Southcliffe

(série)
  • Grande-Bretagne Southcliffe
Bande-annonce 2
Grande-Bretagne, 2013, 3 h 5 min (Durée : 45–47 min)

Réalisation:

Sean Durkin

Scénario:

Tony Grisoni

Photographie:

Mátyás Erdély

Acteurs·trices:

Sean Harris, Mark Badham, Shirley Henderson, Hayley Squires, Emma Cunniffe, Alfie Stewart, Eddie Marsan, Joe Dempsie, Anatol Yusef, Kaya Scodelario (plus)
(autres professions)

Épisodes(4)

Résumés(1)

Ville anglaise, Southcliffe voit s'abattre sur elle une vague de plusieurs fusillades le même jour, causant la mort de nombreuses personnes. Un journaliste reviendra dans cet endroit qui l'a vu grandir. Il sera témoin des différentes émotions ressenties par les proches des victimes à la suite de ces évènements : la peine, le deuil, la culpabilité et la rédemption... (texte officiel du distributeur)

(plus)

Critiques (2)

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The first two parts, which, like "Durkin" unpredictably pass between two states of consciousness (before / after the catastrophe), they are a completely phenomenal example of how the poetics of psychological art film can be combined with the attractive structure of series storytelling. Although the second half of the series is visually and impressive in terms of acting, sometimes it has a hard time withstanding the intentional short-circuiting and neurotic nature of the actions of the characters. It is saved a fair but by Durkin's way of defending clarity, but I can't shake the feeling that it was either supposed to be a radical feature film, or a longer series that would elaborate on the characters and their relationships. Despite the slight mess of the last episode and the bitterness that the captivating energy of the first hour and a half eventually vanishes into the swampy fog, I rate this distinctive interpretation of Quality TV highly. [80%] ()

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I can't shake the feeling that it would have been better suited to the form of a two-hour film rather than a three-hour miniseries divided into four episodes, but it's still highly topical and, in its "it could happen in your neighborhood" realism, disturbingly chilling. ()