Résumés(1)

La prodigieuse histoire vraie d’une jeune femme surdouée devenue la reine d’un gigantesque empire du jeu clandestin à Hollywood ! En 2004, la jeune Molly Bloom débarque à Los Angeles. Simple assistante, elle épaule son patron qui réunit toutes les semaines des joueurs de poker autour de parties clandestines. Virée sans ménagement, elle décide de monter son propre cercle : la mise d’entrée sera de 250 000 $ ! Très vite, les stars hollywoodiennes, les millionnaires et les grands sportifs accourent. Le succès est immédiat et vertigineux. Acculée par les agents du FBI décidés à la faire tomber, menacée par la mafia russe décidée à faire main basse sur son activité, et harcelée par des célébrités inquiètes qu’elle ne les trahisse, Molly Bloom se retrouve prise entre tous les feux… (SND)

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Critiques (11)

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Voici encore un grand rôle pour Jessica Chastain et une nouvelle preuve qu’elle est probablement l’actrice la plus oubliée du moment dans les remises de prix. L’histoire est très longue et est racontée sur trois segments temporels, donc il est nécessaire de se réserver suffisamment de temps et d’attention. Et même si alcool et drogues jouent une part importante dans ce film, vous aurez du mal à le suivre si vous êtes fatigué, ivre ou défoncé. Je suis très content d’avoir vu Le Grand Jeu, même si – et je suis formel – il n’est pas à la hauteur de Miss Sloane. ()

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Un film qui semble trop sérieux pour inclure une courte scène dramatique (le tueur de la mafia) et trop intelligent pour avoir besoin de dialogues répétitifs de 20 secondes pour exprimer ce qui peut être dit en cinq secondes (sans perdre de point). Donc, si je ne veux pas m'appuyer sur une efficacité superficielle, je veux raconter une histoire crédible avec suffisamment de perspicacité sociale et une réflexion réfléchie sur le côté moral de ses personnages. Ce qu'il ne fait pas complètement non plus. Le Loup de Wall Street sans regard satirique, humour, énergie et côté humain des personnages. Mais avec tellement de costumes et de décolletés sexy que l'ennui n'est certainement pas à craindre. JEREMIE ()

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Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Jessica Chastain plays mostly strong female characters in recent years. Her role in Molly’s Game is similar in this aspect but at the same time it is so well done that you will be amazed. The director Aaron Sorkin put so much information into the 140 minutes of the running time that I had problems to understand it all and remember at least parts of it. The storytelling is really straightforward but on the other hand you don’t have time to get bored either. And if you get lost in all the poker terminology, one glance on Jessica will convince you that it doesn’t really matter. Thankfully there was the lawyer played by Idris Elba by her side, because when she couldn’t explain something, he did it for her with a pleasure. Molly’s Game is a great movie. It is lively, fun and it has an unbelievable story. And these films are the best… ()

gudaulin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Despite the presence of my favorite actress Jessica Chastain, positive reviews, and feedback, Molly's Game is a film that never captivated me for a single moment and mostly left me puzzled. It's not so much about Jessica's reliable performance as it is about the way the character is written. Secondly, in a short period of time, I felt like the creative team was trying to sell me a feminist drama about a strong woman facing societal pressure. For example, in the case of Happy Valley, that series felt much more convincing and I was able to identify with its protagonist and overlook the feminist tone. In Molly's Game, I perceived the character of Molly Bloom completely differently than Aaron Sorkin did. Not as a victim, but as a manipulative and ambitious bitch who ultimately overestimated her abilities and only with great luck managed to balance her collision with the American legal system. If the film worked with a character type like the one in There Will Be Blood, which is devoid of any idealization and sentimentality, I would take Molly's Game much more seriously. With this film, it seemed to me that despite all the effort to create a strong female character, the film sells costumes by top designers, the actress's physical attractiveness, and her perfect makeup, i.e., the Hollywood gloss. The film may be a problem even for those who don't care about poker, as there is a bit too much of it at the expense of the characters. I'll give it three stars because, despite all my reservations, Sorkin is talented and simply because of Jessica, but it's a very weak three stars. Overall impression: 50%. ()

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I will skip the traditional (and justified) criticisms of Sorkin's original monologue-dialog reclamation style, because you either love it or hate it. And the same could be said about this movie. Moreover, Sorkin even highlights his strength (or weakness as you wish). And as a result the aspects that the better directors adapting his material in the past always tent to hide somehow, is even more noticeable here. Anyway, there´s still a lot to be unhappy about. It 's longer than it should be, there' s a lot of stylized passages à la The Big Short with dialogs, which are directed like in a theater. Molly comes out of it too positively (it 's too genteel), her personal life is omitted (which would have been fine if it had not been too obvious that´s essential ) and it lacks a proper ending. Which is related to the fact that it may have come about with too little distance from those events, in other words, not everything is / can be / wants to be said. But at the same time, it is true that Molly's destiny is so captivating and stimulating that it would manage to handle even a significantly worse movie than the one made. In addition, Jessica and Idris are Sorkin's refined replicas and they both obviously enjoy it a lot. And myself as well. ()

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