The Machinist

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Résumés(1)

Trevor Reznik est ouvrier dans une usine. Un métier répétitif, fatiguant, usant, au milieu d'un bruit assourdissant, où la moindre inattention peut avoir des conséquences dramatiques. Une attention que Trevor a du mal à maintenir, car il est très fatigué. En fait, Trevor n'a pas dormi depuis un an. Depuis quelque temps, la vie de Trevor devient de plus en plus étrange. Qui laisse des messages codés dans son appartement ? Pourquoi Marie ressemble-t-elle tant à sa mère ? Quant à Ivan, le nouvel employé de l'usine c’est un homme d'ailleurs très étrange, inquiétant et dérangeant, il semble surveiller sans cesse Trevor... (ESC Distribution)

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Critiques (10)

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Christian Bale fait clairement partie de ces acteurs qui n'ont aucun problème à se laisser maigrir jusqu’à l’os ou à se prendre une tranche de gras dans le ventre. En ce qui me concerne, son apparence dans The Machinist m’était pénible à voir, tandis que je trouvais son embonpoint dans American Bluff grotesque et hilarant. The Machinist est un psychothriller solide qui est dominé par Bale lui-même et, en second lieu, par ses deux comparses féminines. La fin m’a déçu, d’où ma note moyenne. ()

Isherwood 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Paranoia isn't pleasant at all, especially when the director presents it in a way that even the most astute viewer cannot fully interpret the sequence of events. Similar to the main character, one fumbles in the deep darkness of uncertainty, waiting for the final resolution as if for merciful deliverance from the gates of hell represented by both unknown arrivals and relatively close ones undergoing a sharp process of alienation. Brad Anderson deftly plays with the screenplay, and what initially seems like an uncertain move is merely a bluff, concealing another very direct move towards the goal, manifested in the ending, which is the director's sole but all the more painful stumbling point. Everything that precedes it is very successful filmmaking, be it the very dark camera filters, the minimalist but very intrusive soundtrack, or the cast. I find Christian Bale's emaciated character to be very double-edged. Christian Bale certainly deserves deep admiration for what he had to go through, but at the same time, his character can be somewhat disruptive while watching the rest of his acting part, which definitely belongs to Bale's other great roles, although again quite dark. Either way, The Machinist is ultimately a very impressive probe into "ordinary" human life, where the filmmakers have forgotten that the era of crushing plot twists has been over for some time now. ()

Annonces

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A picture that can be summed up as “Bale, but nothing else". Christian Bale absolutely excels, not only in physical preparations for the part, but mainly in his performance of a worker suffering from long-term insomnia, and strange things start happening to him. The problem is that this movie seems much better than it really is, and the screenplay is completely predictable. The only reason why it is at all watchable is the expectation that the outcome won’t be what it looks like it is going to be from the very first minutes. The movie quite often promises very clearly that “this is going to be really something, just wait and you’ll see". In the end it all seems to trail off into nothing and you are left feeling that somebody wasted the huge potential. Overall, this is definitely an example of quality filmmaking that is saved by the Bale and he is rightly praised highly by many for his performance. I’m rather intrigued to see just how bad this would have turned out with a different actor. ()

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The viewer's slight and, over time, steadily increasing suspicion diminishes the resulting effect of the final revelation. The Machinist, therefore, is strong not in the incisive Shyamalan-like twist (which I found satisfying, it was very fitting in the context for the story), but in the brilliant depiction of the mental suffering of a man, sparked by severe insomnia and the violent repression of guilt within himself. On top of that, the gloomy atmosphere was delicious. Anderson could not have found a better actor than Bale, in whose face all the shades of mental anguish and fatigue are perfectly visible, and whose Stanislavskian method, supported by the consumption of just one apple a day, leads to something that, in scenes where Bale's character is half undressed, makes the viewer feel physically sick. Apples were soon replaced by mounds of doughnuts (the model diet of any proper Batman) and it makes me want to say that Bale is not the devil, KevSpo. Even he wouldn't take such a gamble with his health :) ()

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A well made mystery drama with elements of horror. You you will have to enjoy the atmosphere because to story itself is not that surprising (if you’ve already watched a few films, figuring out the twist will be easy). That said, The Machinist is still worth watching, if only for Christian Bale’s superhuman (inhuman) performance. ()

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