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

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    Origine : 75 Paris
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    ©-DR-L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL p17

    16/07/2014 04:46

    ©-DR-L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL  p17


    "The Death of the Wolf"...
    10/10
    Author: poe426 from USA
    3 March 2012

    *** This review may contain spoilers ***

    Politics is checkers played by fools who think they're master chess players. Fred Ward does a good job here as the B-movie star who played second banana to a chimp, but it's Willem Dafoe who gets to deliver one of the best lines: "No democracy can function without the trust of its people." Amen, brother. And one can't help but admire the irony of Ward watching and analyzing THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE.

    By far the most suspenseful scenes involve the Frenchman (the nail-biting flight across the border), but the most powerful scenes involve the Russian: his refusal to leave the country of his birth even though it means he must die; his desperate attempt to cling to his son one last time; his recitation of the lines of the poem THE DEATH OF THE WOLF as he's being given the Bush-Cheney-Rumsefeld-Rove treatment. Despite the U.$ Spin on things, telling the Truth is never treachery. I'm convinced, at this point, that the end game will look not unlike the subterranean societies in movies like THX-1138 (que j'ai trouvé hyper chiant !!) or George Orwell's NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR. Politics and religion will be the death of us yet.






    ©-DR-L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL de Christian Carion (2009) p18

    16/07/2014 04:54

    ©-DR-L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL de Christian Carion (2009) p18


            External reviews
             Showing all 71 external reviews





    ©-DR-L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL de Christian Carion (2009) p19

    16/07/2014 04:59

    ©-DR-L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL de Christian Carion (2009) p19


    One of the best movies ever made!
    10/10
    Author: dgurtin from United Kingdom
    2 May 2011

    From the brilliant cinematography of the opening scene, this movie declares itself as a masterpiece. I watched it at the edge my seat till the end, laughing and crying for Emir Kusturica's Sergei, a bear of a man and hating my beloved Willem Defoe's blood curdling CIA chief Finn. Guillaume Canet as Pierre Froment is also very good, maddeningly naive and equally lovable; in fact movie is full of living and breathing real characters, although unfortunately all women are slightly shadowy compared to men.

    I loved the exquisite detail to the period with clothes, hair, glasses and atmosphere, particularly in Moscow. The story was grippingly interesting and every single scene, every bit of dialogue believable. I feel enriched for having watched L'affaire Farewell, Merci Christian Carion.






    ©-DR- L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL p20

    16/07/2014 05:07

    ©-DR- L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL  p20


    "Farewell"
    9/10
    Author: Cambridge Film Festival from United Kingdom
    28 September 2010

    FAREWELL is an elegant depiction of Cold War espionage based on true events that proved catalytic to the demise of the Soviet Union. Pierre Froment (Guillame Canet), a French businessman who is 'above suspicion' due to his amateur status, is compelled to deliver high level intelligence from reckless, disillusioned KGB veteran Sergei Grigoriev (Emir Kusturica) to Reagan's cabinet via François Mitterrand, thereby crippling Soviet intelligence.

    Whilst Froment and Grigoriev convincingly resemble weary bureaucrats, scenes in the White House lack credibility - perhaps an attempt at satire by Carion, they are nevertheless rendered redundant by the sombre refinement of the film. Cultural boundaries between East and West deliver brief comic reprieve, and signal the imminent disintegration of an already stagnant regime.

    Suffused with nostalgia, we observe Brezhnev-era Moscow cast in the lurid yellow light of street-lamps, or bleached white by lens flare, with an effortless attention to detail - Muscovites stand in endless queues on street corners as Soviet vehicles roam empty boulevards flanked by Socialist realist statues.

    Subterranean scenes add a noir aesthetic, reflecting the shades of deception throughout - in the words of Grigoriev; "I live in lies and solitude".Kusturica gives a shatteringly affecting performance, conveying Grigoriev's wistful patriotism and hope for his son's future with a rare eloquence. Carion creates real suspense and accommodates subtle plot twists, but there are no cheap thrills here- the film defies the brash conventions of its genre . Understated, fluid camera-work and dedicated performances deliver a film of classic style and depth. 5 out of 5

    Cambridge Film Festival Daily

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    11 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
     
    The Very Moving Emir Kusturica
    9/10
    Author: film_ophile from boston mass. usa
    10 July 2010

    We just returned from seeing this film as part of the Annual French Film Festival at Boston's Museum of Fine Arts, 7/10/10. In the U.S., we have an expression sometimes used to express one's admiration for a certain talented actor/actress who is riveting to watch on screen.I will use this expression here w/ regards to the lead actor, " I could watch Emir Kusturica read the phone book".

    It is his performance more than any other single factor, that causes me to think very highly of this film.It is a rare thing to watch a film about a real life hero without seeing a film that is also maudlin,clichéd or too simplistic. But in "Farewell" I felt that the story was compelling and the screenplay was well written,economical, completely believable and well acted.There were no unnecessary scenes and the whole thing mostly made sense, as sad as that sense was.The cinematography was crummy, but you can't have everything.

    Besides,I was so mesmerized by K's performance that I didn't really care that much about the cinematography, because my eyes were always focused in on him.As I exited the theater I felt like I had just been hit by a truck, and I am still feeling this film.

     






    ©-DR-L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL de Christian Carion (2009) fin

    16/07/2014 05:13

    ©-DR-L'AFFAIRE FAREWELL de Christian Carion (2009) fin


    Bibliographie
    Éric Raynaud et Sergueï Kostine, Adieu Farewell, Robert Laffont, 2009.


    Autour du film
    On peut apercevoir deux fois Reagan regarder un western, L'homme qui tua Liberty Valance.
    *
    La bande originale du film utilise les Chœurs de l'Armée rouge et la chanson Steppin' Out de Joe Jackson.

    Trivia
    -Alexander Avdeev (Russian ambassador in France who became Russian Culture Minister and who had been expelled from France in 1983 because of Farewell) blocked most Russian actors to play in this movie, including Sergey Makovetskiy and Nikita Mikhalkov, because he did not want to back a movie about a Russian traitor. He also blocked authorizations to film in Moscow, while most of the plot takes place in Moscow. Christian Carion had to pretend to film a Coca Cola advertisement for the few images of the city.
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    -Oval office was recreated in a disused warehouse in Ivry-sur-Seine (Paris south-eastern suburb), in Lenin street (rue Lénine).





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