Résumés(1)

Assoiffé de liberté, amoureux de la nature et sportif acharné, Aron est dans une quête perpétuelle de sensations fortes. Alors qu'il s'aventure seul dans les magnifiques gorges de l'Utah, Aron va se trouver pris au piège au fond d'un canyon, isolé de tous. Livré à lui-même au coeur de la nature, sans espoir de secours, il va devoir affronter sa vie passée et prendre une décision qui le bouleversera à jamais. (Pathé Films)

(plus)

Vidéo (4)

Bande-annonce 2

Critiques (15)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Après un certain temps, je donne une note subjective de 5 étoiles car c'est mon groupe sanguin. Danny Boyle prouve encore une fois son originalité créative et sa capacité à raconter pratiquement n'importe quelle histoire de manière captivante à travers des jeux audiovisuels. Dans ce drame en huis clos basé sur un événement réel et avec un seul acteur sur scène, il n'hésite pas à utiliser des filtres de caméra puissants, des accélérations, la division de l'image en plusieurs parties et un saut constant dans les flashbacks. Ce sont des outils qui pourraient sembler inappropriés et perturbants dans un film de ce genre, mais 127 heures, au contraire, avance de manière spectaculaire, ne s'ennuie pas une seule seconde et ne perd jamais de sa concentration passionnée sur l'état d'esprit du personnage principal. Un excellent film qui provoque des larmes de bonheur à la fin, presque exceptionnel. ()

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais It can be argued that 127 Hours has no great overlap, and that it is simply a post-modern stylized testimony of courage and desire to survive. It can also be argued that subliminal stressing of fate and miraculous hunch smacks of melodramatic cheesiness. A lot can be argued about, but what really counts is the experience. Pain, despair, fear, and above them a triumphant animal desire to escape and live, no matter what it takes. And 127 Hours has plenty of raw experiences to give. That's why this is an exceptional film and one of the most intense experiences of pain I've ever experienced in a movie theatre (Gibson and his biblical exploitation should study how it's done "for real"). ()

Annonces

Isherwood 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais This is Touching the Void in a more cinematic, but less emotional package. Boyle cuts back on the poignant sequences and instead serves up a minimalist tale of one self-centered fop for whom a smaller rock was waiting to show him that ego isn't everything. The cinematography, music, editing, and especially the acting are incredibly captivating for the entire ninety minutes, even if all of this can be summed up in a single sentence. Maybe this is how you recognize good filmmaking, and maybe this is what works better than all the sad sights from the slums. But then again, it doesn't collect gold-plated statuettes. ()

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Yeah, Boyle and Franco probably did the best they could under the circumstances, but the fears I had before the screening turned out to be true: the premise is good for an autobiography, but not for a feature film. To allow the camera to leave that unfortunate wedged guy at least for a while, the script includes flashbacks and hallucinations that are pretty annoying and pathetic, though I understand the dramatic reasons behind them. But, considering the possibilities the creators had, the film is very brisk and energetic and Boyle again shows his strength: the blend of music and images. The ending (when the “action” is behind) managed to arouse some emotions. However, I still have mixed feelings about 127 Hours and I would love it if next time Danny chose more story-rich material. 7/10 ()

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais After the third screening, it's clear to me: this film has matured and offers much more than a first superficial viewing might suggest. What hightlights it above all is its playfulness. It’s packed with so many directorial ideas and visual tricks, visual and sound games (functional flashbacks, image splitting, refreshingly chosen music) that watching its atypical narrative is a joy – this despite the slightly morbid climax. James Franco is a great actor in this film, and Danny Boyle is a genius. ()

Photos (97)