The Disaster Artist

  • États-Unis The Disaster Artist (plus)
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Résumés(1)

En 2003, Tommy Wiseau, artiste passionné mais totalement étranger au milieu du cinéma, entreprend de réaliser un film. Sans savoir vraiment comment s'y prendre, il se lance … et signe The Room e plus grand nanar de tous les temps. Comme quoi, il n'y a pas qu'une seule méthode pour devenir une légende ! (Warner Bros. FR)

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Critiques (10)

Goldbeater 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Quelle que soit l'image que vous ayez de Tommy Wiseau – un visionnaire optimiste, un rêveur tragique ou plutôt un raté qui a trop fait parler de lui –, ça n’a pas la moindre importance. Car ici, c’est James Franco qui tient les rênes. Et visiblement, il est au sommet de sa forme. Il est intéressant de noter que The Disaster Artist fonctionne à tous les niveaux. La distribution fait sens, le jeu d’acteurs convainc et, pour ne rien gâcher, on a droit à un amusant caméo toutes les deux minutes (le meilleur arrivant après le générique de fin, donc regardez jusqu’au bout !). Évidemment, la deuxième moitié s’apprécie mieux si on connaît au moins un minimum The Room. En regardant le film, j’ai eu l’impression que les créateurs ne se sont pas ennuyés pendant le tournage et qu’ils ont fait leur possible pour transmettre cette joie au public. Et rien que ça, ça fait déjà mon bonheur ! ()

JFL 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Despite everything that Franco says about his project, which is parroted by publicists and talk-show hosts, The Disaster Artist is not a good film. Above all, it lacks not only real drama and heart, but also proper insight into the characters’ inner selves. Unlike Burton’s frequently recalled Ed Wood, The Disaster Artist does not bring forth any new or remotely intense or deeply felt view of Tommy Wiseau and his egocentric creative abortion, The Room. It merely repeats what has already been said many times, literally turning observations, which occur to truly everyone while watching The Room, into film sequences and only points out the inconsistencies and ambiguities in the myth that has grown up around the film and its creator, but without following up on them. The result is only a succession of freakshow vignettes in which Franco makes faces and pretends to give a great acting performance. Paradoxically, however, the closing comparison of the original scenes from The Room and their reconstructions by the Franco brothers and company shows that Franco is only mimicking Wiseau pretty much in the same way that a number of The Room fans did before and after him when talking about the film with friends and “re-enacting” the most bizarre sequences. The main drawback of The Disaster Artist is Franco himself. He is a workaholic with a pathological fear of standing still even for a moment. Because of that, his filmography is astonishing in terms of the number of projects he manages to bring to fruition every year as a producer, director and actor. However, the sad truth remains that Franco is not a multitasking genius but, like the vast majority of us, simply a person with limited capacity. In the field of acting, that can still be masked by fleeting effort and the work of make-up artists and costume designers, but Franco’s directing projects are a prime example of unrealised potential. Franco is incapable of fully focusing on one thing for several months, let alone years, as proper directors do, nor does he have his own distinctive style that would make his projects stand out (such as in the case of craftsmen Takashi Miike and Seijun Suzuki). For Franco, each film is just one of a thousand items on an ever-expanding “to do” list that give him a momentary diversion. Whereas that doesn’t particularly matter in the case of stylish hokum like Future World, The Disaster Artist would deserve to be handled by someone other than a fantasist with ADHD who tries to make himself into a great auteur by diving into the role while communicating with everyone during shooting by parodying Wiseau. The documentary project A Room Full of Spoons, with whose creators Wiseau engaged in litigation, offers hope in this respect, as the filmmakers allowed themselves to do what Franco did not do, which is that they aimed to uncover the major issues surrounding The Room – where Tommy comes from, how old is he and where he get the money for the film. ()

Annonces

gudaulin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The comparison to Burton's Ed Wood, which many commentators resort to, is logical and The Disaster Artist does not come out of it with honor in any way. James Franco still has a long way to go to be a master and above all, he lacks imagination. It's simply not a playful Burton-like film and it can't do anything other than parasitize on the legendary flop The Room. There is nothing else here than mechanical copying, while Tommy Wiseau is portrayed as a completely uncharismatic and, unfortunately, also downright annoying guy, who annoys the viewer with his performances. Much more could have been extracted from the source material. Overall impression: 45%. ()

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais James Franco is one the most active and creative members of the Hollywood crowd. In addition to comedies, he is often interested in more serious themes, and Disaster Artist is in a similarly serious spirit, even though it is actually revolving around a completely absurd affair. But I like the way he conveyed it. He portrayed the main character in such a way that he deserves at least an Oscar nomination. His creation treats every scene of the film this movie is about in a great detail. You won’t see how a movie is made every day, so you can appreciate a lot of such behind-the-scene moments. It’s a film worthy of attention and I now definitely want to see the original film this movie is about. Such a film story could have been written only by life itself. ()

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