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 CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration
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CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration

VIP-Blog de tellurikwaves
  • 12842 articles publiés
  • 103 commentaires postés
  • 1 visiteur aujourd'hui
  • Créé le : 10/09/2011 19:04
    Modifié : 09/08/2023 17:55

    Garçon (73 ans)
    Origine : 75 Paris
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    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT p7

    29/03/2014 08:05

    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT p7


    Un postulat audacieux
    « The Kids are all right », chantaient les Who en 1965. Un thème rock repris par une réalisatrice qui a su l'être dans l'évocation du travail de Nan Goldin ébauchée avec High Art. Avec Tout va bien, The Kids are All right, c'est un peu différent.

    Le postulat est en tout cas audacieux, surtout au vu de certaines réactions outre-Atlantique au moment de la sortie du film : un couple de femmes ( Julianne Moore et Annette Bening, convaincantes) vit son histoire depuis plus de vingt ans. Elles ont deux enfants adolescents, un garçon et une fille que chacune a portés respectivement. Le père est un même donneur anonyme. La famille vit tranquillement dans une banlieue aisée aux Etats-Unis (là ça commence à être un peu moins audacieux).

    Mais le fils cadet, âgé de 15 ans, commence à se poser quelques questions sur ses origines, et convainc sa sœur de 18 ans de partir à la recherche de leur père. C'est une formalité, puisque le géniteur est retrouvé en quelques jours, et prend l'apparence plutôt agréable de Mark Ruffalo, gentil paysagiste un brin baba cool, qui voit arriver ces deux ex-têtes blondes dans sa vie avec une certaine émotion. L'intrusion de cette figure paternelle (et masculine...) dans la cellule familiale va bien évidemment tout perturber.
     
    Un manque d'audace
    Avec The Kids are all right, Lisa Cholodenko réussit un pari intéressant : ouvrir le thème de l'homosexualité féminine et de l'homoparentalité au grand public sans tomber dans des clichés outranciers. Pour ce faire, elle aborde son sujet à travers la crise du couple, ici formé par Nic et Jules, qui traverse une période charnière de son histoire. Jules se sent dépréciée et mal aimée, et l'arrivée impromptue de Paul va venir la troubler.

    Un sujet somme toute universel, et le plus sage des hétérosexuels pourra s'y reconnaître. Un bien et un mal, puisque la réalisatrice y perd en même temps l'audace qu'elle avait su mettre dans High Art. On se consolera grâce à un casting des plus réjouissants, avec Annette Bening en pilier de la cellule familiale, Julianne Moore en quadra fragilisée et Mark Ruffalo en tentateur débonnaire. C'est déjà ça.

    Par Véronique Delahaye






    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT p8

    29/03/2014 15:22

    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT p8


               External Reviews (Liste Partielle)

              Showing all 309 external reviews





    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT p9

    29/03/2014 15:26

    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT p9


    One real moment is all it takes to make a film worth something, The Kids Are All Right brings it.
    8/10
    Author: brielle_jalexa9 from United States
    4 January 2011

    OK, so here is what is going on with The Kids Are All Right. When I think of Lesbian couples the image of the family portrayed by the stars of this movie comes to mind.

    I live in Kentucky so I don't ever really come into contact with any established lesbian couples, but I remember watching this video in a Sociology class about proposition 8 that featured all of these Kentucky based gay couples whose wholesomeness and nuclear family awesomeness were supposed to convince me that gay people should be allowed to adopt kids. For the record it didn't need to because I'm completely for gay people doing anything they want, but if I was ignorant then I might have beenconvinced.

    I mean, the couples were perfect, upstanding members of the community, their kids were involved in sports and clubs and they all just screamed 'It's Okay to beGay and Have Kids!'.What I most remember is that the families kind of all had this lingering desperation in their smiles, like were trying harder to be happy than most people because they were aware that other people would be judging them based on their ability to be happy under the scrutiny of social judgment. The family in the movie, Nic (Annette Benning),Jules (Julianne Moore), Lazer(Josh Hutcherson), and Joni (Mia Wasilowska), kind of all have that same desperation lingering around them.

    The film basically centersaround what happens when the tension brought on by that added responsibility is broken by the intrusion of an outsider.That intruder is Mark Ruffalo. I think the evolution of his character is one of the most interesting parts of the film. When we first meet Mark, he's just so cool. Everybody wants to be like him. Relaxed, carefree, seemingly very open and with an uncanny ability to understand and relate to people. He grows vegetables, doesn't hurt the environment and has sex with YaYa from America's Next Top Model. He seems like the opposite of Nic the uptight,control freak,who's very traditional and leads a very traditional life despite or in spite of her gay lifestyle.

    So you think, 'oh, this movie is going to be about an outsider coming into a family and repairing the relationships within it'. Nic will loosen up and the kids will be able to open up to people because someone finally understands them. But unfortunately film hasn't been that neat and tidy since the 1930s. In this film, certain things come into play that switches our perspective and we come to identify more with Nic's character than we really expected. But we share sympathy with every character. At the end, we actually have the most sympathy for Mark, I would say.

    This switch was unexpected and I think it makes the film special and more worthy than just a farce about a Lesbian couple and a straight guy. The best films are ones in which our expectations are inverted, I think. A film should be like a beautiful unopened flower. The bud is beautiful and then it opens, changes and becomes even more beautiful because of those changes. I know that sounds all preachy and lame but if you can't be preachy and lame on the internet than where can you?

    My favorite parts of the film were where I saw flashes of my own relationships portrayed in situations presented by the characters. The conflict between Nic and Jules, where they love each other, accept each other, but clearly don't always like each other, injects the film with humor while at the same time serving as a painful reminder of how hard it is to settle down. That struggle to just continue to like the people you love is portrayed so poignantly in the little digs Nic pokes at Jules every now and again.

    The frustration they both feel is palpable. And If you have an overbearing mother like I do, than you know how it looks and feels to be shut down by your mom like Laser and Joni are by theirs. After every unintentionally overbearing comment, I was like 'wow, that was a real moment.' I have to say that I was a little disappointed with Laser's character. I feel like his character was so rich in the beginning, but really died away to almost nothing by the end. Just a few archetypal little brother comments thrown in to remind us that he's still there. I feel this way because we spent a lot of time with his character in the beginning, understanding that he's a fifteen year old boy. He's moody.

    And he's searching for something to define him outside of his mothers. That's undoubtedly why he is initially so passionate about finding his biological father. But though his relationship with Mark is pivotal, it is not really explored as deeply as is Mark's relationship with Joni. Basically his character was traveling to a destination that it just didn't reach. But this could be intentional. Teenagers are supposed to be mysterious and confusing so maybe it's true to his character to leave him unexplored. However, it did disappoint me. I don't know how this movie is going to do during awards season. I assume it will do well, but more because of the trendy subject manner than due to it's merit as a film. I don't know, the film society just votes that way sometimes. But it moved me and that's worth an award to me.






    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT de Lisa Cholodenko (2010) p10

    29/03/2014 15:55

    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT de Lisa Cholodenko (2010) p10


    Josh Hutcherson  : Laser  






    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT de Lisa Cholodenko (2010) p11

    29/03/2014 16:01

    ©-DR-THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT de Lisa Cholodenko (2010) p11


    The Kids - and this Movie - Aren't All Right
    6/10
    Author: flickernatic from United Kingdom
    23 November 2010

    *** This review may contain spoilers ***

    This is an entertaining movie worth seeing, at times funny, at times moving, but one that fails, frustratingly, to exploit its potential.

    Nic and Jules are a lesbian couple, each with a teenage child fathered by the same anonymous sperm donor, Paul. Their children decide to contact their father and he enters, rather awkwardly, in to the family's lives. Nic and Jules' relationship is loving but passionless - they resort to watching gay porn in bed but even this fails to produce a spark - and before long, Jules and Paul become energetic lovers who meet repeatedly to pursue their affair.

    Paul, who has never settled into a relationship, finds that he has fallen in love with Jules. He also discovers that the children he fathered so anonymously now mean everything to him. He wants to find a way to continue the relationship with his 'kids' and Jules. But, despite the positives he has brought to them, ultimately he is rejected by them all. Nic, Jules and the kids resume their previous lives while Paul is left out in the cold.

    The dramatic situation created by Paul's arrival, his affair with Jules and its effects on Nic and the 'kids' is potentially very interesting and worth exploring. Unfortunately, the theme is treated at best half-seriously, as if Hollywood can't cope with this topic without making it into a comedy. The inclusion of several explicit sex scenes is also a distraction which adds nothing to the story. Most disappointing of all is the ending; this seemed a cop-out.

    Jules is clearly bi-sexual but she suddenly claims that she is all- lesbian; Nic seems barely troubled by Jules's startling lapse; the 'kids' are overly keen to reject Paul; and all this appears to be designed to produce an old-fashioned 'happy ending' in which the lesbian couple and their children return to everyday life as if nothing had happened (what?!) - except Paul, that is, who is told to 'go and find your own family'. Are, then, the 'kids' 'all right'? On the contrary, their parents' antics appear to have left them in a dreadful mess. Maybe we are supposed to take the titleironically.

    On the plus side, the acting is generally good, although Mark Ruffalo does too much mumbling and Julianne Moore tends to over-act. The outstanding performance for me was from Mia Wasikowska as the daughter, Joni. But this would have been a far better, more memorable and thought-provoking movie if it had followed through more courageously. I'm sure Jimmy McGovern would have done it a whole lot better!






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