All Is Lost

Bande-annonce 1
États-Unis, 2013, 106 min (alternative 102 min)

Résumés(1)

Au cours d'un voyage en solitaire à travers l'Océan Indien, un homme découvre à son réveil que la coque de son voilier de 12 mètres a été percée lors d'une collision avec un container flottant à la dérive. Privé de sa radio et de son matériel de navigation, l'homme se laisse prendre dans une violente tempête. Malgré ses réparations, son génie marin et une force physique défiant les années, il y survit de justesse. Avec un simple sextant et quelques cartes marines pour établir sa position, il doit s'en remettre aux courants pour espérer se rapprocher d'une voie de navigation et héler un navire de passage. Mais le soleil implacable, la menace des requins et l'épuisement de ses maigres réserves forcent ce marin forcené à regarder la mort en face. Robert Redford (vainqueur d'un Oscar® pour "Des gens comme les autres") vous entraîne dans All Is Lost, l'histoire du combat d'un homme seul face aux éléments déchaînés. Ecrit et réalisé par J.C. Chandor (nommé aux Oscar® pour Margin Call), avec une bande originale d'Alex Ebert, ce film est un hommage poignant, puissant, viscéral et profondément émouvant au génie de l'homme et à ses capacités de résistance. (Universal Pictures Vidéo FR)

(plus)

Vidéo (6)

Bande-annonce 1

Critiques (7)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Un film qui vous captive autant que Gravity, mais sans vous obliger à le regarder en 3D sur grand écran (la seule valeur ajoutée du cinéma est le son surround du grondement de l’eau et du tonnerre). Bien qu'il ne soit pas aussi touchant sentimentalement ni aussi contemplatif que Gravity, le film est plus enthousiasmant et plus réaliste, s’attardant lui aussi sur les processus de pensée et comportements du protagoniste et sur la débrouillardise de celui-ci avec les choses qu’il a sous la main (la production d’eau potable m’a interpellé). Même avec sa longueur élevée de plus de cent minutes, le film fonctionne sans aucun moment d’ennui ou aucune maladresse dans la narration du récit. Robert Redford excelle avec ses expressions faciales réalistes. Il y a juste le final qui ne devrait pas… enfin, vous verrez ! ()

lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Surprisingly good. If we judge the quality of the survival genre solely on the basis of visual satisfaction and maximum visual authenticity, this year's awarded Gravity is obviously well ahead of the rest. However, if we also take into account a films' ability to engage the viewer with the action and a specific atmosphere, the more intimate All Is Lost, by Charon, is a very equal opponent for Cuarón. Even though instead of a spectacular meteor shower we have only a tiny little container, instead of majestic orchestral music we only have remote depressing hope-theme motif playing occasionally, and instead for the infinite cosmos the hero is faced only with a larger puddle, the experience of the appreciative viewer is almost as intense, complex and emotional as in Gravity. On top of that, there's a more likeable survivor who has mastered some really great minimalist acting over a long career. I’m giving it a nice 4*, which, given the low ambitions of the film, I consider the highest possible. )) P.S. I also gave Gravity 4*, just in case.... It’s an excellent film. ()

Annonces

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I originally thought I was going to direct this accusation more at Gravity, but in the end it will fall in the middle of the ocean. This film lacks any added value. The situation is tense, and in terms of craft it more or less very decent (even captivating in places), Redford acts to his last breath, but if I don’t take into account the intense 106 minutes, filled with the sequence of my worst nightmares, then All is Lost is just a very superficial metaphor of loneliness and hope. The character of "our guy" (title label) is very approximate, and it's more about loving Redford's charisma, vitality and economical acting - “fuck" hasn't sounded this authentic on the big screen for a long time. The film consumes almost all the words during the introduction for a rather banal epitaph of the hero, whilst paradoxically the subsequent course does not tell us much about it. In no way does it lack an epic dimension, and the runtime flew right by. What was missing was something vertical (except for the emphasized vistas and camera ceilings). Maybe this is because the film can be read through Redford's personality mainly as the symbolic image of the withering "old America" (which did not impress me), and the challenge to endure to the last Amen, because there is a ray of hope even in absolute darkness. As sung in Alex Ebert's final song: "Old man, the word... raised on golden days, God love the USA". But there is simply something missing here that, with a bit of pathos, I call a universal, and, at the same time, a specific view of exposed humanity, the opportunity to identify not only with the situation, but also with the protagonist. It is powerful, but only when it is happening. Looking back, it slowly but surely disappears like a sailboat with too fragile a hull. [70%] ()

3DD!3 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Awesome Redford under the modest and precise direction of J.C. Chandor. An intense ride from start to finish, when even the viewer descends into deep despair, face to face with the bleakness of the situation. The golden adage “things could always be worse" applies here too. Maybe it’s a bit of a shame that the creator didn’t cross the imaginary line, but it’s true that everybody would have left the theater in a really gloomy mood. One of the movies of the year doomed to be trampled (but unrightfully) by the strong competition. ()

Kaka 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A unique and unusual film based solely on editing and the main protagonist - Robert Redford. Similarly urgent and minimalist as Tom Hanks's Cast Away, or Gravity, except here the hero has even less space, a few square meters to be precise. Although everything seems to be captured authentically at first glance, it doesn't entertain that much, its too slow and contemplative. In the end, only very high-quality craftsmanship remains. ()

Photos (45)