时间:2018-12-04 作者:英语课 分类:创新国际英语教程 学生用书 3


英语课



[00:00.00]Unit 16 Films and television

[00:05.20]3 And when you can’t answer!

[00:13.84]Listen and practise saying the expressions.

[00:20.01]1.Sorry,my mind’s gone completely blank.

[00:25.44]2.Wait,it’ll come to me in a minute.

[00:33.18]3.Wait,it’s on the tip of my tongue.

[00:41.64]4.Sorry,I can’t remember off the top of my head.

[00:49.08]Pronunciation

[01:00.13]Practise saying the questions .

[01:04.24]a.Who’s in it? b.What’s it about? c.Where’s it on? d.What’s it like?

[01:24.09]e.Who’s it by? f.When was it made? g.Where’s it from? h.What kind of film is it?

[01:45.04]2 While you read

[01:57.11]TV ROBOCOP NOT VIOLENT ENOUGH FOR VIEWERS

[02:02.57]The news that Mary Whitehouse has died at the age of ninety-one

[02:10.51]has brought the same kind of opposing reactions

[02:14.95]that she provoked when she was alive.

[02:18.79]For over thirty years she was the head of the National Viewers’and Listeners’Association,

[02:26.36]which she set up in the late sixties.

[02:30.13]She formed the organisation 1 along with two other mothers in their mid-forties

[02:36.68]to ’protect children from the filth 2 and violence

[02:42.25]that is flooding our TV screens and ruining our children’s lives.’

[02:48.49]When if first startd,the NVLA

[02:53.35]attracted hundreds of people to the meetings it held round the country,

[02:58.52]and the group forced the government and TV companies

[03:03.38]to create a nine o’clock watershed 3,

[03:07.32]before which programmes should not contain swearing,

[03:12.50]excessive violence or sexual behaviour.

[03:17.17]It also corrdinated letter writing and phone campaigns

[03:23.34]to complain about certain films and programmes.

[03:27.99]A spokesman from the NCLA said,

[03:32.53]’It’s very sad that she has died,

[03:36.97]but she made a great contribution to his country.

[03:41.44]If hadn’t been for Mary Whitehouse,

[03:45.49]the quality of TV in this country would be much worse

[03:50.92]and the effect on our children would’ve been terrifying.’

[03:55.57]One TV producer said in reply,’I would say that’s rubbish really.

[04:02.83]Mrs Whitehouse was just an ultra conservative who didn’t understand art.

[04:08.79]She caused a lot of problems for producers of serious drama and,

[04:14.35]as a result,she might’ve persuaded some writers

[04:19.71]and TV executives not to show one or two things,

[04:24.57]but basically life moved on ahead of her.

[04:28.93]In the end,we’re adults and we live in a democracy

[04:34.21]and we should be able to watch what we like.’

[04:38.05]Raradoxically,a recent incident perhaps proves both sides of argument.

[04:45.81]Following the showing of Robocop,

[04:50.27]the sci-fi movie best remembered for its comic-book violence,

[04:56.20]hundreds of people rang up to complain about it.

[05:01.17]However,what offended the audience was the polite language

[05:07.02]and the fact that it was not violent enough!

[05:11.17]Angry viewers called their local television stations

[05:16.84]saying that the TV version had been censored 4 so much

[05:21.88]that the film had been ruined.

[05:25.43]All the f-words had been over-dubbed and the viilence was so reduced

[05:31.49]that at times it was apparently 5 hard to follow the plot.

[05:36.04]One man who complained said,

[05:40.40]’This is a classic example of over-the-top censorship we constantly get on British TV

[05:48.13]because of people like Mary Whitehouse.

[05:52.71]When are you going to realise these people are dinosaurs 6

[05:58.16]and let us choose what we want to watch?

[06:02.32]The strong public reaction

[06:07.07]has actually led TV executives to consider putting back

[06:12.11]some of the bad language and violence when it is shown again.

[06:16.97]The film,shown last Saturday night at 10.05 pm,

[06:22.75]attracted more complaints than any other film this year.

[06:28.00]One executive commented that

[06:32.25]’one can’t help but notice we’ve maybe taken too much out of a film like Robocop.

[06:39.62]Maybe we’ve gone a bit too far this time.’

[06:43.75]Mrs Whitehouse must’ve been turning in her grave.

[06:48.82]However,a spokesperson for the NVLA said,

[06:54.38]’People who make these kinds of complaints

[06:59.06]are only concerned about their own interests

[07:03.60]rather than the good fo society as a whole.

[07:07.96]Anybody who can’t give up a little bit of film

[07:12.54]in order to reduce the current climate of violence

[07:17.29]should not be taken seriously.’



1 organisation
n.组织,安排,团体,有机休
  • The method of his organisation work is worth commending.他的组织工作的方法值得称道。
  • His application for membership of the organisation was rejected.他想要加入该组织的申请遭到了拒绝。
2 filth
n.肮脏,污物,污秽;淫猥
  • I don't know how you can read such filth.我不明白你怎么会去读这种淫秽下流的东西。
  • The dialogue was all filth and innuendo.这段对话全是下流的言辞和影射。
3 watershed
n.转折点,分水岭,分界线
  • Our marriage was at a watershed.我们的婚姻到了一个转折关头。
  • It forms the watershed between the two rivers.它成了两条河流的分水岭。
4 censored
受审查的,被删剪的
  • The news reports had been heavily censored . 这些新闻报道已被大幅删剪。
  • The military-backed government has heavily censored the news. 有军方撑腰的政府对新闻进行了严格审查。
5 apparently
adv.显然地;表面上,似乎
  • An apparently blind alley leads suddenly into an open space.山穷水尽,豁然开朗。
  • He was apparently much surprised at the news.他对那个消息显然感到十分惊异。
6 dinosaurs
n.恐龙( dinosaur的名词复数 );守旧落伍的人,过时落后的东西
  • The brontosaurus was one of the largest of all dinosaurs. 雷龙是所有恐龙中最大的一种。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • Dinosaurs have been extinct for millions of years. 恐龙绝种已有几百万年了。 来自《简明英汉词典》
学英语单词
A/NA
Acteon
advanced operating system
apprenticeship
approved acceptance
automatic distribution phonogram equipment
biokoes
caking fertilizer
chicken nuggets
clatches
colorless adsorbed compound
communication among independent tasks
cooper-key
counter-mortar radar
Cyclopentiazide
de-editor
decorousness
digital image mosaic
distilled water
dividend stock
effective source area
epileptic dementia
expenditure on economic construction
fadometer
false ellipse
flockless
flounder gill cell line( fg )
fly-bane
fuel injection advance angle
general-purpose operating system
gloomy
gullied surface
Habenaria rostrata
hauls in
hayashi
helmet-mounted display
hemolytic tissne
heuristic routing
hiatus hernias
high-frequency electric machine
homoannular
intermittency effect
Kamehameha IV
karlton
l-glutamic dehydrogenase
lautering
livestock-raising
Lumeton
luminous flux density
madonninas
mail exploder
microplanktons
modeling program
molybdenum(iii) oxychloride
Murgatroyd belt
myocillin
Natha
non-affiliated
nonconsciously
nonlinear nework
nonsensationalistic
oscilloscopic
Pallinup R.
partition of load
perendinate
periclitate
periodical statement
physical contacts
planet-gear
postverbal
pre-analytic
prostrater
proteolysis
put sb. to expense
ribbon parachute
roaming service
rotated vector field
rough sort
sales and purchases on commission
sapregen
self-correcting sample
sensitive personality
shirring thread
Shuigou
side chain motion
single fiber splicer
slavoski
sludge boat
sou markee
South Americans
sting for
storage of value
took a pleasure in
two-element
undeterminately
undulipodium
Vanin plague
ventrocephalad
vibration compaction
view borrowing
weathering shooting
yatter