Résumés(1)

La résistible ascension d'un valet de banque dans le monde féroce du Capital. Il pense comme ses collègues que la société ne peut pas se passer d'eux, telle qu'elle est organisée. Ils se sentent légitimes et nécessaires. (ARTE Éditions)

Critiques (5)

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Capital is about the modern capitalism – who would have thought. It’s about people who have every ordinary person’s money under control. It’s a thriller about people who play their dangerous games in which loss comes far too quickly and a win is taken for granted, because the only other option is social death. Costa-Gavras filmed it very harshly. And Gad Elmaleh’s acting was just as brutal. The scene where he’s having a lunch with his colleague in some shabby worker’s pub is unforgettable. I’d probably stare just like they did. If I met a politician in my favorite pub, I’d wouldn’t be able to cope either. ()

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Intellectual exploitation. Everything you've ever thought about global capital, predatory capitalism and high banking management all in one film, where the characters are just a function of a legible ideological message (which I agree with, but which I do not enjoy in this pamphlet form). Sometimes it is ridiculous (Pacman with bank logos that is supposed to shed light on the principle of a key transaction, a director who needs a consultant to shed light on the fact that if he swallows a bank with 80% of toxic assets, he'll have a problem, etc.), but mostly it is a desperately sterile and unsatisfying film, because it only shows theses and model situations - golf, luxury whores, redneck American managers (from Goldman Sachs), the distortion of painters' names, an estranged son addicted to computer games, a sexually frustrated protagonist, and old ethical bankers, etc. If I'm wrong and this movie is a really realistic depiction of the lives of elites, then it's great news, because soon everyone will want idiocy, frustration and boredom. The dominant impression for me was that Costa Gavras wanted to make a film that would be like a motionless surface, under which it boils with tension... but in reality, however, there is a sterile, tiled bottom underneath. [40%] ()

gudaulin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Costa-Gavras has never been the type of director to mind the label of an activist creator, especially one with a clear political profile. He makes this perfectly clear with his new film. Even the title, which deliberately evokes associations with the world-famous title by Karl Marx, connects the world of bankers and financial corporations with the world of political ideas. While Oliver Stone once made Wall Street, where his left-wing political convictions occasionally flashed through the dialogue of a suspenseful thriller about an unscrupulous stockbroker, Costa-Gavras made a film that proudly embraces leftist ideals and sometimes transitions into straightforward proclamations. The (anti)hero of the film turns to the camera and addresses the audience in key moments, thinking out loud and revealing even what would normally remain cloaked in diplomatic phrases. Paradoxically, he becomes a more interesting character than Stone's Gordon Gekko, who is essentially a one-dimensional predator driven by the pursuit of profit. Marc Tourneuil, on the other hand, is a player with more complex motivations and thought processes, aware of the consequences of his actions but determined to stay in the game and to win. With his drama about the rise of an intelligent and ambitious careerist against the backdrop of a power struggle in a globally influential bank, Costa-Gavras has become the spokesperson for those who increasingly observe scandals in the world of high finance with disgust – the irresponsibility and arrogance of the elites, the ruthlessness with which speculators conduct their shady dealings on or beyond the edge of the law. It is important to realize that the described managerial and business practices were not invented by the author of the source material; he drew on intimate knowledge of the environment and specific cases. Gad Elmaleh, known primarily in France, handled the demanding role with honor and is well on his way to breaking into the club of internationally acclaimed film stars. Despite a few minor reservations (such as the rather unnecessary romantic fling with a supermodel, which dilutes the main storyline), I argue that Capital is a film that has balls and has arrived at the right time, marked by an economic crisis and its repercussions. Sometimes it's good not to hold back and to say what needs to be said for it to be heard. Overall impression: 90%. ()

Dionysos 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Cela peut sembler stéréotypé à certaines personnes, mais Costa-Gavras ne voulait clairement pas réaliser un drame humain subjectif, mais plutôt un regard objectif sur le monde des grandes banques, et je n'ai pas peur de dire que (surtout grâce à l'effet catalyseur de la crise économique de 2007) le film a également une fonction éducative dans ce sens. Cela se reflète également dans la typicité des personnages, mais que peut-on faire quand le titre du film est "Das Kapital" de Marx (et non pas le livre "Le Capital" de Stéphane Osmont, qui est une œuvre de fiction à l'origine de ce film), où nous pouvons lire par exemple à la page 251: "En tant que capitaliste, il n'est que l'incarnation du capital. Son âme est l'âme du capital. Cependant, le capital n'a qu'un seul instinct vital - celui de se valoriser, de créer une plus-value...". Il n'est donc pas surprenant que Costa-Gavras de gauche n'ait pu réaliser le film autrement. Cependant, il n'est certainement pas cliché ni prévisible, loin de là. Les motivations du personnage principal ne sont pas claires dès le départ, et on peut dire la même chose de l'évolution concrète de l'intrigue, et les techniques cinématographiques conventionnelles ne vous ennuieront pas même en moins de deux heures. ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A film about how capitalism looks in today's world, and it's not anything nice because people who come into power are willing to do anything to maintain it, and it doesn't matter how much they smile at you or how much you believe they're telling the truth. There may be a lot of grand hypocrisy behind all this, which this film shows bluntly. ()