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What is this blog? Well, it is our blog. We are French students who loooove going to the cinema. Therefore we decided to create a blog to share our thoughts about films we've seen. You'll discover our favourites, as well as the ones we hated... Welcome!

Wednesday, 17 April 2013

Opinion poll on criticisms and awards


How influenced are you by film criticisms and awards?

The results of our opinion poll

We gave a series of ten questions to people of various ages (from 20 to 50), to try and evaluate the
extent to which people are influenced by awards and criticisms.

The results show that most people do not read film criticisms and that those who do read them do not take
them into account in their final decision about seeing a film or not.

Everybody asks for the opinion of their friends or relatives who have already seen the film.

Only a minority of people watches the actual ceremonies of film festivals or films competitions, but most
of them inquire about the results afterwards.

All the people to whom the opinion poll was submitted consider that an award is not a token of quality.

This opinion poll shows the general tendency of paying little heed to the film festivals or competitions
which are less mediatized, even if they are considered as major events within the cinema industry (Goya,
Berlinale, Mostra of Venice…).

Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Quartet







Lo:

Elderly people are definitely funny!

If you have seen 'The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel', you will love this film. I you have not, you will love this film. It has basically the same starting point - elderly people in a retirement house- but dealt in a completely different way.

This one happens in a retirement house for singers and musicians. These musicians and singers have to present a show at the end of the film in order to keep the house open. But a new character arrives and some won't be as happy as others. This new character played by Maggie Smith is a great and capricious singer who was once married with one of the main male characters and do not want to sing with him again. And all along the film we are wondering she will or if she will not sing.

Wonderful movie directed by the great Dustin Hoffman. A tremendous actor who succeeded in doing one of the most beautiful and poetic film of the beginning of this year.

The actors are all great and make us laugh. Maggie Smith put a smile on our face every time she starts to speak. Billy Connelly is just marvelously funny. Tom Courtenet is charming. And Michael Gambon is as despicable as ever.

You will laugh. You will cry. You will be moved. You will listen to good music. In one word: Go!

Monday, 8 April 2013

Side Effects

                                
US Release date: 8 February 2013
UK Release date: 8 March 2013
French Release date: 3 April 2013

Director: Steven Soderbergh

Clémence:


Feeling a bit down? Let me offer you a pill!

Key words : Ablixa, psychiatry, perversity, deception, denunciation, money.

The plot is as follows: a young woman (Rooney Mara) whose husband (Channing Tatum) is just out of prison becomes depressed and sees her world falling apart after a brand-new antidepressant prescribed by her psychiatrist (Jude Law) has unexpected and dreadful side effects. Is that really it, though? One thing is certain: the psychiatrist has to face the consequences of his patient’s actions and try and clear his name.

I found the intrigue clever and nicely packaged and the actors excellent. I had never seen Rooney Mara in a film before, but she is perfect in this role and steals the show to lead actor Jude Law, who is nevertheless as good as usual. Channing Tatum’s presence on the film poster is superfluous in my opinion, because his character is clearly just a prop that allows for the story to develop. Catherine Zeta-Jones delivers a good performance as Rooney Mara’s previous shrink.

In Side Effects, almost everybody cheats and bends the rules to match their own best interests. Morality is secondary, at best. Money is what matters. It is a clear denunciation of the pharmacological world. It also sheds light on the current state of America, addicted to antidepressants and anxiolytics, and where everybody seems to have some pills in their pocket and to be unbeatable at antidepressant names. The United States appear as an over-stressful world: many people seek medication to be able to keep going and luckily (really?) find compliant doctors ready to provide them with drugs.

If you like twisted thrillers filled with suspense, I would strongly advice you go and see Side Effects. Even if you do not especially like twisted thrillers filled with suspense, go and see it anyway, you won’t regret it. It is captivating and brilliantly interpreted.


Los Amantes Pasajeros/I'm so excited

                                    Pósters Los amantes pasajeros
Spanish Release date: 8 March 2013
French Release date: 27 March 2013
UK Release date: 3 May 2013
US Release date: 28 June 2013

Director: Pedro Almodovar

Clémence:


Funnily absurd, or ingeniously allegorical?


Key words: fun, absurdity, homosexuality, sex, politics, economics

The plot is fairly easy to sum up: the crew and passengers of an airplane supposed to go to Mexico are facing potential death because of a technical problem. The stewards spare no effort to try and alleviate the tension, one of the passengers is clairvoyant and desperately wants to lose her virginity, another one is persuaded that her enemies are scheming against her (she indeed claims to be in the possession of very compromising videos involving her and the six hundred most influential men of the country), a newly-wed couple are going on their honeymoon… The passengers of the second class have been drugged and are all asleep in blissful oblivion.

Although I had a really good time throughout the film and laughed quite a lot at some point, i.e. during the epic dance of the stewards (no, I am not giving the game away, as this scene appears in the trailer), I’mso excited will definitely not make a lasting impression on my memory. The actors are good but the scenario is empty. I am usually very appreciative of Almodovar’s films (especially of Los abrazos rotos, Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios, La mala educacion, Tacones lejanos and Todo sobre mi madre) and I think that this film is much below his usual standards. It could, therefore, be deemed disappointing as an Almodovar film and yet, I enjoyed myself and had a good laugh.

The film is funny and light (very light indeed!), but does not it claim to be something else? Is not there more to it than meets the eye, no hidden message behind the salacious jokes? I think that I’m so excited could also be seen as a political allegory of the current crisis in Spain, through the mention of a financial scandal, the corruption, the unprofessionalism, egocentrism and superficiality of all the characters who are supposed to held responsibilities (the crew of the airplane, the crew of the airport (hi Penelope Cruz and Antonio Banderas!), the businessman), etc.

To cut a long story short, if you fancy a light comedy and do not want to overwork your brain, go for it!


Sunday, 7 April 2013

Cloud Atlas


US Release date: 26 october 2012
UK Release date: 22 february 2013
French Release date: 13 march 2013

Directors: Tom Tykwer, Andy and Lana Wachowski

Main actors: too many to make a proper list... you will discover their names in the following description!

Clémence:


Did you spot Halle Berry as an ugly male doctor?

Key words: reincarnation, metaphysics, magic, epic, convolutedness.

I should be straight with you: I loved the film so much I went to see it thrice.

That being said, here is the story or I should rather say, here are the six stories:

-          - 1849: South Pacific Ocean. JimSturgess is taking the passage from a British colony to the mother country and is slowly poisoned by his alleged friend, a doctor interpreted by a very ugly Tom Hanks.

Key words: slavery and betrayal.

-          - 1936: Cambridge and Edinburgh. JamesD’Arcy’s lover Ben Whishaw is a young and talented composer who lives and works with an old tyrannical composer interpreted by Jim Broadbent.

Key words: love letters, homosexuality and genius.

-         - 1973: San Francisco. A reporter, Halle Berry, meets a now old James D’Arcy and has to investigate and solve a mystery involving oil and nuclear power.

Key words: plots, suspense, turtleneck sweaters.

-          - 2012: London and Scotland. JimBroadbent, an elderly editor, finds himself trapped in a retiring house and plans his escape.

Key words: humour, escape and old age.

-          - 2144: Neo Seoul is filled with clones. With the help of Jim Sturgess, one of them Sonmi-451 (Doona Bae), might change the world.

Key words: uniformity, love and rebellion.

-          - 2300s: A post-apocalyptic island. Humanity is back to a primitive state. Tom Hanks and his tribe live in fear of cannibals and worship a goddess called Sonmi (rings a bell?), but the arrival of a more evolved human being (Halle Berry) might change everything.

Key words: apocalypse, cannibalism and faith.


The message of the film is that everything is linked. It is the circle of life, literally. Souls reincarnate, good or bad deeds echo in eternity (“What we do in life, echoes in eternity!” Maximus, Gladiator). If the recurrence of the same actors in different roles and the interwoven stories themselves did not make you understand that, the presence of the comet birthmark on a different, important person in each story should do the trick. The comet-bearer is always someone whose actions had significance and influenced the future.


Some people called it messy and snobbishly, excessively complicated, but as you might have guessed from the number of times I saw the film, I really, really loved it. It is visually, esthetically superb. It is captivating, beautiful and moving. The Wachowskis (directors of the Matrix trilogy) and Tykwer (director of Perfume: the story of a murderer) assembled one of the most impressive cast you could imagine and comprising many of the finest living actors who do not have anything to prove anymore: the brilliantly versatile Tom Hanks, the ever-graceful and mesmerizing Ben Whishaw, the stunningly beautiful Halle Berry, a despicable Hugh Grant, the great Susan Sarandon and Hugo Weaving, the irreplaceable Jim Broadbent, the touching Jim Sturgess and James D’Arcy, and the talented and previously unknown to me Doona Bae.

Another argument in favour of Cloud Atlas (if you need another one) is most certainly the music, the consistency of which gives an unmistakable personality to the film as it is made of several variations of the same musical theme. It is wonderful and I really liked the fact that the music composed by the character of Ben Whishaw in the film, the Cloud Atlas Sextet, should be the musical score of the film itself.

I think I got a bit carried away here, so I will simply conclude by telling you to go and see it. The story is epic, the cinematography excellent, the acting extraordinary. You can have fun trying to spot all the actors in their various disguises, and you will most certainly leave the room in a dreamy state, with your eyes filled with stars.


Lo:


Gosh, I felt so stupid... 


I shall be less enthusiastic than my colleague here, the reason being that I was not as mesmerised as her by this nonetheless aesthetically perfect film.

Why is that? Well first, the choice to use the same cast over and over in the several mini-films - though it is a good idea - is not that good! (What is she talking about??). Grrr, let me do the talking! Once you understand that it is the same actors but disguised in several and very different characters, you are caught in an evil game which consists in spoting all the actors in the story. Oh, it is Tom Hanks! Argh, what an ugly Hugh Grant! etc, etc... and from my point of view it is bad, very bad! Indeed, by doing that you spend most of the film doing something else than following the film and in the end: woops, I don't know what this is all about! Not the best reaction the directors are expecting (or maybe it is!).

Secondly, the way this film was edited. I am fed up with all these pretentious film directors who under the pretext to be fashionable are all doing the same kind of films. (What is she talking about??) Grr, what did I say? Well, the fashion is to make very complicated films and to edit them in a very complicated way in order to have a very cooooool film. It could be interesting if it has not been done hundreds of times. Here, the several stories are all interwoven - with sometimes I agree beautiful transitions, very beautiful - but which add a difficulty to the reading of a story which is NOT difficult at all. I may not be the brightest but I only understood the real message of the film after speaking to my completely crazy colleague and for me that is definitely a negative point.

Yet, I enjoy watching this - somewhat long - film and I definitely recommend it to everybody.Who said I was paradoxical? (Grrr)