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CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration

VIP-Blog de tellurikwaves
  • 12842 articles publiés
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  • Créé le : 10/09/2011 19:04
    Modifié : 09/08/2023 17:55

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    © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986)

    21/12/2011 09:40

     © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986)


    Pirates est un film franco-américain réalisé par Roman Polanski et sorti en 1986

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    lien vers la fiche complete du film
    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091757/?ref_=fn_al_tt_2

     

    Cast
    Walter Matthau  : Capitaine Thomas Bartholomew Red
    Cris Campion : Jean-Baptiste, dit La Grenouille
    Damien Thomas  : Don Alfonso
    Charlotte Lewis : Dolores
    Richard Pearson : le padre
    Olu Jacobs : Boumako
    Ferdy Mayne : Capitaine Linares
    David Kelly : le chirurgien
    Roy Kinnear : le Hollandais
    Bill Fraser : le gouverneur
    Luc Jamati : Pépito Gonzalez
    Emilio Fernández : Angelito
    Tony Peck : officier espagnol

    Fiche technique
    Titre original : Pirates
    Réalisation : Roman Polanski
    Scénario : Gérard Brach et Roman Polanski avec
    la collaboration de John Brownjohn
    Directeur de la photographie : Witold Sobocinski
    Décors : Pierre Guffroy
    Costumes : Anthony Powell
    Montage : Hervé de Luze et William Reynolds
    Musique : Philippe Sarde
    Production : Tarak Ben Ammar-
    Carthago Films / Accent-Cominco
    Société de distribution : A.M.L.F.
    Pays d'origine : États-Unis et France
    Langue : anglaise
    Genre : aventure
    Durée : 124 minutes
    Dates de sortie :
    États-Unis : 18 juillet 1986
    France : 8 mai 1986

     






    © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986) p2

    21/12/2011 09:47

     © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986)  p2


    Résumé
    En 1672. Perdus au beau milieu de l'Atlantique sur un radeau de fortune après le naufrage de leur navire, le capitaine Red et son comparse La Grenouille sont recueillis par un galion espagnol, le Neptune, commandé par Don Alfonso de la Torre.Immédiatement enfermés à fond de cale, ils découvrent dans les soutes du navire le trône en or massif du roi Inca Capatec Hanahuac : le capitaine Red ne pense plus qu'à une chose, s'en emparer !





    © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986) p3

    21/12/2011 09:55

     © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986)  p3


    Production Genèse du projet
    Le scénario du film a été conçu par Roman Polanski et Gérard Brach durant huit mois. Les deux hommes voulaient créer une satire de films de pirates.Mais la quête des capitaux pour le film a duré des années. Les majors, d'abord intéressées, se sont désistées les unes après les autres. C'est finalement Tarak Ben Ammar qui a accepté de le produire

    Casting
    Dans le projet original, Jack Nicholson devait jouer le Capitaine Red et Polanski celui de la Grenouille. Isabelle Adjani devait interpréter Dolorès.

    Tournage
    Le tournage a eu lieu entre Malte, la Tunisie et aux Seychelles.

    Les navires
    La construction du galion, Le Neptune, a commencé en avril 1984. Elle a duré une année et a requis le travail de 2000 ouvriers. Lecoût a été de $8 000 000. Lloyds l'a assuré pour $30 000 000. Sa perte aurait signifié l'abandon du film.Le brick a été acheté à Sousse puis démonté. L'équipe n'a gardé que la coque. Le mât et la cabine ont dû être refaits.Le galion du film a ensuite été réutilisé comme décor pour l'émission télévisée Mission Pirattak puis offert par Tarak Ben Ammar à la Ville de Cannes lorsdu 40e Festival international du film en 1987, à quai dans le vieux port.


     

     






    © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986) p4

    21/12/2011 12:15

     © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986)  p4


     Critique par Fear
    “Pirates” est un film à part dans la filmographie variée de son auteur. Efficace et bien joué, il trouvera probablement son public. Pour ma part, je me suis bien ennuyé devant ses sirupeuses qualités ...
     
    Polanski a toujours su renouveller son horizon artistique. Si on cristallise une image de lui en un maître du cinéma fantastique, c'est avant tout car il sut imposé sa patte dans ce registre. Ayant la reconnaissance d'un public plus large ces dernières années, un petit retour sur une de ses oeuvres restées plus discrète, ne semble pas superflu.Sans être confidentiel, il faut bien avouer que ce n'est pas ce titre qui vient en tête quand on pense au cinéaste polonais.
    *
     La difficulté de le voir ou de le trouver a toutefois grandi la qualité de ce produit - dans l'imaginaire collectif - qui ne restera pas dans les plus grands faits d'arme de Polanski.Il apparaît étrange de voir l'évolution dans l'optique de présentation de la situation. L'entame montre le capitaine Red et La grenouille. Un humour léger s'en dégage et la tonalité burlesque est déja évoquée. Jusqu'à la rebellion sur le bateau, on ressent une impression ressentie par des millions de personnes. Vous savez cette ambiance de film de jour férié.
    *
    Car oui, la piraterie traîtée de cette manière s'accomoderait très bien de ce genre de programmation. Loin d'être flatteur, le désagréable va s'estomper quelque peu.La base comique n'est pas de mon goût je le confesse. De plus, la tonalité gentillette - certes contrebalancé par quelques séquences – m'a tout de même agacé. Ne jouant pas sur la crédibilité, le cabotinage ne confère pas de réelle pertinence. En effet, cela sied très boien au héros mais beaucoup moins bien à une partie des espagnols.
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    C'est dommage que Polanski n'est pas eu plus recours aux dialogues car certaines tirades de Red était bien sentie. Contrairement à ce que beaucoup pensent, il ne m'est pas apparu comme percutant d'allier quelques phrases correctement écrites et le gag.L'aventure est au contraire assez bien menée. Encore faut-il se plaire à suivre des péripéties où chaque prise de décision est liée à l'effet drolatique qu'il pourrait susciter.Les évènements s'enchaînent rapidement et les retournements de situation sont légions. On croît même un court instant qu'un tournant positif va avoir lieu.

    Ainsi, l'arrivée sur l'île et la négociation sur la valeur des otages est probablement le passage le plus agréable. Sorti de là, on retombe dans un film qui n'est ni familial – évocation de violence sans pour autant en proposer – ni adulte – tonalité parfois niaise.On trouvera également la fin mièvre et ô combien convenue Je ne remets pourtant pas en cause la qualité inhérente au métrage. Il est représentatif du cinéma de pirates avec tous ces clichés - gentils méchants, histoire d'amour éloquente,

    ...-. Sans être parodique, l'ajout de l'humour n'est pas sans rappeler la démarche de Polanski pour “Le bal des vampires” (1968). Les acteurs sont au diapason, avec une mention spéciale pour Walter Matthau. De même, la photographie est de très bonne facture.Au final, les aficionados de film de pirates y trouveront un métrage efficace. Pour les autres, ce sera un Polanski de facture franchement moyenne et qui se laissera glisser dans les limbes de l'oubli. Cet hommage tombe définitvement à l'eau

     

     






    © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986) p5

    21/12/2011 12:19

     © DR - PIRATES de Roman Polanski (1986)  p5


     
    Index 42 reviews in total 

    Lien vers toutes les reviews
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    Excellent dark pirate adventure/comedy

    8/10
    Author: iqof20 from Indianapolis, IN
    12 February 2003

    Pirate movies are few and far between. Its hard to get people to buy off on a script containing ~40 minutes of "Arrrr" and "Aye Matie".However, Pirates is just a great fun romp through being a nasty, dirty, pirate. This is one of Walter Matthau's best roles. He literally becomes Captain Red. At no moment do you associate this man w/ any of this other roles.Too many jokes and gags to list, but not a comedy in the traditional sense. It is an adventure first with humor thrown in.Less of a comedy and more adventure than Yellowbeard. Darker, deeper, better, and less glitzy than Cutthroat Island. All around, a great classic pirate movie and virtually defines the genre.

    Matthau is Superb! One of Polanskis most underestimated movie.
    8/10
    Author: rickihogaard from Denmark
    31 May 2004

    Watch this movie. Walther Matthaus acting is quite superb. People are talking about Pirates of the Carribean these days, and Depps performance, which is also quite funny but it is my opinion that Matthau personifies that which Depp (tries to) plays in PotC Matthau is the perfect old-school pirate drunkard and simply hilarious As an extra notable performance is Frog (Cris Campion) playing a french retard which falls in love with the fair Maria-Dolores. This Polanski film is a gem. I cant call it the best pirate movie ever made because i haven't seen them all, but i can tell you that its the best I've seen yet, and i suspect that it will stay that way. Its just a shame that it never got the credits that it deserved.

    Pöetzsch

    One of Polanski's Most Underrated Films
    10/10
    Author: Dracenstein from Calgary, Canada
    26 May 2004

    Pirates is one of Roman Polanski's most underrated films along with The Fearless Vampire Killers and the Tenant. While the latter two films are masterpieces, Pirates is a very good pirate film that's never received it's due.Polanski redefines the pirate film while still paying tribute to the swashbuckling genre. This film is the perfect companion piece to The Fearless Vampire Killers. Walter Matthau gives an excellent performance as the fearless Pirate and the rest of the cast's performances hit all the right notes. Polanski's direction is masterful as always. The photography and musical score are also very good. From a purely technical standpoint this film is excellent. The script is really the only thing that keeps this film from attaining greatness. MGM who now hold the DVD rights (they now own the rights to the entire Cannon film library) must release this film as soon as possible in it's uncut, 124 minute widescreen glory (I suggest emailing MGM).

    Film rating: 9 out of 10.

    Walter Matthau's Captain Red leaves a lasting impression
    Author: Zack_Hobson (djulien@rogers.com) from Toronto, Canada
    24 June 2003

    Roman Polanski's Pirates, starring Walter Matthau as the avaricious Captain Red, is an absolutely hilarious comedy/adventure. The cast of characters is varied and interesting and the sets appear very authentic. The movie contains excellent dialogue, good swashbuckling choreography and plenty of physical humour which borders on the bawdy at times. The story is simple and dynamic and is completely driven by the characters.I like this movie for its characters. Each one's desires become the focus of fanatical efforts. Throw in some fascinating (though often exaggerated) character quirks, and the cast makes this movie.

    The rough, oafish Captain Red desires gold. The handsome, quiet Frog desires Dolores. The stiff, foppish Don Alfonso desires power. In the end, who will get what he desires? Most assuredly not EVERYONE.I only have ONE favorite movie and this is it. I know it is not for everyone (my wife hates it). However, for Matthau fans, or fans of the historical genre, this movie is a fun night out with plenty of laughs. I recommend it strongly.

    Apparently savaged, for inexplicable reasons, by critics who should know better
    8/10
    Author: ephraimwaite from UK
    21 March 2005

    This enjoyably foolish romp was apparently a flop, and mauled by the critics. Why? Good question. I speculate three reasons: lack of an obviously American lead and presence, an opening set-up that pays off in the long run but doesn't provide a beginning with a bang, and an anarchic, politically incorrect, almost amoral tone that was not digestible to Disneyfied mainstream audiences. These, and the length of the piece, would have been strengths if this had been released as a children's book, and I further speculate that it would have been well received in such a format, as a homage to old stories like Treasure Island.

    It could then have been adapted into a hit movie (with more explosions and an ethically impeccable American hero who does get the girl in the end).As it is, there is much to admire, delight and entertain, with legitimate criticisms being some of the dodgy casting and (lack of)linguistics (especially as regards the Spanish characters) - Walther Matthau's gloriously over-the-top performance honourably excepted - some lapses of logic in the plot (why doesn't the Frog just swim after the rowboat and bring it back when they get stuck on the chain?), and the fact that it is slightly too long.Ripe for a sequel, if, like me, you ever wondered what happened to Cap'n Red and his beloved throne, and The Frog and his beloved Dolores.

    R I B @ C
    9/10
    Author: PMGII (pmg214@is9.nyu.edu) from New York, USA
    27 March 2000

    I have been a near Polanski fan for many years; since seeing Chinatown. But after watching Pirates, my suspicions have been confirmed; Polanski's talents did not wane with his exile from the U.S. Basically what I'm trying to say here is Polanski's talent for genre redefinition is alive and well in this wonderfully comedic look at the action-adventure film. Not only this, but he also manages to re-evaluate and comment on the action hero as well as the genre as a whole. It is puzzling, as in most Polanski films, to ask yourself are the main characters heroes, and if so what kind? and if they are heroes, then to look at the way the film treats them... and with Polanski this is always a fresh, beautiful, and rewarding task.

    A modern swashbuckling classic, arr!
    10/10
    Author: Vassago
    3 May 2000

    "Arr, mateys, shiver me timbers!" is what you feel like shouting while watching this involving modern pirate movie that should become a classic. Roman Polanski had wanted to make a pirate movie such as this one for a long time, starting in the Lodz Film Academy in Poland, and finally did it - unfortunately, the problems he had affected the movie and made it a theatrical flop. Quite unfairly, as it has everything a pirate fan might want - a lovely score, breathtaking scenery, props and settings, a script that is adventurous and funny, good acting - and plenty of fun and adventure!

    And, most importantly, the amazing Walter Matthau as the best stereotypical pirate cap'n you'll ever see! Matthau performance is breathtaking - I can see his Cap'n Red standing arm-in-arm with Blackbeard, Black Bart and Captain Kidd, shouting orders at the "mateys"... Highly recommended for any fan of swashbuckling adventures - and for everyone else! (And while you're out to buy this movie, don't miss the equally underrated, and also very good, newer "Cutthroat Island" with Frank Langella).

    The best pirate film
    Author: daneelo from Budapest, Hungary
    7 March 2004

    This film is one of Polanski's masterpieces. He did to pirate movies what Sergio Leone did to western: showing the opposite of the usual sancticised glamorous movie portrayal of an era, yet achieving an epic effect, and images you want to see again and again. But a difference to Leone, beyond a high dose of irony and situation comic, is the bittersweet ingredient of the Central-Eastern-European experience, of lack of success and constant failure, constantly hitting all of our heroes in the film.

    Memories of living under communism might have also played a role in the (for me) most memorable part of the movie, the failed mutiny followed by the successful mutiny aboard the Spanish ship: the way the aristocrats have power over the people, and make Captain Red and The Frog eat the rat. And then, hilarious juxtaposing, the mutiny is like a parody of a communist revolution.

    But the best thing about the film are the actors. Walter Matthau is at his best as the grumpy old liar Captain Red, Damien Thomas is terrific as Don Alfonso the hyper-arrogant Spanish aristocrat who'll never loses his superiority, Roy Kinnear the embodiment of ugliness as the Dutch, and also the young no-names Cris Campion (playing The Frog, the naive young Frenchman at Captain Red's side) and Charlotte Lewis (playing the even more naive daughter of the governor).

    Oh Captain Morgan, where have thou gone ?
    9/10
    Author: CelluloidRehab (lelnu@yahoo.com) from Hell's Kitchen, NYC
    24 August 2006

    When I was a kid growing up I got into this PC game called Sid Meier's Pirates. I wanted to do everything pirate related. For some reason I never fully identified with the Errol Flynn pirate. He was always a good guy, who got caught up in the circumstances and was still trying to be a good guy. He was always chivalrous, clean and relatively good looking. Thank the contents of Davey Jones' locker for Roman Polanski. In all honesty, it was the VHS cover that first attracted me to this movie : Walter Matthau dressed up as a disheveled looking Captain Morgan, cutlass drawn and pointed as us.

    The movie revolves mainly around the exploits of the stool-legged Captain Bartholomew Red (Mathau) and his French first mate (who at times resembles dinner), the Frog. On the heels of their last adventure (see Boca del Toro), the movie starts out in the middle of the ocean with our two protagonists on a raft floating around, mad with hunger. After encountering a Spanish galleon (the Neptune) and performing a self-rescue, the story shifts into main gear : the Aztec Throne of Zapotec Anahuak.

    This is by far my favorite pirate movie. It has all the right elements - action, adventure, ship battles, wooden appendages, sword fighting, humor, barrels of rum, gold, prison, cross dressing, cockney accents, love, large feathery hats, giant wigs and even the attractive Charlotte Lewis (remember Eddie's love interest from the Golden Child). Walter Matthau is clearly the standout character in this movie. His Captain Red is an amalgamate of various pirates but yet stands on its own because of Matthau. Red is haughty, greedy, ambitious, inspirational, conniving, and single-minded when it comes to gold.

    This is made all the more apparent by the juxtapose to his highly idealistic first mate. Where as Captain Jack Sparrow is a bit on the weaselly side, Captain Red is more like a scraggly wolf. It was also beneficial that Matthau was a tall 6 foot 3 inches tall, giving Captain Red a larger than life persona. If not for Keith Richards, I think Captain Red could have been more than an appropriate inspiration for Mr. Depp.Roman Polanski does an excellent job in de-glamorizing the pirate lifestyle. Even Captain Jack Sparrow is a bit on the tame side (Thank You Disney). If Errol Flynn was the prototype, then Walter Matthau is the grittier, colorized version. What Polanski did for vampires with the Fearless Vampire Killers, he does the same for the pirate genre with this movie.

    On top of the typical "pirate" behavior, Polanski has even added commentary on the day. This would include the class divisions between the officers and crew, the political strife between the English, Dutch, French and the haughty Spanish (the RIAA of the day) and the unquenchable lust for gold.This movie was maligned by the critics when it came out and has since sunk into anonymity. This should not be so. It contains one of Matthau's best performances and is the best pirate movie ever made. Unfortunately, if you don't like pirates or adventure movies, then you probably will like the English Patient and not this. For everyone else, I highly recommend the Spanish (manga films) region 2 DVD of this movie (presented in anamorphic 16x9).

    -Celluloid Rehab

    The best pirate film of recent times
    Author: Robin King (mrtricks) from London, England
    17 January 2003

    I agree with many of the comments here, but most have opted to concentrate on Walter Matthau's (forgive the spelling if it's wrong) delicious performance as Captain Red. While it is undeniably brilliant - a few dodgy accent moments aside - especially when you consider how few risks many actors take with their casting, I would like to draw attention to a fine performance by Cris Campion as The Frog. When I was watching this again the other day and getting my girlfriend to watch it, she at first despaired when I told her the frog was the romantic lead. I told her to have patience, and at the end she could, after all, see why he was the object of Dolores' love.

    Head and shoulders above nearly all young actors around at the moment, Campion exudes passion, swashbuckling- derring-do and smouldering charm as well as being an excellent foil for Matthau's comic exertions. This makes his love story with Dolores all the more heightened and genuinely affecting. In many modern "buddy" films, the onscreen duo have no chemistry and are simply put together to maximise box office interest, but Matthau and Campion are a perfectly matched pair, the frog's unfaltering loyalty to his captain matching Red's utterly selfish backstabbing. You get the feeling that if there is one person in the world that Red would not betray, it might be the frog - even if he might eat him!

     

     






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