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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
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  • Créé le : 10/09/2011 19:04
    Modifié : 09/08/2023 17:55

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    ©-DR- WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011) p25

    25/05/2014 03:51

    ©-DR- WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011)  p25


    A Fantastic War Movie that Will Appeal to All Audiences
    9/10
    Author: Al_Scarface_Capone from United States
    5 November 2011

    I was lucky enough to see War Horse in a special pre-screening last week, and I can safely say I will be seeing it again when its released on Christmas day. I went in with relatively low expectations, after watching the series of mediocre trailers, and walked out being able to safely say that War Horse is one of the best movies of the year,one of Steven Spielberg's best films, and, quite possibly, one of the best war films ever made, up there with my personal favorites The Thin Red Line, Apocalypse Now and Paths of Glory.

    Steven Spielberg had long said that he didn't want to make Saving Private Ryan again. He said he wanted War Horse to be a war movie that parents cant take their children to and teach them something about love and war, and in this respect I can say that he more than succeeded. Spielberg comes close to the clinical perfection of Private Ryan, but more importantly, from an emotional perspective, War Horse far exceeds Private Ryan.

    There are many people apt to cry at Private Ryan, but War Horse is more likely to cause tears at a similar level to, say, Schindler's List. More importantly, unlike either Schindler or Private Ryan, War Horse is unlikely to cause any sort of political or moral complaints. He never tempers the anti-war message with nationalist tripe. Rather, he plays war straight. War is evil, men are good. There are no sides in this movie. In fact, at various points throughout the film, he seems to directly reject Saving Private 's heroism is dying for country message.

    War Horse is based on the children's book and play of the same name. It is about a boy who's father, on a whim, buys a horse for his son that he knows will never be what is needed for the farm work it is purchased for. The boy forms an incredible bond with the horse. The first forty five minutes of the film is spent establishing the relationship between boy and horse. This part of the film is rather slow, but is necessary to establishing the film's central relationships, and is quickly made up for by the shift in pace as soon as the war begins.

    From the Scottish country side, after this important turning point in world history, War Horse shifts to France, where the titular horse is serving after being sold to the army. The boy is a year or two too young to follow his horse to Europe at this point, so for the next section, the film follows the horse only. From here on out, I will leave the plot a mystery, but it is gripping, thrilling, and very emotional.

    There are two scenes in War Horse that I think are worthy of further mention. The first is a charge across no man's land. For anyone not familiar with the bulk of World War I's combat, it consisted of months at a time of back and forth shooting between trenches, broken up by awful charges across no man's land, to take a few hundred yards of enemy territory. These charges, as short as they were, as a result of the machine gun, came with death tolls in the thousands or higher.

    War Horse contains one of these charges, and it is carried out with both taste, and near perfect artistry. It is just grisly enough to get the reality across, but not so grisly that it makes the movie impossible to show to younger audiences. In fact, this trench charge ranks up with Steven Spielberg's other famous World War battle scene, the beach landing in Saving Private Ryan. It doesn't quite make it, but it comes close.

    The other scene worthy of mention also occurs in the trenches, and reflects the other side of War Horse. The titular horse gets caught in the barbed wire in No Man's Land. The soldiers on either side spot it. No one knows what to do, as it is clear that its in incredible pain, but they know that leaving their respective trench would expose them to machine gun fire. Eventually two soldiers, one British, the other German both move to free the horse. The soldiers on both sides know what is going on, so no one fires a shot.

    This scene is unbelievably touching. The discussion they have (the German soldier happens to speak good English, explained adequately through a joke) will move even the most cynical of viewers, and gives a good idea of just what perspective War Horse takes to the act of war. There are a few small problems in War Horse that, in most films, I would take issue with, but I will forgive in this case as I feel that they are so necessary for this film to appeal to younger audiences. The German soldiers speak English to one another, a big pet peeve for me.

    I would have preferred for French characters to speak subtitled French and German characters to speak subtitled Germans, but I recognize that many younger viewers refuse to read subtitles. There are a few unnecessary jokes, but again, younger viewers will enjoy these. Spielberg, as always, has three different endings tacked onto the movie, in this case necessary to provide the cut and dry resolution younger viewers require. As I said, these are still problems, but they are, for better or worse, required to accomplish what Spielberg was trying to.

    I can say with absolute certainty that when Christmas rolls around, I will be dragging all my younger relatives to a screening of War Horse. I have never seen a movie so able to pull its punches enough to get a PG- 13 rating, but show enough to explain just what it is about war that makes it such an odious, disgusting, awful affair. In short, see War Horse as soon as you possibly can.






    ©-DR-WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011) p26

    25/05/2014 04:02

        ©-DR-WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011) p26







    ©-DR-WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011) p27

    25/05/2014 04:06

        ©-DR-WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011) p27







    ©-DR-WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011) p28

    25/05/2014 04:10

        ©-DR-WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011) p28


    Trivia
    Showing all 29 items
    Jump to: Cameo (1) | Director Trademark (1)
     
    -Fourteen horses played Joey during the movie. The "main" acting horse in the film, Finder, also portrayed Pur sang: la légende de Seabiscuit (2003) in the movie about the famous racehorse.
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    -Jeremy Irvine (Albert Naracott) contracted trench foot when filming the war scenes of the movie.
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    -When Joey is trapped in barbed wire, the wire used was rubber prop wire when a real horse was used. Part of the filming of this sequence utilized an animatronic horse.
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    -Steven Spielberg stated that the only digital effects used in the movie were three shots that lasted three seconds, and was done to ensure the safety of the horse involved. Spielberg was quoted as saying "That's the thing I'm most proud of. Everything you see on screen really happened."
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    -This Steven Spielberg film was released in the same year as another Spielberg movie, Les aventures de Tintin: Le secret de la Licorne (2011) and both were Oscar nominated. But the film represents another double Spielberg losing year at the Oscars. This movie received six Academy Award nominations including Best Picture whilst Les aventures de Tintin: Le secret de la Licorne (2011) got one nomination. Both films failed to win an Oscar. In 2006, Spielberg also had two movies Oscar nominated, Munich (2005) and La guerre des mondes (2005). Both those two films also failed to win an Oscar that year. Spielberg had a double Oscar winning year in 1994 with La liste de Schindler (1993) (won 7 Oscars) and Jurassic Park (1993) (won 3 Oscars).
    7 of 7 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -Finders Key, the horse and real star of War Horse was last ridden in a race by actor and professional jockey Kevin Mangold, finishing in 5th place at 77 to 1 odds.
    6 of 6 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -Steven Spielberg's first film to be edited digitally. He has famously held onto editing traditionally; his editor, Michael Kahn, has edited nearly all of Spielberg's films on a Moviola.
    5 of 5 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -The white goose's name is Harold.
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    -This is the second time David Thewlis has acted in a movie whose star was a horse. The other was Prince noir (1994).
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    -Film debut of Jeremy Irvine.
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    -The tank created for the movie is now an exhibit in a bona fide tank museum in Dorset, England, among real tanks including those from the first world war.
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    -Original author Michael Morpurgo's original story evolved from a chance meeting with three surviving WW1 soldiers at his local bar in Iddesleigh, Devon, Morpurgo's English hometown. After a number of meetings with the former members of the Devon yeomanry, and consultations with the Imperial War Museums (IWM), Morpurgo was able to structure a story based on the experiences of the veterans and their poignant accounts of, not just human slaughter on the battlefield, but also the wholesale carnage and starvation of horses.
    4 of 4 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -Based on both a children's novel of the same name set during World War I, by Michael Morpurgo, first published in the United Kingdom in 1982, and the 2007 stage adaptation, also of the same name.
    3 of 3 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -This movie was made and released just under thirty years after its source 'War Horse' novel by Michael Morpurgo was first published in 1982.
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    -This movie utilized about 5800 extras and background artists.
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    -Robert Emms, who had played the lead role of Albert Narracott in the West End stage production of the play, was cast in this film in a different part, as David Lyons.
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    -Lead Jeremy Irvine had never ridden horses prior to being cast in this, his very first feature film.
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    -Janusz Kaminski has stated that he used John Fords La prisonnière du désert (1956) as a template for his exterior filming, paying particular attention to Ford's panoramic sky, landscape and terrain.
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    -The granddaughter of Captain Budgett, one of the World War I veterans who had inspired Michael Morpurgo to write the original story, appeared as an extra in the movie.
    4 of 5 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -After this became Steven Spielberg and Michael Kahn's first film together edited digitally, the two swore off digital editing once again in favor of analog flatbed editing, stating that digital editing rushed their creative process too much.
    4 of 5 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -Prior to principal photography, a number of actors did about two months of intensive horse training.
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    -Production filming took place under the codename 'Dartmoor'. Dartmoor is the location in Devon where the film was predominantly shot.
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    -First horse movie to be nominated for the Best Picture Academy Award Oscar in eight years. Pur sang: la légende de Seabiscuit (2003) was the last.
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    -Emily Watson also starred in the similarly named The Water Horse (2007). In both films she played the mother of the title animal's human guardian during a World War (in "War Horse" the First, in "The Water Horse" the Second).
    2 of 2 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -Finder's two famous roles, Seabiscuit and Joey, were very similar. Both were remarkable mainly in their bravery and determination to overcome insurmountable odds they never should have been able to, considering what kind of horse they were.
    2 of 2 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -Eddie Redmayne was rumored to be cast in the lead role of Albert Narracott that went to Jeremy Irvine.
    5 of 8 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    -Specially designed mud was used to make the battle scenes look authentically filthy.
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    Cameo
    Michael Morpurgo:  The author of the source book is seen standing next to David Thewlis during the auction scene at the beginning of the movie. Morpugo's wife Clare is also seen in the film.
    4 of 4 found this interesting Interesting?YesNo | Share this
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    Director Trademark
    Steven Spielberg:  [fathers]  Albert's father is the initial antagonist who deprives Albert of his best friend by selling Joey into danger.





    ©-DR-WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011) fin

    25/05/2014 04:15

        ©-DR-WAR HORSE de Steven Spielberg (2011)  fin


    Nominations et récompenses
    Six nominations lors de la 84e cérémonie des Oscars (26 février 2012) :
    *
    *


    Meilleur film (Steven Spielberg et Kathleen Kennedy)
    Meilleure direction artistique (Rick Carter et Lee Sandales)
    Meilleure photographie (Janusz Kaminski)
    Meilleur montage de son (Richard Hymns et Gary Rydstrom)
    Meilleur mixage de son (Gary Rydstrom, Andy Nelson, Tom Johnson et Stuart Wilson)
    Meilleure musique de film (John Williams).

     






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