Le Monde fantastique d'Oz

  • États-Unis Oz: The Great and Powerful (plus)
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Résumés(1)

Quand Oscar Diggs (James Franco) - un obscur magicien à l'éthique douteuse - se retrouve propulsé du poussiéreux Kansas au luxuriant Pays d'Oz, il pense que la gloire et la fortune s'offrent enfin à lui. Sa rencontre avec trois sorcières, Theodora (Mila Kunis), Evanora (Rachel Weisz) et Glinda (Michelle Williams) va pourtant tout remettre en cause car aucune d'entre elles n'est convaincue qu'il correspond bien au grand sorcier que tout le monde attendait. Traitant à contrecœur les problèmes rencontrés par les habitants du Pays d'Oz, Oscar doit bientôt découvrir en qui il peut avoir confiance et de qui il doit se méfier avant qu'il ne soit trop tard. Faisant appel à ses « pouvoirs » magiques à grand renfort d'illusions, d'ingénuité - voire d'un soupçon de sorcellerie - Oscar se transforme peu à peu non seulement en un grand et puissant sorcier, mais aussi en un homme meilleur... (Walt Disney Company France)

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Vidéo (58)

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Critiques (10)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français James Franco n’a pas sa place dans ici. Les deux sorcières jouées par Mila Kunis et Rachel Weisz font pâle figure aux côtés de Charlize Theron dans Blanche-Neige et le Chasseur. La seule scène palpitante du film est la chasse avec le type musclé dans le prologue en noir et blanc. Et les seuls moments magiques sont ceux avec la poupée en porcelaine. Le résultat n’est pas terrible et c’est surprenant venant de Sam Raimi, qui s’en sort normalement haut la main (tant avec les petits thrillers et films d’horreur qu’avec les blockbusters). ()

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais OK, I don't know what specifically caught Raimi's attention in the 150th generic version of the plot, i.e., "the hero travels to a fantastic realm where three witches rule, one of whom is evil and only he can defeat her." The fact is that the implementation is not bad at all and the result is definitely not an unnecessary remake (Franco really does not resemble Judy Garland, the whole story is about something completely different, and the framework of the world is absolutely different), or prequel, as I thought for a while. So, it's simply different in terms of genre and content than the famous game with songs and a dog from 1939, a song in which the funny-awkward James Franco sings a slightly varying chorus “I'm a bastard / liar / charlatan" and women fall into his lustful arms as if he was Rudolph Valentino. After the poetic, funny and imaginative introduction, it is followed by a widescreen hyper-colored 3D fair with lots of digital flowers, a pastel mindfuck and cute creatures, which, however, Raimi handles with more forethought and irony than Alice’s Burton. He also manages to play around a bit, pay homage to the moving images, and to pay tribute to the details of his predecessor from the late 1930s, but I wouldn't say that he explains to me why I should watch this recycled plot and listen to the second-rate melodramatic croaking of witches. In addition, the 1939 version seems to me to be much smarter, more thoughtful and has nicer singing... and it’s just better in general. ()

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Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais As it sometimes happens, you get movies reviewed here at Filmbooster that most people would expect to provide them at least with some proper cinematographic entertainment. Well, Sam Raimi is no dummy, so it was clear also that what he would make wouldn’t be your typical genre movie, but a typical blockbuster that can make a lot of money. And if I set aside the sometimes too wacky editing, or the crazy camerawork, and given the way people criticize this movie and bring it down to average, I was pretty satisfied. Sure, you can see that the whole thing is shot in front of a green screen, but I didn’t mind that. The premise of the story is a bit different than what you’d expect. This is no Alice in Wonderland. At times, it’s scary, especially the characters of the witches themselves – that’s pretty typical for the director… and at times it can really lift you up and make you laugh. And that’s good to know. The movie has it in it. The fact that it’s not the way everybody had dreamed it would be and everybody’s upset, that’s another thing. Sam Raimi simply made a fairy-tale with everything that entails. I was satisfied and I must admit that James Franco’s transformation in this movie was flawless. ()

3DD!3 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Raimi has taken a story for little girls and re-vamped it into a movie for little boys with a soft-spot for machinery and magic tricks. Edison’s legacy is alive even here and I’m glad. However, it fails when confronted with real magic and some aspects are very jarring. Paradoxically, it is the Land of Oz itself, its laws and its fame are responsible for this, because the story about a dapper fraudster who finds good inside himself works only in terms of its artiness, but is spoiled by the poor production design, full of obviously digital or even plastic substitutes for the real world. Franco isn’t suited to a world like that, but that’s what I liked about his Oz. He’s a modern person, but with fantasy and ending up in this strange land doesn’t surprise him, he just wants to get as many laughs as he can from it (the scene with the cashier reminds me of Scrooge McDuck). I didn’t like the trio of magicians one bit. Just Mila Kunis was magically naive at the beginning, but things went downhill with her after her transformation. If a new and original world were presented or if I were younger, I would have given Oz: the Great and Powerful more. P.S.: I get Alice in Wonderland and the Wizard of Oz confused and these alternative stories don’t help me at all. Is it only me, or you have a similar problem? ()

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais For the first half, I was seething with the words: "This isn't a movie, it's just a dusty attraction!". A chain carousel that gives you the creeps, a product for one purpose: so that the capos at Disney can afford new limousines. But there is one big BUT. Although I subscribe to a completely different world of cinema, I ended up feeling like someone on a weight loss diet who visits a candy store with all its delicacies wrapped in colorful and at first glance tempting packaging, and bites into one of them. Superficial, I know, but sometimes you just succumb to something like that easily. The last act improved the final impression, and the incorporation of technical conveniences into the fairy tale world was reminiscent of the best of The Wizard of Oz from 1939, or Vaughn's Stardust, which is still proof that a fairytale can be done in a clever way. So in the end....in the end, it wasn't as silly and overwrought as the disastrous trailer might make it seem. ()

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