Résumés(1)

Utoya 22 Juillet retrace les attentats d'Utoya, en Norvège lorsque le terroriste d'extrême droite Anders Behring Breivik avait fait 77 morts à Oslo et sur l'ile d'Utoya en 2011. C'est justement sur l'ile norvégienne que se déroule le film. Plongés dans la peau de Kaya, militante des jeunesses travaillistes, les spectateurs vivent de l'intérieur l'interminable horreur telle qu'ont pu la vivre les nombreux militants prisonniers sur l'ile d'Utoya. (Potemkine Films)

(plus)

Vidéo (4)

Bande-annonce 2

Critiques (7)

Goldbeater 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Un autre film sinistre qui démontre que le sentiment de sécurité n’est qu’illusion. Dans Utøya, le rôle principal, c’est l’authenticité. Je peux m’imaginer que, pour ce film, nombreux seront ceux qui diront que la forme prévaut sur le contenu. Ce n’est en tout cas pas mon point de vue, même si je comprends tous ceux qui ont du mal avec Utøya, 22 juillet, le film étant très difficile à visionner. Les créateurs ont beaucoup de mérite pour avoir filmé l’intrigue dans un milieu relativement délicat et avec des jeunes acteurs imprévisibles, le tout en une seule prise ! Impressionnant et très inconfortable et dérangeant émotionnellement. [KVIFF 2018] ()

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Hats off to the filmmakers for managing to pull this off in one single shot. It adds an incredible sense of authenticity. It’s just a shame that the movie is sometimes lacking in atmosphere. After all, it took the Norwegian cops ages to finally catch that damned Breivik. On the other hand, I must admit that the actual content overpowered the premise. Even if this movie brims with quality filmmaking, it’s ultimately still “just” a reconstruction of a massacre and nothing more. After watching this, I had to go watch some documentaries as well to get a better picture on this. If it were up to me, I’d sent Breivik to Guantanamo so that they could go rogue on his ass. Whatever the Norwegian press sometimes write about their prisons make them look like a walk in a park, which is a laughable punishment for what he’s done. ()

Annonces

lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A thorough lesson in cheap narrative manipulation. I believe that an audience of a highly sensitive nature might be impressed, and I can’t deny at least the strong depiction of those seemingly endless 72 minutes (though that’s probably because the concept of the film is utterly boring and several passages are endless, especially for the viewer). A strong and heavy topic transformed into flat narration that lacks arguments, which only aims to exhaust the viewer without stimulating any interpretation or curiosity. To a great extent, this is thanks to the properly authentic and chilling format, but it’s mostly tedious, shallow and uninteresting, which for a premise like this it’s very bad. Paul Greengrass’s 22 July is far more intense because it doesn’t rely only on effect and it’s not afraid to place the whole event, including the suffering of the innocent victims (for which I can't find enough words of sympathy) in a much more urgent and provocative argumentative context (and no, the film cannot be defended with the argument that it should only be a raw depiction of the events on the island, because such depiction should communicate with the viewer instead of having them yawn). 50% ()

EvilPhoEniX 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Overrated to the point of woe and a completely unrewarding and unnecessary film that only feeds Brevik's infamy in the media. The event that took place on 22 July 2011 on the island of Utøya in Norway was horrific, resulting in the death of 77 young students, but unfortunately the film falls far short of representing the horror that took place in reality. I had a big problem with the fact that we see absolutely nothing in the film only hear it, so my experience would be quite similar if I was blind. The film only focuses on one girl who runs, screams, hides in among the threes or under a rock looking for her sister for the entire film, while Breivik is somewhere in sight shooting at the students, but all you hear is gunshots, screaming and running. There is only one dead body, one wound and absolutely no blood in the film, not even Breivik himself is shown, and I take that as a huge screw-up since they mention the word 'massacre' everywhere. It's filmed quite authentically and in one take, but so what if nothing happens for the whole film. I hope Paul Greengrass makes a real massacre in the American remake next year, with steamy psychological terror and a maniacal Breivik to showcase the real horror that took place back then on screen. If only they had at least shown pictures of the deceased at the end so I could take it as a memorial, but I didn't get to see that either. This has no balls, no juice, no drive, no emotion. Bleh. 30% ()

Matty 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I believe that a thoughtfully enriching and formally courageous film can be made about the events in Norway seven years ago that not only leaves viewers shaken, but also forces them to think. Utøya: July 22 is really not such a film. Though I appreciate that its makers wagered predominantly on the realistic motivation of the scenes (which, however, is somewhat superfluous in a film with fictional characters), that in itself is not a guarantee of a good film. On the contrary, it leads to the fact that most of the film’s runtime consists of long, suspensefully simple shots of several characters hiding and sitting tight somewhere in the forest or under a rocky cliff. Furthermore, any authenticity is demolished by tasteless melodramatic crutches (a mother calling her dead daughter, a micro-plot with a boy in a yellow jacket) suggesting that the main and perhaps only (cynical) ambition of the film’s creators was to wring some emotions out of the viewers, to claw at their souls a bit by exploiting real terror (after all, this intention is indicated with a certain guilelessness by the sentence that Kaja delivers at the beginning while looking at the camera when she calls her mother: “You will never understand, just listen to me”). But the narrative is too straightforward (for proof that this can be done more inventively, see Van Sant's complex Elephant) and there are too few variables at play that would draw us into the story, so Utøya does not work even as an “adventure” survival horror movie. We may ask ourselves whether Kaja will survive or not, whether she will find her sister or not, but that’s all. Poppe relies on our connection to the protagonist, but forgets that the film is not a video game in which fear for the character’s life enhances the player’s control over her actions. As Son of Saul recently showed, it is possible to hold our attention without letting us catch our breath in the present moment while also making a complex statement on a particular tragedy. By contrast, Utøya is a paradoxical reconstruction of an event about which we learn almost nothing, with the exception of the opening and closing explanatory titles. For me, this is a prototype of a useless film without value added, which was made mainly to provoke a media response. It is a film in which it is possible to admire the athletic performance of the leading actress and the cameraman (even though the personalised camera work, which sometimes reacts to the surrounding stimuli independently of the characters, creates the misleading impression that we are watching scenes composed of found footage). 50% ()

Photos (31)