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Tales of the City (Alastair Reid, 1993) DVDRip VOSI

Publicado: 31 Jul 2014 00:15
por Initiand
Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City (DVD - x264 - engl. + engl. subs) 3 parts a 90 min (original 6 E)
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Título original Tales of the City (TV)
Año 1993
Duración 360 min.
País Reino Unido
Director Alastair Reid
Guión Richard Kramer (Novela: Armistead Maupin)
Música John E. Keane
Fotografía Walt Lloyd
Reparto Olympia Dukakis, Donald Moffat, Chloe Webb, Laura Linney, Marcus D'Amico, Billy Campbell, Thomas Gibson, Paul Gross, Barbara Garrick, Nina Foch
Productora Coproducción Reino Unido-EEUU; American Playhouse / Channel 4 Television Corporation / KQED
Género Drama | Miniserie de TV

Premios
1994: Emmy: 2 nominaciones, incluyendo mejor miniserie
1993: 2 Nominaciones BAFTA TV: Mejor actriz (Dukakis) y diseño de vestuario

http://www.filmaffinity.com/es/film223093.html
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106148/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

Capturing 1970's San Francisco with genuine loving care and paying no heed to the social mores of standard network broadcasting, TALES OF THE CITY arrived on the scene in 1993 to critical praise and a fair amount of controversy (it was funded by Channel 4 and televised in the U.S. on PBS). I've watched it many times over, and I'm unsure if a series has ever quite so wonderfully, wistfully, and mystically captured the experience of moving to a big city and spreading your wings. TALES OF THE CITY is life in transition–Mary Ann Singleton (Laura Linney) comes all the way from Ohio to emerge from her chrysalis: she becomes an independent young woman of her own construction- adapting and absorbing, but never mimicking, never losing her sense of self (or her housecoat that looks like a mattress cover!):
Tales of the City takes viewers back to a simpler time when music was funky, sex was free-flowing, and people weren't so uptight - the early '90s. Acorn Media's 20th Anniversary edition of this acclaimed boob tube miniseries doesn't offer much of anything new, but seeing it again is like getting a surprise visit from some cherished old friends.

Immediately upon its original airings - on the UK's Channel 4 in 1993, then the following January on PBS - the six-part Tales of the City gained an appreciative following. The fun and frothy '70s flashback was a pitch-perfect recreation of Armistead Maupin's best-selling novels. In depicting a diverse group of San Franciscans coping with life in the Gerald Ford/Jimmy Carter era, the production got the period trappings right (down to the vintage Oui and Playgirl magazines strewn about in one character's pad), along with a positive commitment to translating the heart and soul in Maupin's stories. The show was also subject to a lot of controversy in its day, which now seems quaint.

Hollywood's efforts to bring Maupin's popular novels to the screen never amounted to much, until Great Britain's Channel 4 came to the rescue and financed this particular production (despite what many zealot Republicans of the day said, PBS had zero financial participation in this). With Maupin's active participation, a cast of mostly theater-groomed American actors, and filming in a combination of famous San Francisco locales and well-designed studio settings, the resulting series is about as perfect as a literature-to-screen transition can be. While it seems surprising that something so lightweight and fun could be a lightning rod for controversy, it did ruffle some feathers due to the series' playful and realistic gay and lesbian pairings, along with a few completely natural instances of nudity (male and female), non-judgmental drug use, and coarse language. Nudity on PBS? Hard to believe, but there it was. Tales' American broadcast got record ratings, but the threat of funding cuts from Uncle Sam forced PBS to hand over broadcast rights to the sequels to Showtime. That's progress for you.

Tales' screenplay, co-written by Maupin and Richard Kramer, sustains the casual, laid-back vibe of the books with a host of human, subtly written characters. Rather than go into the details of the plot, let's get to know each major character:

Mary Ann Singleton (Laura Linney) - prim, blonde, Midwestern girl eager for adventure in the Big City. While Mary Ann goes to great lengths to prove she isn't all that naive (like having an affair with her married co-worker), she has a lot to learn over the course of this saga.
Michael "Mouse" Tolliver (Marcus D'Amico) - like Mary Ann, another young transplant to San Francisco (by way of Orlando, Florida). Michael is well-versed in the ways of the local gay scene, but he's a hopeless romantic and sweet country boy at heart.
Mona Ramsey (Chloe Webb) - Michael's sardonic best friend, Mona freely dispenses both clever quips and hard drugs. Her hippie-ish demeanour is similar to her landlady (below), but the two share a lot more than Mona initially realizes.
Mrs. Madrigal (Olympia Dukakis) - free-spirited, joint-dispensing landlady and mother hen to the denizens at 28 Barbary Lane. Mrs. Madrigal's generous exterior shields what is a wounded woman with a complicated past.
Edgar Halcyon (Donald Moffatt) - business leader and part of San Francisco's Old Money, Edgar heads the advertising agency where Mona and Mary Ann work. His affair with Mrs. Madrigal helps him cope with the "straight" life and a devastating medical diagnosis - which is kept from his bewildered wife, Frannie (Nina Foch).
Beauchamp Day (Thomas Gibson) - Edgar's rakish son-in-law, who carries on not-so-discreet affairs behind his wife's back.
Dee Dee Halcyon Day (Barbara Garrick) - Beauchamp's repressed wife, a tightly coiled woman yearning to escape high society and go guerilla (think Patty Hearst). A visit with her gynecologist (Billy Campbell) brings life-altering news.
Brian Hawkins (Paul Gross) - handsome bachelor neighbor at Barbary Lane, perfectly in tune with the city's casual vibe. Brian helps himself to the all-you-can-eat buffet of available single women in S.F., including Mary Anne's dippy friend Carrie (Parker Posey). His promiscuous ways would soon come to an end, however.
Norman Neal Williams (Stanley DeSantis) - The least sociable 28 Barbary Lane resident, the outsider status of older, bespectacled Norman brings out the empathy in Mary Ann, who slowly befriends him. An unsavory side of Norman is revealed when he uncovers Mrs. Madrigal's secret past.

Watching Tales when it originally aired as a barely closeted 25 year-old, I remember it as being something of an event. I was a huge fan of the books, and I wasn't let down. Laura Linney embodied that certain vulnerable yet stable quality that the fictional Mary Anne had (what a fantastic performance!), and Marcus D'Amico nailed Michael's adventurous spirit and boy-next-door appeal. Both totally epitomized their characters. The show was also notable for having a passionate, realistic romance between two older characters, Mrs. Madrigal and Edgar - how often does that happen? The Showtime sequels More Tales of the City (1998) and Further Tales of the City (2001) were just as faithful to the source novels, but they weren't nearly as endearing as the originals. While Laura Linney still rocks it as Mary Ann, several other key roles were re-cast, and since Maupin's books got progressively more silly over time it just wasn't as intriguing. As with the Star Wars saga, the monumental original proved to be a tough act to follow.
Tales of the City (1978)
More Tales of the City (1980)
Further Tales of the City (1982)
Babycakes (1984)
Significant Others (1987)
Sure of You (1989)
Michael Tolliver Lives (2007)
Mary Ann in Autumn (2010)
The Days of Anna Madrigal (2014

Código: Seleccionar todo

Tales of the city (1993) Armistead Maupin S1-E1 eng+eng subs by InI.mkv
Format : Matroska at 2 487 Kbps
Length : 1,79 GiB for 1h 43min 16s 520ms
Video #0 : AVC at 2 290 Kbps
Aspect : 784 x 576 (1.361) at 25.000 fps
Audio #0 : AC-3 at 192 Kbps
Infos : 2 Kanäle, 48,0 KHz
Language : en
Text #0 : UTF-8
Language : en
Text #1 : VobSub
Language : en

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Tales of the city (1993) Armistead Maupin S1-E2 eng+eng subs by InI.mkv
Format : Matroska at 2 486 Kbps
Length : 1,72 GiB for 1h 38min 51s 360ms
Video #0 : AVC at 2 290 Kbps
Aspect : 784 x 576 (1.361) at 25.000 fps
Audio #0 : AC-3 at 192 Kbps
Infos : 2 Kanäle, 48,0 KHz
Language : en
Text #0 : UTF-8
Language : en
Text #1 : VobSub
Language : en

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Tales of the city (1993) Armistead Maupin S1-E3 eng+eng subs by InI.mkv
Format : Matroska at 2 487 Kbps
Length : 1,75 GiB for 1h 40min 32s 200ms
Video #0 : AVC at 2 290 Kbps
Aspect : 784 x 576 (1.361) at 25.000 fps
Audio #0 : AC-3 at 192 Kbps
Infos : 2 Kanäle, 48,0 KHz
Language : en
Text #0 : UTF-8
Language : en
Text #1 : VobSub
Language : en
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eD2K link Tales.of.the.city.Armistead.Maupin.S1-E1.eng.eng.subs.mkv [1.79 Gb] 

eD2K link Tales.of.the.city.(1993).Armistead.Maupin.by.InI.S1-E2.eng.eng.subs.mkv [1.72 Gb] 

eD2K link Tales.of.the.city.(1993).Armistead.Maupinby.InI..S1-E3.eng.eng.subs.mkv [1.75 Gb] 

without cut and pieps
for me the city guide of San Francisko, who loves San Fancisco will love that serial
By success i have also the second episode with eng subs

Re: Tales of the City (Alastair Reid, 1993) DVDRip VOSI

Publicado: 31 Jul 2014 02:12
por jail
Gracias, Initiand.

Re: Tales of the City (Alastair Reid, 1993) DVDRip VOSI

Publicado: 31 Jul 2014 20:13
por cerb
Muchas gracias :amo:

Re: Tales of the City (Alastair Reid, 1993) DVDRip VOSI

Publicado: 01 Ago 2014 00:34
por Bunker
Danke, Initiand.

Re: Tales of the City (Alastair Reid, 1993) DVDRip VOSI

Publicado: 01 Ago 2014 18:35
por boettcher
Thanks, Initiand :)

Re: Tales of the City (Alastair Reid, 1993) DVDRip VOSI

Publicado: 02 Ago 2014 17:08
por pochutla
Thanks a lot Initiand

Re: Tales of the City (Alastair Reid, 1993) DVDRip VOSI

Publicado: 22 Ago 2014 23:50
por Initiand
the second serial is coming soon

Re: Tales of the City (Alastair Reid, 1993) DVDRip VOSI

Publicado: 25 Nov 2014 06:57
por janca
Thanks Ini