Résumés(1)

Fin des années 30. Lady Sarah Ashley, une aristocrate anglaise hautaine et renfermée, arrive au coeur des paysages sauvages du Nord de l'Australie pour y rejoindre son mari qu'elle soupçonne d'adultère, et qui tente - sans succès - de vendre l'immense domaine qu'ils possèdent sur place: Faraway Downs. Elle ne tarde pas à découvrir que l'exploitation est au bord de la ruine et menacée par son propre contremaître, Neil Fletcher, un homme sans scrupules de mèche avec un puissant éleveur, prêt à tout pour précipiter la chute du domaine et s'en emparer. Pour sauver Faraway Downs, Sarah n'a pas d'autre choix que de s'allier à un "cow-boy" local un peu rustre connu sous le seul nom de "Drover", et de parcourir avec lui des milliers de kilomètres à travers les terres aussi magnifiques qu'inhospitalières du pays afin de mener jusqu'à Darwin 1500 têtes de bétail.
Peu à peu transformée par la puissance et la beauté des paysages, touchée par la rencontre d'un jeune aborigène orphelin, Sarah découvre des sentiments qu'elle n'avait jamais éprouvés jusqu'alors. Au terme de leur périple, la seconde guerre mondiale a rattrapé l'Australie, et la ville de Darwin doit désormais faire face aux bombardements japonais. Pour la première fois de sa vie, Sarah sait pour qui et pour quoi se battre, et est prête à tout pour sauver ce qui compte désormais pour elle. (texte officiel du distributeur)

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Critiques (10)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français La monstruosité de bonbons théâtralement affectée, qui décide toutes les demi-heures de ce qu'elle est réellement et compte sur le fait que la relation du couple central la tiendra ensemble, où elle est plus sèche que dans tout le désert australien. Je n'ai jamais autant souffert au cinéma et je ne peux pas croire que c'est Baz Luhrmann qui m'a causé cela, dont je suis amoureux de tout mon cœur son magnifique, émotionnel et parfaitement complexe Moulin Rouge!. Je donne seulement deux étoiles pour la poétique de la ligne avec un petit "caramel" et la seule scène vraiment belle du film (l'arrêt du bétail au-dessus du précipice). Un méga échec commercial mérité. ()

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais In the first half, Luhrmann tells the story with gusto, passionately and fully applying his almost grotesque sense of humour (which I like and which his previous film, Moulin Rouge, was packed with), but when he arrives in Darwin midway through the film, he seems to wave a magic wand, and the narrative, full of life and the enchanting atmosphere of the Australian outback, becomes a game of playing with the audience's patience, where it's as if the filmmakers are trying to see what clichés and screenwriting gimmicks they can get away with. That cheesy ending is something that not even Danielle Steele, the queen of rosy books, would dare write. Still, I sense Luhrmann's sincere effort to pay homage to his beloved native Australia throughout the work, and so I can't entirely damn it. ()

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Kitschy silliness that for two and a half hours smothers smart viewers in digital cattle, while pulling the more sensitive viewers by the nose with a stupid love story between an English lady and an Australian cowboy. Jackman is alright, Kidman is too vague at times, but the fundamental problem is, of course, the script. If told you that the twists are all predictable half an hour before they happen, I’d be lying, they are predictable already from the trailer, even before the film begins. Think about the most clichéd romance you can imagine, set it in Australia during WWII, add some bollocks about the importance of the art of storytelling (this is how ridiculous this movie sounds!) and you have Australia. ()

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais It begins like an unfunny, madcap comedy (all praise to those kangaroos), then it suddenly turns into rather a good adventure fantasy movie about hunters with magic and a nice amount of tongue in cheek, but then subsequently flops over into a remake of Pearl Harbor. Just even stupider and deadly serious into the bargain. At the end it becomes a politically correct appeal with at least seventeen ending acts. The cherry on the cake is the finale “gets out of boat and rifle shot" which easily wins the prize for sky-high dumbness in the movie theaters this year. Of course, you shed some tears while watching it, which certainly was the filmmakers’ aim, but I’m not so sure that they were meant to be tears of laughter. It’s all in a visual guise which, unlike Moulin Rouge!, doesn’t balance playfully on the line between kitsch and genius, but becomes puke-worthy digital kitsch of the third kind. The characters (not the actors - they do their very best to save things) are a parody of themselves, because for instance every ten minutes Sarah turns into a different character, thinking, acting and behaving completely differently to before. A movie about strength and the need to tell a story that doesn’t have a clue about how to tell a story is bound to fail. And it does. ()

Zíza 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Even though I'm drunk (who would be surprised after so many drinks...), stars were popping up in front of my eyes during the film – three stars, no, I'll give it four... In the end, it turned out the way it did, because keeping me awake when I’m drunk means the movie wasn't boring after all. Yes, C2H5OH made me experience some scenes really intensely – I laughed more at some of the "absurdities", I was more "moved". I liked it mainly because it was about the mundane. About the sweet, dusty ordinariness that I’ve grown to like. I didn't wait for the movie to end; they got together pretty soon :-) I'm glad. Despite the length, I didn't feel like I necessarily needed to go to bed just yet, because I wondered what the ending would be like. And it didn't disappoint me. It's not a 100% happy ending, but I like it :-) sorry, when I suck a bit of nectar I tend to speak in tongues – and I'm still holding on here. See ya. ()

NinadeL 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A fairy tale about how a dog and a cat cooked up a movie. After regularly encountering the immeasurable power of passion in Into the Beat and after some time away from Moulin Rouge!, which I eventually accepted, I was expecting a lot from Australia. However, the result is... something I'm willing to close both eyes to just for the prosaic fact that Nicole looks immeasurably great after 1939. Which isn't much, but also not too little for moving pictures. ()

Kaka 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A horrifying wannabe innovative mix of comedy and classic epic storytelling style. Luhrmann's obvious attempt to come up with something new, a new concept of an epic story, is shocking. At times, Australia appears to be an amateurish blend in terms of its plot, and without the beautiful scenery and captivating actors, it would be a complete horror. Two strong storylines clashing with each other, a ton of digital effects, an introductory half-hour of comedy, bad war sequences, and a final epic cliché. Once was enough for me. Luhrmann is an amateur who should watch Cold Mountain every other day. ()

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Une bouse australienne colossale qui m’a désenchanté et profondément déçu en ce qui concerne Baz Luhrmann. Le scénario est pitoyable et tissé de clichés et de scènes bruyantes soulignées par le caractère peu sympathique de Nicole Kidman et la raideur de Hugh Jackman. J’ai passé trois heures ennuyeuses au cinéma en croupissant désespérément dans mon siège. S’agissant de l’Australie, les rôles principaux auraient dû aller à Naomi Watts et Russel Crowe. Par pitié, qu’on ne me montre plus jamais de film australien de trois heures où on court après du bétail sur la moitié du continent ! ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais "Every continent should have its blockbuster," said likely director Baz Luhrmann and made the film "Australia," which is a patriotic film, but shows the dark sides that Australia had to go through in the 20th century. After the first few minutes, the viewer is unsure of what they are actually watching. Is this supposed to be a comedy, which tries to showcase the two big Australian stars Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman in beautiful shots? Or should we take the film seriously and expect that there will be a little more to it in the end, and that we can look forward to some drama that will really move our emotions? In the end, it turns out to be a drama that wants to be grand, but actually remains somewhat small. It still focuses on the main actors and how good they look, especially Hugh Jackman, which raises the question of whether Luhrmann might be gay. He is not, at least as far as I can judge from the fact that he is married to a woman. The story of the little boy, which the film is actually about, is not as touching as it was supposed to be, and therefore - but not only for that reason - the film did not gain much favor with me, because on a runtime of almost three hours, it is not that exceptional. More: http://www.filmovy-denik.cz/2012/05/noc-patri-nam-voda-pro-slony-posledni.html ()