Exodus : Gods And Kings

  • Canada L'exode : Dieux et rois (plus)
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Résumés(1)

Exodus, le nouveau film de Ridley Scott, met en scène le courage et l'audace d'un homme qui va défier le pouvoir de tout un Empire. En s'appuyant sur une 3D immersive et des effets spéciaux de toute dernière génération, Ridley Scott redonne vie à l'histoire du leader prophétique Moïse alors que celui-ci s'élève contre le pharaon Egyptien Ramsès, et qui va conduire, au cours d'un incroyable périple, 600.000 esclaves hors d'Egypte, en proie à une terrifiante épidémie de peste. (20th Century Fox FR)

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Critiques (8)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Épopée biblique sur Moïse, dans laquelle il n'est pas nécessaire d'analyser les personnages et leurs relations, car nous les connaissons tous très bien. Une belle conception épique avec des extérieurs époustouflants et de beaux costumes, ainsi qu'une représentation spectaculaire des légendaires plaies ou de la traversée de l'océan font de ce film un divertissement. Il manque de profondeur. Je suis athée et les événements bibliques eux-mêmes ne me suffisent pas pour être enthousiaste. Ils auraient dû servir de base de réflexion pour une représentation sensible de la motivation des personnages et des difficultés de la phase historique cruciale de l'humanité, de ses problèmes politiques et ethniques. Tout cela fait défaut dans l'Exode, ou est simplement survolé. Une œuvre d'importance, moins divertissante que la bêtise "Dracula: Légende inconnue". ()

NinadeL 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The retelling of a biblical story zillion times... this time reinterpreted by Ridley Scott. Well, if I didn’t know that Joel Edgerton is such an extremely flexible actor (those different masks, work with his body, accent), I'd say it all hinges on Bale. But Edgerton is the real hero of Exodus: Gods and Kings. Overall I'm not thrilled, but I guess it's good not to forget about some of the Hollywood classics. However, I consider The Prince of Egypt cartoon to be the best of all the treatments. ()

Annonces

Isherwood 

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anglais At first, I thought Scott was going to do the bidding of the Jewish lobby, which has long since failed to let the viewing public be moved by its bitter fate through a narrative sandal. Yet he goes about it in a surprisingly rational way, and so while the pragmatic appreciation of the seven plagues of Egypt by Pharaoh's croaker is still laughable, Moshe's revolution, in which he is on the edge of personal madness, is no longer feigned, and the unorthodox vision is definitely clamped at the bottom of the Red Sea, with even the slight shortcoming (the not-quite-functional portrayal of the bond between the "brothers," which is fortunately saved by both characters; and 20 minutes more would have helped) receding and both ordinary viewers and the those familiar with the literary work will be satisfied. ()

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais We can clearly see in every other scene, how much the movie was edited and it is more that obvious that Ridley has a much longer version of it in his drawer. Without this, it would have been even better. But even in its current not polished form, it is exactly what one would expect from it. In other words, it is a truly magnificent and handcrafted adaptation of one of the most impressive stories ever. The snag is mainly in the form of the already mentioned cinema editing, which should have either been shorter and free of all those ambitious subversive motives and themes (Moses' blinded madness, his unbelief, vengeful (not)God of preschool age, emphasis on the non-mythological line, doubting Joshua, Macbeth-like Sigourney, much more sympathetic Egyptians led by the pharaoh, etc.) and simply being an "precise" adaptation of the well-known or should have been even longer and should have been more focused on the above-mentioned and purely sympathetic ambitious subversions. In its current form, however, it is unfinished and halfway, because the epicness of Egypt, individual wounds and the exodus itself were prioritized in terms of footage. Which is a letdown on one hand, but on the other hand it is very enjoyable to watch. That is for sure. ()

3DD!3 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais An untraditional presentation of God (the comparison God as a kid with a magnifying glass and people as ants lacks metaphor) and a story of Egyptian plagues. Scott works with modern themes and reflects the contemporary wherever he can. Sometimes this is to the benefit of the movie, sometimes to its harm. The problem is the restricted length (Sigourney appears almost as an extra) which eats away at the sophistication of the characters and the significance of some decisions. Exodus reminds me of the movie theater version of Kingdom of Heaven which, despite its quality workmanship, didn’t manage to say what it was all about and that wasn’t fixed until the director’s cut came out on Blue-Ray. The exteriors and the effects are well-polished and the Egyptian makeup soon didn’t matter anymore. At all stages of Moses, Bale was excellent, but his friendly atheist becomes a believer schizophrenic far too soon and in the second part the good guy turns into a bad guy, God knows why... and Rameses just won’t negotiate with terrorists. The viewer understands this in the light of contemporary events, doesn’t he? Doesn’t he? Missed opportunities certainly, a bad movie definitely not. Compared to Prince of Egypt, just a little superfluous. ()

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