AWoman in Berlin (German: Anonyma - Eine Frau in Berlin), known as The Downfall of Berlin Anonyma in the UK, is a 2008 German film directed by Max Färberböck, starring Nina Hoss and Eugeny Sidikhin.It is based on the memoir, Eine Frau in Berlin, published anonymously (by Marta Hillers [citation needed]) in 1959 in German, with a new edition in 2003.Shahid Kapoor’s Bloody Daddy is all set to stream on JioCinema from June 9. He has been giving one interview after another and in one of them, he spoke about marriage that didn’t go down really well with netizens. He said, “This entire marriage thing is about one thing that the guy was a mess and the woman came in to fix him. So the rest of his life is going to be a journey of him getting fixed and becoming a decent person. That’s pretty much what life is about.” This was while he spoke to Film Companion. Netizens react Comment number one- I get that you played Kabir Singh but you don’t have to continue behaving like that bro.’ Comment number two- Lot of people think it’s cute and romantic for a broken’ guy to be fixed by a girl. Another added- This is what women are for? To fix men? Manchild.’ In an exclusive interview with Firstpost, Kapoor spoke about his film and director Ali Abbas Zafar and said, “Ali has mostly made action films and worked with Salman Khan sir, so when he wanted to collaborate with me, I was like how will me meet. I’ve done a few action films and Ali has his own voice as a filmmaker, so I think with this film we tried to bring both the voices together. This is a very performance oriented, dramatic kind of a film, there’s a lot of potential for a performance for me and for the action. He was trusting me as an actor for the performance and I was trusting him completely as a director so this film is the right first step for both of us.” He added, “The action is little more towards real, little bit grittier, it doesn’t feel you’re watching it from the outside. You can’t perform one action scene and then jump on to the other, you have to look tired, so all those elements are there.” 29year-old Hyuga Toru is a wealthy man. He first started to run an internet website from his small room and his hobby began to make a lot of money. Nowadays, he doesn't like to socialize and if somebody comes to him he suspects that they may want his money. Sawaki Chihiro attends a job fair and by an unexpected occurrence begins to work for Toru.
A widow and a widower find a special bond at their children's' boarding school. Film Details Also Known As Un Homme et une femme Genre Release Date Jan 1966 Premiere Information New York opening 12 Jul 1966 Production Company Les Films Treize Distribution Company Allied Artists Country France Location France Technical Specs Duration 1h 43m Sound Mono Color Black and White, Color Eastmancolor Theatrical Aspect Ratio 1 Synopsis A man and a woman, both widowed, meet while visiting their respective children at a boarding school in Deauville. The woman, Anne, misses her train, and the man, Jean-Louis, a racing car driver, offers her a ride back to Paris. During the long ride Anne speaks of her late husband, a poet, singer, and movie stunt man who was killed while making a film. Anne and Jean-Louis meet the following Sunday and take their children to lunch. They go for a sailboat ride and walk together on the wintry beach. Driving back to Paris that night, Jean-Louis talks of his own life as a racing car driver and the time 3 years earlier when he was almost killed in a crash. His wife, unable to bear the strain and shock, committed suicide. After saying goodby to Anne, Jean- Louis leaves for the races at Monte Carlo. While there, he receives a telegram from Anne telling him she loves him. Wildly elated, he drives all night and arrives in Deauville early the next morning. But when he and Anne attempt to make love, Anne, haunted by the memory of her dead husband, cannot give of herself. Believing their affair has ended, they part in silence, and Anne takes the train to Paris while Jean-Louis drives back alone. But on a sudden impulse, he drives to the station to await her arrival. She steps off the train, sees him, pauses, breaks into a smile, and races into his arms. Director Crew Videos Film Details Also Known As Un Homme et une femme Genre Release Date Jan 1966 Premiere Information New York opening 12 Jul 1966 Production Company Les Films Treize Distribution Company Allied Artists Country France Location France Technical Specs Duration 1h 43m Sound Mono Color Black and White, Color Eastmancolor Theatrical Aspect Ratio 1 Award Wins Best Foreign Language Film 1966 Best Writing, Screenplay 1967 Claude Lelouch Best Writing, Screenplay 1967 Pierre Uytterhoeven Award Nominations Best Actress 1966 Anouk Aimee Articles When French filmmaker Claude Lelouch's A Man and a Woman showed up in American cinemas in the summer of 1966, its success was unprecedented and extraordinary. The picture had won the Grand Prize at Cannes earlier that year, but then as now, that kind of honor doesn't necessarily guarantee commercial success. A Man and a Woman did extremely well in its native country, but its popularity in America, in particular - among a public that was often suspicious of foreign films - was phenomenal. The picture played for more than a year in several large American cities in Los Angeles, it remained on screens for more than two years and won two Academy Awards, for Best Screenplay and Best Foreign Film. It's not a particularly complex or deep film - in fact, its simple title sums up its story line and its central theme pretty well. Yet it's a superb example of how a film that may not be particularly "great" can capture the popular imagination and linger in the memory for years. Even Bosley Crowther, the notoriously stuffy New York Times film critic, fell for it. Lelouch, he wrote, "has a rare skill at photographing clichés so that they sparkle and glow with poetry and at generating a sense of inspiration in behavior that is wholly trivial." Crowther may have been damning the movie with faint praise, but he does capture how ridiculously compelling it is. Anouk Aimée is Anne, a Parisian woman who, while visiting her young daughter at a boarding school in Deauville, meets another parent, Jean-Louis Jean-Louis Trintignant. The two learn about each other's lives gradually over the course of several school visits, their backstories revealed in moody flashbacks instead of dialogue Because we see their lives unfold in images rather than in words, it's as if we're watching them learn to read each other's minds. We learn about Anne's husband, a stuntman named Pierre Pierre Barouh, a sturdy charmer who's as adept at crooning samba as he is at taking a tumble. Jean-Louis is a race-car test driver - we see him conferring with mechanics and zipping into his gear before slipping behind the wheel to begin an afternoon's work at what is possibly the coolest job in the universe. But later we also learn, through more of these impressionistic flashback interludes, that both Anne and Jean-Louis have shouldered their share of heartbreak. Their tentative romance is their way of climbing back toward life, complete with all the attendant false starts and apprehensiveness. A Man and a Woman, for all its urbane polish, wasn't a costly film. The picture had an initial budget of $100,000 - a small sum even at the time - but it was difficult for Lelouch to raise even that much. Lelouch - who had gotten his start making Scopitones, short films set to pop tunes that were viewed in a jukebox outfitted with a small movie screen - had recently released a flop, Les Grands Moments 1965, and it wasn't easy to find funding for another movie. Somehow, he managed to pull together enough money to make A Man and a Woman, partly thanks to a payout from the French government. And even as he was shooting the film, he sold American distribution rights to Allied Artists, netting him another $40,000. The film was shot in three weeks with a very small crew, largely on location. Aimée recalled, "Jean-Louis and I not only did our own makeup and attended to our own wardrobe but we also helped with the lights. We had no sets. For a scene on the train from Deauville to Paris, Lelouch and I actually took the train to Paris and he filmed en route." She also noted that the crew traveled from location to location throughout France in just two automobiles, and everyone worked on Saturdays and Sundays to cut costs. That kind of filmmaking can either lend spontaneity to a picture or turn it into a mess, but A Man and a Woman easily landed on the side of freshness and believability. Lelouch used documentary filmmaking techniques, often availing himself of natural light, and shot sections of the film with a hand-held camera, a device that's overused today but was still a novelty in fiction filmmaking in 1965. He also demanded that his actors think on their feet; instead of giving them a script, he provided them with bare-bones information about the action and dialogue and then left it to them to fill in the blanks. The approach helps free the actors from their inhibitions - and, maybe, from their egos. "They [the actors] discover the film every day as it is being shot," Lelouch has said. "This doesn't give them a chance to do their number, to be actors. They remain human beings who are afraid, let's say, of what happens to them." The allure of A Man and a Woman can't be broken down into discrete elements, but it's easy enough to identify certain touch points that make it work. There's Aimee's marble-carved elegance, and Trintignant's half-shy, half-confident boyish demeanor. And there's an elemental beauty to certain aspects of the story After winning the Monte Carlo Rally and receiving a telegram from Anne saying, "Bravo. I love you," Jean Louis drops everything and drives overnight from Monte Carlo to Paris just to see her. Not finding her in Paris, he tracks her to Deauville, where she's visiting the children. The overnight drive, an impulsive act usually carried out only in the flush of first love, might be a cliché, but Lelouch handles it both tenderly and with a marked degree of animal energy He captures that slender flash of light at the beginning of an affair when longing is everything. But one of the most indelible components of A Man and a Woman is Francis Lai's damnably hummable theme song, a melody that moves forward first in staccato fits and starts a lot like Anne and Jean-Louis' relationship and then slides into a kind of irresistible swoon. It's likely that once you've heard this melody, it lodges in some corner of your brain forever, though it's worth noting that Lai - who was in his early thirties when he wrote this music - would just a few years later go on to create another inerasable totem, the theme from Love Story 1970. The music for Love Story won Lai an Academy Award, but the theme from A Man and a Woman surely has more sentimental value among certain moviegoers. For many Americans of a certain age, A Man and a Woman was a first encounter with "foreign" cinema. It's a picture that feels daring and risky artistically, yet is entirely accessible on emotional terms. Producer Claude Lelouch uncredited Director Claude Lelouch Screenplay Pierre Uytterhoeven; Claude Lelouch uncredited Cinematography Claude Lelouch Music Francis Lai Film Editing Claude Barrois Cast Anouk Aimee Anne Gauthier, Jean Louis Trintignant Jean-Louis Duroc, Pierre Barouh Pierre Gautier, Valerie Lagrange Valerie Duroc, Antoine Antoine Duroc, Souad Francoise Gauthier, Henri Chemin Jean-Louis' Codriver, Yane Barry Mistress of Jean-Louis, Paul Le Person Garage Man, Simone Paris Head Mistress. BW & C-102m. by Stephanie Zacharek Sources New York Times Peter Lev, Claude Lelouch, Film Director, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press IMDB A Man and a Woman When French filmmaker Claude Lelouch's A Man and a Woman showed up in American cinemas in the summer of 1966, its success was unprecedented and extraordinary. The picture had won the Grand Prize at Cannes earlier that year, but then as now, that kind of honor doesn't necessarily guarantee commercial success. A Man and a Woman did extremely well in its native country, but its popularity in America, in particular - among a public that was often suspicious of foreign films - was phenomenal. The picture played for more than a year in several large American cities in Los Angeles, it remained on screens for more than two years and won two Academy Awards, for Best Screenplay and Best Foreign Film. It's not a particularly complex or deep film - in fact, its simple title sums up its story line and its central theme pretty well. Yet it's a superb example of how a film that may not be particularly "great" can capture the popular imagination and linger in the memory for years. Even Bosley Crowther, the notoriously stuffy New York Times film critic, fell for it. Lelouch, he wrote, "has a rare skill at photographing clichés so that they sparkle and glow with poetry and at generating a sense of inspiration in behavior that is wholly trivial." Crowther may have been damning the movie with faint praise, but he does capture how ridiculously compelling it is. Anouk Aimée is Anne, a Parisian woman who, while visiting her young daughter at a boarding school in Deauville, meets another parent, Jean-Louis Jean-Louis Trintignant. The two learn about each other's lives gradually over the course of several school visits, their backstories revealed in moody flashbacks instead of dialogue Because we see their lives unfold in images rather than in words, it's as if we're watching them learn to read each other's minds. We learn about Anne's husband, a stuntman named Pierre Pierre Barouh, a sturdy charmer who's as adept at crooning samba as he is at taking a tumble. Jean-Louis is a race-car test driver - we see him conferring with mechanics and zipping into his gear before slipping behind the wheel to begin an afternoon's work at what is possibly the coolest job in the universe. But later we also learn, through more of these impressionistic flashback interludes, that both Anne and Jean-Louis have shouldered their share of heartbreak. Their tentative romance is their way of climbing back toward life, complete with all the attendant false starts and apprehensiveness. A Man and a Woman, for all its urbane polish, wasn't a costly film. The picture had an initial budget of $100,000 - a small sum even at the time - but it was difficult for Lelouch to raise even that much. Lelouch - who had gotten his start making Scopitones, short films set to pop tunes that were viewed in a jukebox outfitted with a small movie screen - had recently released a flop, Les Grands Moments 1965, and it wasn't easy to find funding for another movie. Somehow, he managed to pull together enough money to make A Man and a Woman, partly thanks to a payout from the French government. And even as he was shooting the film, he sold American distribution rights to Allied Artists, netting him another $40,000. The film was shot in three weeks with a very small crew, largely on location. Aimée recalled, "Jean-Louis and I not only did our own makeup and attended to our own wardrobe but we also helped with the lights. We had no sets. For a scene on the train from Deauville to Paris, Lelouch and I actually took the train to Paris and he filmed en route." She also noted that the crew traveled from location to location throughout France in just two automobiles, and everyone worked on Saturdays and Sundays to cut costs. That kind of filmmaking can either lend spontaneity to a picture or turn it into a mess, but A Man and a Woman easily landed on the side of freshness and believability. Lelouch used documentary filmmaking techniques, often availing himself of natural light, and shot sections of the film with a hand-held camera, a device that's overused today but was still a novelty in fiction filmmaking in 1965. He also demanded that his actors think on their feet; instead of giving them a script, he provided them with bare-bones information about the action and dialogue and then left it to them to fill in the blanks. The approach helps free the actors from their inhibitions - and, maybe, from their egos. "They [the actors] discover the film every day as it is being shot," Lelouch has said. "This doesn't give them a chance to do their number, to be actors. They remain human beings who are afraid, let's say, of what happens to them." The allure of A Man and a Woman can't be broken down into discrete elements, but it's easy enough to identify certain touch points that make it work. There's Aimee's marble-carved elegance, and Trintignant's half-shy, half-confident boyish demeanor. And there's an elemental beauty to certain aspects of the story After winning the Monte Carlo Rally and receiving a telegram from Anne saying, "Bravo. I love you," Jean Louis drops everything and drives overnight from Monte Carlo to Paris just to see her. Not finding her in Paris, he tracks her to Deauville, where she's visiting the children. The overnight drive, an impulsive act usually carried out only in the flush of first love, might be a cliché, but Lelouch handles it both tenderly and with a marked degree of animal energy He captures that slender flash of light at the beginning of an affair when longing is everything. But one of the most indelible components of A Man and a Woman is Francis Lai's damnably hummable theme song, a melody that moves forward first in staccato fits and starts a lot like Anne and Jean-Louis' relationship and then slides into a kind of irresistible swoon. It's likely that once you've heard this melody, it lodges in some corner of your brain forever, though it's worth noting that Lai - who was in his early thirties when he wrote this music - would just a few years later go on to create another inerasable totem, the theme from Love Story 1970. The music for Love Story won Lai an Academy Award, but the theme from A Man and a Woman surely has more sentimental value among certain moviegoers. For many Americans of a certain age, A Man and a Woman was a first encounter with "foreign" cinema. It's a picture that feels daring and risky artistically, yet is entirely accessible on emotional terms. Producer Claude Lelouch uncredited Director Claude Lelouch Screenplay Pierre Uytterhoeven; Claude Lelouch uncredited Cinematography Claude Lelouch Music Francis Lai Film Editing Claude Barrois Cast Anouk Aimee Anne Gauthier, Jean Louis Trintignant Jean-Louis Duroc, Pierre Barouh Pierre Gautier, Valerie Lagrange Valerie Duroc, Antoine Antoine Duroc, Souad Francoise Gauthier, Henri Chemin Jean-Louis' Codriver, Yane Barry Mistress of Jean-Louis, Paul Le Person Garage Man, Simone Paris Head Mistress. BW & C-102m. by Stephanie Zacharek Sources New York Times Peter Lev, Claude Lelouch, Film Director, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press IMDB Quotes Trivia Notes Released in France in 1966 as Un homme et une femme; running time 110 min. Miscellaneous Notes Co-winner of the Palme d'Or for Best Film at the 1966 Cannes Film festival. Voted one of the Year's Five Best Foreign Language Films by the 1966 National Board of Review. Released in United States Summer May 27, 1966 Released in United States July 12, 1966 Released in United States on Video February 1987 Released in United States Summer May 27, 1966 Released in United States July 12, 1966 Released in United States on Video February 1987 The Country of France
ImdbA man in a legal but hurtful business needs an escort for some social events, and hires a beautiful prostitute he meets only to fall in love. Director: Garry Marshall, Writer: J.F. Lawton, Stars: Richard Gere, Julia Roberts, Jason Alexander | Plot Keywords: prostitute | prince | busin essma n | polo | party | Taglines: She walked off the street, into his life and stole his heart. A woman started filming a stranger walking behind her in Toronto because she had a feeling he was following her. When she turned into a restaurant, he came in too and waited by the door while she Ecliptic wrote in the caption of the video that the man had followed her for a block and entered the restaurant behind her. At first, she thought maybe he was hungry and didn’t have any money, so she asked him if she could get him something to he told her he was just going to keep waiting by the front door of the restaurant, so Ecliptic told an employee at the register that he had been following her. The employee went to go grab a security guard as Ecliptic stayed put in the restaurant and kept employee returned and told Ecliptic the security guard recommended calling the Ecliptic said, addressing the man she thought was following her, “if you keep following me, I’m gonna have to call the police. So if you stay here and I leave, then we’ll be stranger denied following Ecliptic and agreed to go in opposite directions after leaving the restaurant. When he left, and Ecliptic could see him walking away, she thought it was safe enough to leave too. But as she looked back, she could see the man standing near the other side of the restaurant. Luckily, the employee stepped outside and monitored the a mix indigenous woman i don’t f*** around to find out,†Ecliptic captioned the video. “Help someone in need. they follow people they know can help, but this isnt usually the case — make commenters were in awe of Ecliptic’s patience and thoughtfulness in the situation and making sure the man wasn’t just looking for food, Ecliptic has a point about being hypervigilant as a mixed Indigenous woman walking around Toronto women and girls in Canada are 16 times more likely to be targeted and killed than non-Indigenous women. In 2020, the Canada Women’s Foundation reported that 1 in 5 women who were killed in Canada that year were number of missing and murdered indigenous women MMIW in Canada is at a national emergency level of crisis. Indigenous women only make up 4% of the Canadian population but represent 16% of the women murdered between 1980 and May, Canada’s House of Commons backed a motion calling for funding a new Canada-wide emergency alert system for when an Indigenous woman or girl goes month prior, in April, another Indigenous woman’s body was found at a Winnipeg landfill site — the same site where investigators found another Indigenous woman’s body in June 2022. Activists have been pressuring law enforcement to seriously look into the Winnipeg landfill and the Prairie Green landfill for months in hopes of discovering the remains of other missing Indigenous women and finally getting answers for The Know by Yahoo is now available on Apple News — follow us here!The post Toronto woman films man follow her into restaurant, wait before she leaves appeared first on In The from In The KnowI'm a shopping expert, and these are the Amazon fashion new arrivals worth buying in JuneNYC women are wearing 'subway shirts' this summer so men don't bother them on the trains 'Stay safe out here'A Black woman sitting next to a racist man on an airplane confronts him midflight 'I think you’re disgusting'AMan and a Woman A Man and a Woman ( French: Un homme et une femme) is a 1966 French film written and directed by Claude Lelouch and starring Anouk Aimée and Jean-Louis Trintignant.
Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray are always in sync, a relationship that developed when they first joined the Nuggets. In the Eastern Conference Finals, the Miami Heat faced a pair of stars that don’t play off each other all that much. Over seven games, Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum had six total assists to each other. In Game 1 of the NBA finals on Thursday, Jamal Murray and Nikola Jokic had nine assists to each other. And they now have 93 assists to each other over 16 playoff games, more than three times as many as Brown and Tatum had to each other 27 over 20. And the Nuggets’ two stars didn’t have to pass the ball to make each other better in their team’s 104-93 victory. One of them is a two-time Kia MVP. The other has twice averaged more than 31 points in a playoff series. And they may have the best two-man chemistry in the NBA. Here’s a bit of film on how difficult the Nuggets’ Murray-Jokic actions are to defend 1. Along the sideline The first possession of the game was supposed to be a post-up for Jokic, not a screen for Murray. But Bam Adebayo denied the entry pass. Murray didn’t hesitate, using both Jokic and Adebayo as a screen on Gabe Vincent, getting baseline, and finishing over Caleb Martin… Murray’s second basket of the game came, basically, on the same play. Adebayo fronted Jokic, who then stepped up to set a sideline screen for Murray. Adebayo was in position to stop the drive, so Murray just pulled up from 15 feet. 2. From the top Murray has shot 62-for-111 on pull-up 2-pointers in the playoffs. Those 62 makes are 15 more than any other player has, while that is the second-best mark among 33 players who’ve attempted at least 25 pull-up 2s. That’s efficient scoring, but the Heat let Murray walk into a couple of comfortable pull-ups when Adebayo was in drop coverage on standard pick-and-rolls from the top of the floor. Murray was 5-for-9 on pull-up 2s in Game 1. 3. From the side Murray and Jokic also ran pick-and-rolls from the side of the floor. Midway through the second quarter, Adebayo switched one of those. So Jokic took Haywood Highsmith into the post and drew a foul. According to Second Spectrum tracking, the Nuggets have scored a very efficient points per chance when Jokic has posted up this season. On Thursday, it was 14 points on nine chances per. 4. Empty corner The play above had Bruce Brown in the left corner. Late in the second, the Nuggets ran a pair of Murray/Jokic from the left side with nobody in that corner, making it tougher to help on the roll. First, Adebayo switched the screen and Jokic took Jimmy Butler into the post. He seemed ready to go to work, but Michael Porter Jr. came over and set a flare screen for Murray. So Jokic kicked it out for a Murray 3. They ran the empty-corner pick-and-roll again on the next possession. Adebayo didn’t switch this time, instead trying to guard both guys. But that allowed Jokic to get good position at the left block, from where he pirouetted for a short jump hook… Midway through the third quarter, Murray and Jokic ran a pick-and-roll toward an empty corner. Adebayo was in drop coverage, Murray drove at him, and kicked the ball back to Jokic for an in-rhythm 3. 5. Against the zone Murray and Jokic were even able to run pick-and-roll against the Heat’s zone. It allowed Jokic to get a catch in the middle of the paint, from where he found Jeff Green cutting behind Duncan Robinson… There’s not an easy solution for the Murray-Jokic pick-and-roll. Play drop coverage and you’re giving Murray space to shoot or Jokic space to roll into. Play a little bit higher and Jokic is getting behind you. Switch and he’s posting up somebody much smaller than him. The Nuggets have been terrific against zone this season. One thing that the Heat didn’t try is blitzing and trapping those pick-and-rolls with a ton of ball pressure to make the pass to Jokic as difficult as possible. But rotating out of that would be difficult if Murray can find an escape pass, whether it’s to Jokic or somebody else. Game 1 was actually the Nuggets’ fourth least efficient offensive performance of their 16 playoff games. But Denver’s bread and butter was near impossible to stop. And if it continues to be that way, this could be a short series. Game 2 tips Sunday 800 ET, ABC. * * * John Schuhmann is a senior stats analyst for You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Twitter. The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Warner Bros. Discovery.Oneday on a hot summer day, Suyeon calls an AS engineer because her air conditioner breaks down while exercising at home. But there I meet my ex-boyfriend. After a long time in reunion, they fall into the old thoughts and immediately go into the room and make love. Meanwhile, Eun-jung goes out of the house to dump her husband's luggage. Tae-hwan, a neighbor he met on the road accidentallyYearning to watch 'A Man and a Woman' on your TV or mobile device at home? Searching for a streaming service to buy, rent, download, or watch the Claude Lelouch-directed movie via subscription can be challenging, so we here at Moviefone want to help you out. Read on for a listing of streaming and cable services - including rental, purchase, and subscription choices - along with the availability of 'A Man and a Woman' on each platform when they are available. Now, before we get into the nitty-gritty of how you can watch 'A Man and a Woman' right now, here are some finer points about the Les Films 13 romance flick. Released October 15th, 2016, 'A Man and a Woman' stars Anouk Aimée, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Pierre Barouh, Valérie Lagrange The movie has a runtime of about 1 hr 42 min, and received a user score of 73 out of 100 on TMDb, which collated reviews from 219 experienced users. Interested in knowing what the movie's about? Here's the plot "A man and a woman meet by accident on a Sunday evening at their childrens' boarding school. Slowly, they reveal themselves to each other, finding that each is a widow." .'A Man and a Woman' Release DatesWatch in Movie Theaters on July 12th, 1966
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AMan and a Woman HD Two strangers have dropped their kids off at a pickup area for a children's camp in Helsinki, Finland. A spark of mutual interest is ignited between the man and woman. Released: 2016-02-25 Genre: Drama, Romance Casts: Jeon Ik-ryoung, Park Min-ji, Jeong Sun-kyung, Oh Jung-wan, Marko Wilskman Duration: 115 minBrowse428 woman on top of man in bed stock photos and images available, or search for businessman relaxing on bed or couple in bed to find more great stock photos and pictures. businessman relaxing on bed. couple in bed. man lying on bed. WonderWoman 1984 | Official Movie Site | Own the Digital Movie Now & 4k Ultra HD Blu-ray™ 3/30 .