Pearl Harbor

  • États-Unis Pearl Harbor
Bande-annonce 1
États-Unis, 2001, 175 min (Coupe du réalisateur : 184 min)

Réalisation:

Michael Bay

Scénario:

Randall Wallace

Photographie:

John Schwartzman

Acteurs·trices:

Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett, Kate Beckinsale, Cuba Gooding Jr., Tom Sizemore, Jon Voight, Colm Feore, Mako, Alec Baldwin, William Lee Scott (plus)
(autres professions)

Résumés(1)

Amis depuis la plus tendre enfance, Rafe McCawley et Danny Walker sont deux brillants pilotes de l'armée de l'air américaine. La Seconde Guerre mondiale a commencé, mais les Etats-Unis n'ont pas encore engagé les hostilités. Rafe succombe bientôt au charme d'Evelyn Johnson, une jeune infirmière. C'est le coup de foudre. Mais ce dernier part combattre aux côtés des Britanniques. Evelyn et Danny sont, quant à eux, transférés sur la base américaine de Pearl Harbor. La paisible existence de ces deux jeunes gens bascule lorsqu'ils apprennent la mort de Rafe. Evelyn partage son chagrin avec Danny et un amour naît de leurs confidences. Rafe est pourtant vivant. En cette journée du 7 décembre 1941, les retrouvailles et les explications vont devoir être reportées à plus tard: au même moment, près de 200 bombardiers japonais surgissent dans le ciel de Hawaï pour une attaque surprise. (texte officiel du distributeur)

(plus)

Vidéo (1)

Bande-annonce 1

Critiques (8)

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais This is exactly the type of movie I don't like, and actually learned to hate. It's grandiose, it wants to show how everything will be magnificent, but when you look closer, you realize how small it actually is. The characters are tragically flat; you can't really connect with anyone, and it's all just for show like Bay's other films. No, I don't give credit to this director. ()

novoten 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A perfect romantic film with a war storyline as a supplement and an unsuccessful attempt at patriotism as a flaw. At the time, it was a deserved film event, and more than a decade later, it brings back heavy nostalgia and still perfectly functions as a blockbuster with one of Zimmer's life soundtracks. ()

Annonces

lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Pearl Harbor is probably the most kitschily pathetic piece of Hollywood I've ever seen. In this respect, one might be tempted to label Bay's Armageddon the winner, but there all the jingoism and heroism was entirely intentional, keeping the nonsense-filled story in the comic realms of pure narrative delight. Here, however, everything is taken terribly seriously, which is understandable given the subject matter, but when it’s juxtaposed with the sheer anti-realism of all the plot twists, sucked out of some universal filmmaking handbook for clichés and mass entertainment, it also makes the film an almost unbearably intrusive, cruelly long, arrogant show-off. It's true that Bay has a knack for the craft, everything looks awfully good under his direction and the air raid scene has an amazing audiovisual charge, but narratively this guy wanders through boring romance and hints of gripping drama, showing fully how much worse a director he is than, say, the natural humanist Spielberg. The best things about the film are the score by Hans Zimmer, which is almost instantly iconic, and the natural charm of the likeable Kate Beckinsale, even though the script gave her a rather impossible role. ()

DaViD´82 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais US patriotism on a massive scale, colossal and complicated romance, thanks to a love triangle and unimpressive acting performances all wrapped in Bay’s trademark aggressive directing style, or else a load of hogwash that ended up better than it seemed it could at first sight. And this is primarily thanks to the amazing scene involving the attack on Pearl Harbour. Bay’s first (but not last) blunder. ()

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais After Armageddon I was expecting another stupid movie by Bay. It was more or less the case, but I have to admit that Pearl Harbor is a daft film that I quite liked. Until the attack scene it felt like a nice picture book, where the plot and the acting are not important. The raid itself is solidly shot, and even the tearful moment at the very end with the crawling little boy just fits into this cliché. ()

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