新西兰号外!top gear 去中国拍摄,图。。。。
在新西兰
貌似在北京拍摄的, 无图无真相。。
上图:http://tieba.baidu.com/p/1308632694
虽然知道他们对中国的评价肯定很贱,但是还是比较期待这集中国之行。。。
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板凳自己坐。。
补图 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ ... BBC-hit-31-000.html
貌似去天津了。。天津有赛道?求解答
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零愿他们来纽西兰......
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天津?不是什么漂移赛在哪里搞过,最后个开蝰蛇的赢了的那个
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新西兰不是来过几次了么。。这边没啥意思。。没有可以被他们损的地方。。要不怎么说他们贱呢。。
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问题是他们愈贱愈受欢迎。中国有关当局可以不给他们发签证哦!
又或者top gear主持人,特别是那个最贱嘴最欠扁的Jeremy Clarkson,像Christian Bale那样抓起来,再找些公开去扁他,全世界一定会很多人士支持和声援中国公安打Jeremy 。
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你这个想法不错。。哈哈。可惜我们不是掌权者啊。。不过话又说回来了,有批评才有进步啊。。
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Christian Bale之前被中国当局封杀过?
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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/16/world/asia/christian-bale-attacked-by-chinese-guards.html
Christian Bale Attacked by Chinese Guards
By ANDREW JACOBS
Published: December 15, 2011
BEIJING — The actor Christian Bale was assaulted by government-backed guards on Thursday when he tried to visit a blind lawyer who has been illegally confined to his home in eastern Shandong Province.
The lawyer, Chen Guangcheng, has emerged as a cause célèbre among the country’s rights advocates, dozens of whom have been similarly roughed up when they tried to break through the cordon that local officials have placed around Mr. Chen’s village.
The encounter, captured by a CNN camera crew who accompanied him on the eight-hour drive from Beijing to Dongshigu village, promises to become a public relations debacle for China, which has been eagerly promoting Mr. Bale’s latest movie, “The Flowers of War,” which premiered last Sunday at the one of the capital’s most important government buildings.
Directed by Zhang Yimou, the movie was partly financed by loans from a state-owned bank and it is the country’s foreign film submission for the Academy Awards. At $94 million, it is also said to be the most expensive Chinese-made film ever. Officials here have expressed hope that it might earn China its first Oscar.
The footage of Mr. Bale’s attempted visit is dramatic. In it, he is seen pleading with the men who guard Dongshigu’s entry points and then retreating as they push and punch him. “Why can I not visit this free man?” he asks repeatedly. The men, dressed in thick green winter coats respond with shouts of “Go away.” Even after they have retreated into their car, the group, which included a translator, was chased for 40 minutes by men in a gray van.
“What I really wanted to do was to meet the man, shake his hand and say what an inspiration he is,” Mr. Bale said.
In recent months, scores of Chinese activists have had similar experiences, although some have endured far more violence, sometimes at the hands of uniformed police who the victims had called for assistance.
None of the journalists, diplomats or rights lawyers who have made the journey to Dongshigu have succeeded in meeting Mr. Chen, 40, who has been imprisoned in his home, along with his wife and child, since his release from prison in September 2010.
A self-taught lawyer, Mr. Chen crossed the line from celebrated lawyer to persecuted dissident after he took on the case of thousands of local women who had been the victims of an aggressive family planning campaign that included forced sterilizations and abortions. In 2006, he was sentenced to four-and-a-half years during a trial that his legal defenders described as farcical. The charges included destroying property and organizing a crowd to block traffic, crimes allegedly orchestrated while he was under house arrest.
Mr. Bale’s encounter with China’s authoritarian system is sure to complicate efforts to publicize the film, part of a government campaign to bolster the country’s so-called soft power. The film, which premieres on Dec. 23 in the United States and Europe, opens this week in China on 8,000 screens and has been accompanied by a herculean publicity effort.
Speaking to reporters after the film’s premiere on Sunday, Mr. Bale — whose credits include “Batman Begins” and “The Fighter” — defended “The Flowers of War” against accusations that it was overly propagandistic. The film depicts Japanese atrocities during their 1937 occupation of Nanjing, a highly emotional topic that is often used by the Communist Party to stir up nationalistic sentiment among ordinary Chinese.
Mr. Bale plays an American mortician who dons the vestments of a Catholic priest in his effort to save young Chinese women who have taken refuge in a Catholic boarding school during the Japanese invasion. By some estimates, 300,000 people died during the ensuing orgy of murder and rape.
“I think that would be a bit of a knee-jerk reaction,” he said of suggestions made by critics that it excessively demonizes the Japanese. “I don’t think they’re looking closely enough at the movie.”
The government has yet to officially react to news of Mr. Bale’s tussle, although it was largely blocked from the Internet on Friday. CNN featured the video on its homepage but the video could not be opened.
It is not the first time that Hollywood, eager to gain a foothold in China’s fast-growing film industry, has found itself entangled in Chinese domestic politics. Last October, a group of American producers shooting a comedy in the county where Mr. Chen is being held were criticized for their partnership with the local Communist Party officials who have orchestrated his detention.
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: December 16, 2011
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http://nz.entertainment.yahoo.com/news/article/-/12580945/bbc-tv-show-top-gear-incurs-india-wrath/
BBC TV show 'Top Gear' incurs India wrath
January 13, 2012, 5:20 am AFP
LONDON (AFP) - Indian diplomats protested on Thursday about a special edition of the BBC's popular "Top Gear" motoring show, claiming it had given a "disgusting" portrayal of their country.
"Top Gear" presenter Jeremy Clarkson, who has upset Mexico in the past and last month joked that striking British workers should be shot, was filmed on location in India with a Jaguar car which had a toilet fixed to the boot.
Clarkson said the portable toilet was "perfect for India because everyone who comes here gets the trots", referring to an upset stomach.
In another prank, the programme makers hung banners on trains reading "British IT is good for your company" and "Eat English muffins". The messages became obscene when the carriages parted and the signs ripped apart.
Raja Sekhar from the Indian High Commission in London said Indian officials had supplied the BBC with assistance to make the programme, but had been misled about its content.
He said a letter had been sent to the BBC to "convey our strong disappointment".
"We were very actively helping out facilitating the visit but they ran down the whole society, culture and people. It's really disgusting," he said.
"We have a very close relationship with and respect for the BBC. The BBC is probably more admired in India than in England so we feel a bit let down."
The BBC was forced to apologise to the Mexican ambassador to Britain last year after Clarkson and co-hosts James May and Richard Hammond said a Mexican car brand, Mastretta, reflected national characteristics -- "lazy, feckless, flatulent".
May described Mexican food as "like sick with cheese on it", while Clarkson said they would not receive any complaints about the show because "at the Mexican embassy, the ambassador is going to be sitting there with a remote control like this (snores)".
A BBC spokeswoman said: "We have received a letter from the Indian High Commission and will respond to them in due course."
Top Gear is sold in 198 territories worldwide.