Résumés(1)

A l'époque où il enseignait la philosophie, Carter Chambers invitait chaque année ses étudiants à dresser ce qu'il appelait une "bucket list" - la liste de tout ce que ces jeunes rêvaient de faire, de voir ou de tenter avant de "passer l'arme à gauche". Oubliant d'appliquer ce sage principe à lui-même, Carter laissa passer le temps, se sent piéger par une multitude de contraintes et d'obligations familiales et dut se contenter pendant quatre décennies d'un obscur emploi de mécanicien. Aujourd'hui, sa "bucket list" n'est plus qu'un dérisoire exercice mental, une recension d'occasions manquées et de regrets voilés. Pendant ce temps, le multimillionnaire Edward Cole bâtissait un empire et consacrait toute son énergie à amasser encore plus d'argent, sans même s'accorder le temps de savourer ses acquis. Un jour, Cole et Carter se retrouvent dans la même chambre d'hôpital, avec tout le temps nécessaire pour dresser le bilan de leurs vies si dissemblables. Ils découvrent alors qu'ils ont au moins deux choses en commun: un formidable appétit de vivre, et le ferme désir de réaliser d'urgence tous leurs rêves inaccomplis. Les deux hommes embarquent alors pour la plus belle des virées. Un voyage de l'amitié, émaillé d'aventures, d'éclats de rire, de découvertes... (texte officiel du distributeur)

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Critiques (4)

angel74 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais As I get older, I can appreciate films dealing with the finitude of human life much more than before. The Bucket List presents this serious subject with a sensitive and humorous insight and manages to strike an emotional chord in all of us... If I had unlimited possibilities like Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman, I would also want to enjoy the last few months before I leave this world as much as possible. (80%) ()

Annonces

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Another one of those films that are about old age, and it is presented in a humorous way, although of course with passages that try to attack emotions. In some cases, perhaps too overtly, but Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson are personalities that can handle even quite classic scenes with honor. Yeah, this is the type of film that I can enjoy. Definitely not offensive, unless you have a problem watching two older actors. ()

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Before I kick the bucket, I would certainly like to travel through Thailand, visit the peaks of the Andes, paddle upstream along the Amazon and lots of other stuff. But mainly I would like at last to see a movie where Nicholson doesn’t appear in his hundred and first variation on a snooty cynical grouch and Freeman as a good and wise family man for the fifty-second time. And I wouldn’t mind seeing the soccer world cup final in the flesh, but I would gladly give that up for the chance of at last seeing Reiner in a well-directed movie again with an original idea and not simply a well-made routine piece. And it also occurred to me that I would give all the money in the world to see Mother Earth from orbit. Definitely better than watching a squandered opportunity in the shape of the middle section of this movie. Although I don’t doubt that my parents would really like it, this movie reeks of unexploited potential and a run-of-the-mill safe bet from miles away. And it needed so little to make it good. Maybe to swap over the casting of the two main roles and to find a director who isn’t already past his zenith and isn’t afraid of giving it some balls. Oh yes, and it also occurred to me that I would like to see the pyramids with the same visibility conditions that these two hobblers had. When I was there was an impermeable shroud of smog over Cairo for my entire visit and visibility was barely a hundred yards. ()

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