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
?-secretase
aero-engine aerodynamics
alfalfa caterpillar
amortization charge
baggagely
balanced digit system
bbygrls
Bebedero, Salina de
califor
camogie
Charata
cockarouse
code sequence generator
coming full circle
commiserator
complete bouguer anomaly
coupled camera
cross-current solvent extraction
decene
deem
descriptor of substructure
Dip Chem Eng
discloseable transaction
Drotrecogin
earthquake of distant origin
egological
episcleral tissue
feeding in
form feed out
frozen field
frozen snow crust
globulin zinc insulin
Grates Cove
grotesque stone
Hallow-tide
hevea brasiliensis (h.b.k.)muell.arg.para rubber tree
hyalospongiaes
hydraulic shear
hygrothermographs
hyper bolograph
inspection copy
integrated tug barge
jackiella javanica cavifolia
jamming roller
land(-)mobile
Li Chi
machinery
magnum (or capitate bone)
malahides
many-headed
mashat
medium gliding turn
miligant
misinterprete
motive
nafazodone
norths-about
on one's word of hono u r
optical-fibres
orthopsychiatrists
overload safeguard
panification
phenylleucine
phidiass
pleasure domes
plot against
podicipediform bird
proprietor's stake
punched card for visual selection
punctuate
re-entrainment
reallocator
recurvature of storms
reflection prospecting
rope sling
rubber packed coupling
sales growth
sharp V thread
Shimazu Hisamitsu
skywind
sleaths
spherical indicatrix of binormal
step screen
syndiclis lotungensis s.lee.
target radar
throttle control wire tube bracket
tiliquinol
to play hardball
transmission diameter
tressful
Trichterdine
ujong
under an accusation of
unified transfer tax credit
uninitiation
us family
volcano tectonic depression
warm temperate rain forest
whitening movement area
xanthomonas holciola(elliott)starr.et burkholder
yigit
zero-point adjustment