Chien classé ou dit dangereux
- Length: 3:13
- Rating Average: 4.69 from 488 people
- View Count: 317113' favoriteCount='290
- Author: yeyabingo
Tags: Chien Souffrance Stéréotype
Le stéréotype de ses chiens effrayent certains. D'autres disent qu'ils devraient être rayé du classement des espèces canines, ou carrément être détruits.... Mais que pouvons nous savoir ? Ces chiens ont peut-être un font d'attaquent qui sommeil, mais cela n'ai t'il pas le cas de tous ? De mauvais maître, leurs apprennent a combattrent, a tuer Le plus souvent se promener sans muselière obligatoire.... C'est la peine de mort assuré pour le chien. Le maître, lui s'en tirera avec une amende Certain de ses chiens ont sauver des vies. D'autre ont fait de compagnon de fidèle et dévoué. Petite parenthèse : tous ces chiens ne sont pas classés dangereux, mais sont aussi mal vue
Chien bizarre
- Length: 0:59
- Rating Average: 4.35 from 193 people
- View Count: 295586' favoriteCount='300
- Author: vbauwens
Chien bizarre
origami le chien
- Length: 4:24
- Rating Average: 4.82 from 11 people
- View Count: 10222' favoriteCount='11
- Author: ericn77
Comment amuser les enfants un bon moment en leur faisant decouvrir l'art du pliage. Le petit chien plaira aux petits!
Leo ferre - Le Chien (live)
- Length: 5:47
- Rating Average: 4.95 from 43 people
- View Count: 19131' favoriteCount='110
- Author: VolfoniRaoul944
Tags: Chien concert ferre Le Leo
Recital Au Theatre Des Champs Elysees de Leo Ferre. Une pure merveille à mes yeux...
Tokio Hotel- Le chien de Robert mauvaise nouvelle
- Length: 2:3
- Rating Average: 4.83 from 685 people
- View Count: 394179' favoriteCount='1196
- Author: BillyouC
XD et oui encore une
Un Chien Andalou - Argentinian Tango
- Length: 3:55
- Rating Average: 4.62 from 13 people
- View Count: 17529' favoriteCount='21
- Author: DistantMirrors
Tags: andalou andalusian argentinian bunuel chien dali dog luis salvador tango Un
Un Chien Andalou (English: An Andalusian Dog) is a 16-minute surrealist film made in France in 1928 by Spanish writer/directors Luis Buñuel and Salvador DalÃ, and released in 1929 in Paris. It is one of the best-known surrealist films of the French avant-garde film movement of the 1920s. It is also considered one of the most prominent films in Spanish Surrealism. It stars Simone Mareuil and Pierre Batcheff as the unnamed protagonists. The film has no plot, in the conventional sense of the word. There are two central characters, an unnamed man and woman. The chronology of the film is disjointed: for example, it jumps from "once upon a time" to "eight years later" without the events changing. It uses dream logic that can be described in terms of Freudian free association, presenting a series of tenuously related scenes that attempt to shock the viewer. The film opens with a scene in which a woman's eye is slit by a razor. The man with the razor is played by Buñuel himself. In subsequent scenes, a man's hand has a hole in the palm from which ants emerge; an androgynous blind woman pokes at a severed hand in the street with her cane before being knocked down by a car; the man fondles a woman, who resists him violently, and then he drags two grand pianos containing dead and rotting donkeys, the tablets of the Ten Commandments, and two live priests (Dalà plays one of the priests in this scene); the man's father (played by the same actor as the man himself) arrives to punish him, but the man eventually shoots him with two books that abruptly turn to pistols; and the woman's armpit hair attaches itself to the man's face. At the end of the film, the woman walks out of the apartment building, and meets another man on the beach (also played by DalÃ). They seem to be happy, but the final shot shows two figures (apparently Mareuil and DalÃ) buried in sand, dead, and "consumed by swarms of flies" according to Buñuel's original script. However, this latter special effect was left out due to budget limitations. Modern prints of the film feature a soundtrack: excerpts from Richard Wagner's Liebestod, the concert version of the finale to his opera Tristan und Isolde, and two Argentinian tangos. These are the same music that Buñuel played on a phonograph during the original 1929 screening; he first added them to a sound print of the film in 1960. In spite of varying interpretations, Buñuel made clear throughout his writings that, between Dalà and himself, the only rule for the writing of the script was that "no idea or image that might lend itself to a rational explanation of any kind would be accepted."Moreover, he stated that, "Nothing, in the film, symbolizes anything. The only method of investigation of the symbols would be, perhaps, psychoanalysis." Film scholar Ken Dancyger has argued that Un chien andalou might be the genesis of the filmmaking style present in the modern music video.Roger Ebert has called it one of the first low budget independent films.
Punk à chien
- Length: 2:21
- Rating Average: 4.84 from 58 people
- View Count: 36685' favoriteCount='88
- Author: devils59200
Bonus track des fatal picard sur l'album pamplemous mécanique
Futur Crew - Chien Denis Crew
- Length: 4:43
- Rating Average: 4.03 from 63 people
- View Count: 78599' favoriteCount='63
- Author: VooDoO974
Tags: 974 chien crew denis futur krew réunion
Clip des Futur Crew
France Gall - J'ai Retrouvé Mon Chien 1966
- Length: 2:38
- Rating Average: 4.63 from 49 people
- View Count: 23098' favoriteCount='134
- Author: jerone2003
Tags: Chien France Gall J'ai Mon Retrouvé
From 1966 comes this video and song by France Gall. The title of this song is "I Found My Dog". Has a great beat to it. Thanks Christine for this one. The way she has the old guy on the leash is ahem...strange... Maybe she took it out on the old dude for killing her dog but the other guy sawed the dog in half? Mabye the old dudes went nuts and were acting like dogs...?
Léo Ferré Le Chien
- Length: 6:27
- Rating Average: 5.00 from 14 people
- View Count: 5196' favoriteCount='29
- Author: Reano
Léo Ferré
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