Résumés(1)

Deux frères pas très futés (Channing Tatum et Adam Driver) décident de monter le casse du siècle : empocher les recettes de la plus grosse course automobile de l’année. Pour réussir, ils ont besoin du meilleur braqueur de coffre-fort du pays : Joe Bang (Daniel Craig). Le problème, c’est qu’il est en prison… (ARP Sélection)

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Critiques (10)

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Cette fois-ci, Soderbergh m’a déçu. Voir la bande à Danny d’Ocean’s Eleven dans un trou perdu ne m’intéresse pas le moins du monde et je n’ai donc eu d’autre choix que de souffrir le martyre pendant deux heures et de me contenter des personnages amusants du barman manchot et d’Hilary, actrice avec un grand A. ()

Matty 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglaisThey’re going to know what we want them to know.” Logan Lucky is an inventive and humorous mix of a social drama from working-class life and a heist film, a prison-escape flick and a movie about swindling, where mainly the viewer is the one being conned. There is no traditional antagonist whom the protagonists would try to outwit. It is not until the final act that the narrative is enhanced with a character who goes for the throat of the gang around Jimmy (and who is played by an actress famous enough for you to suspect that she won’t simply give up), thanks to which the film is thrilling even after the action. Soderbergh doesn’t cut directly to the chase and, in the opening part of the film, spends a relatively long time on developing the characters and fleshing out their social environment (thus the two-hour runtime makes sense), which he puts to good use in the emotionally charged climax, when I found myself alternating between emotion, amusement and (eventually) dismay in quick succession. Thanks to meaningful “backstories”, understandable motivations and a well-chosen cast, Logan Lucky, unlike other crime comedies, doesn’t lose its persuasiveness even when it asks us to sympathise with characters who sometimes say and do strange things, but for the most part, they are not one-dimensional comedic characters and their behaviour is relatively consistent throughout the film. Even charmingly bizarre, mostly unexplained moments, such as the password “cauliflower” and the taking of a bag from the “bear’, and moments that are entertaining because they are explained in too much detail (making a bomb out of gummy bears) fit flawlessly with the poetic nature of the film. As usual, Soderbergh takes extra care to ensure that nothing that happens in the film comes across as random (without motivation). As gradually becomes apparent, the film is well thought out down to the smallest detail. Soderbergh very skilfully utilises the protagonist’s favourite song, the character of his former classmate, the fact that he doesn’t own a mobile telephone and the special “salt” that Joe Bang sprinkles on his boiled eggs. The careful composition with very clever distribution of information goes hand in hand with Soderbergh’s patient direction of individual scenes. He knows exactly when to cut (and, conversely, when to stay in one place with the camera), where to place the camera so that the shot not only tells us everything important but is also funny, and how to shoot action so that we don’t lose our bearings in the given space. Logan Lucky may appear to be a mere first-class genre movie, but it offers so many premium “services” that I have no problem giving it a full five-star rating and ranking it among this year’s most satisfying cinematic experiences. 90% ()

Annonces

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A film about a bunch of assholes, completely different from the usual Hollywood films. The Logan brothers are retarded. One is all muscles and the other one is missing a hand, so he is truly crippled. For their break-in gang they also recruit Daniel Craig, who is at the time sitting in jail with one last month of desperate staring into the wall left. However, they come up with an idea how to take him along, even though he is in jail, which gives the whole thing an absurd dimension. The film is funny at times, especially when there is a rebellion in jail because they do not have the newest volume of The Game of Thrones source book series in their library. Otherwise, it is your usual average film. For a while the absurdity reminded me of the Coen brothers’ stories, the only difference being that their characters and dialogues are way funnier than in this film. ()

MrHlad 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais It probably wouldn't be a good idea to go into Logan Lucky thinking you'll get a redneck version of Ocean’s Eleven, but I didn't count on that. On the other hand, the new Soderbergh film might have some of that style. Actually, probably any style. While there are a few endearingly bizarre humorous moments, Logan Lucky is far from a comedy. There's a heist, but its fairly seamless planning and execution is unlikely to excite fans of heist movies. There's some drama, too, as the protagonists have to deal with the fact that their lives are in the gutter and it's not likely to get any better, but we don't get anything groundbreaking or particularly interesting in that regard either. And what you end up with is a film that, while full of stars, fails to entertain in any of its forms. Fortunately, it doesn't bore either. ()

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Who wants to watch the perfumed masters of the thievery craft in a well-fitting suit today... It's a white trash world. Soderbergh is back with another genre short circuit, which is not even a little blunt, even though it looks that way at first glance. A manically constructed, deliberately subversive, economically ridiculous indie mutation of the heist genre, which perhaps loses out where one expects the biggest attraction (robbery), but it makes up for it where Ocean's Eleven was completely powerless - on a social level. You can sympathize with the Logan’s group in the most ordinary of things. When John Denver's hackneyed song sounds from the mouth of a disgustingly painted child, it's unexpectedly the best thing ever. An ode to being a loser, a film sneering at the pompous American facade, but equally sensitive to characters from the periphery... it's not a completely smooth ride, but it's something you can easily fall in love with. Steven returns dignity to the rednecks. That is not the only reason why it is good that he returned to the screen. ()

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