺网友:苏·帕金斯 

    4.剧情片《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》有多少集?

    电影吧网友:现在是4集全

    5.手机版免费在线点播《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》有哪些网站?

    被窝电影网网友:电影天堂网神马电影手机端片库电影网达达兔影院

    6.电影纪录片《和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季》评价怎么样?

    • 我一直认为所谓的影片是绘声绘色的书 比小说更高 基于虚拟与幻想 回头一想却都是现实的虚幻影子
    • 不详 导演的作品,有欢笑、有泪水、有喜悦、有悲伤...,虚拟世界中的感情是多彩的,并不同于我们现实中不爽就一直玩的感觉,虚拟感情的交错,当看完之后会觉得更加舒畅。
    • 纪录片和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季不同于其他作品,没有紧迫感、虚浮的情节及杂乱的画面,却在不断教导我们,不像老师家长苦口婆心语重心长的教诲(为遵重在这里我省略掉啰嗦这词)。我们看电影电视剧亦或综艺动漫逗号,往往是融入进去,在不知不觉中去了解这些似乎不容易被我们所发现、所理解的道理。再说近一点,看视频时设身处地会发现这是现实中更近教导的教导!
    • 纪录片和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季剧情很流畅,人物也很丰满,节奏把握的很好,很有年代感。没有过多煽情,每个人物都发挥了作用,细节也很到位。整个影片三观也很正,主演员们感情真挚,总体来说,可以和朋友一起看,推荐!!!
    • 爱奇艺网友2025-02-28
      认真看电影,认真写影评,对待影视严肃大于感性,我不会拿观感和喜爱值去评价一部电影,这是我评价影视的基本信条。我今天不为别的,抛开先前一切杂念和印象不谈,2025-02-28我只想好好评价这部电影拍的真的很不错。
    • 优酷网友2025-02-28
      之所以给和苏·帕金斯一起畅游湄公河 第一季打高分,物以稀为贵,全靠同行衬托,已经不记得有多久没看到这种类型的电影了,不沉闷,有铁齿铜牙纪晓岚的味。
    • 芒果TV网友2025-02-28
      给处于低落心情的我又一次很大的宽慰。如同海面般的沉默 却也有着水波般的温柔。我看得挺浅的 但很钟爱不详 导演的表现形式,少量的台词与配乐,大量的细节背景音与空景,这种细腻的展现形式让一切尽在不言中。这种碎片化的画面镜头仿佛观众也是回忆的执行者感同身受。

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