Résumés(1)

Dans une banlieue napolitaine proche de la ruine, le doux et frêle Marcello tient un salon de toilettage pour chiens. Père séparé, il améliore ses revenus en dealant un peu de cocaïne afin de payer des vacances à sa fille. De la poudre, c’est justement ce que vient réclamer son ami Simoncino, qui sort tout juste de prison. Ancien boxeur, ce colosse brutal terrorise tout le quartier. Son ascendant sur Marcello est tel qu’il l’entraîne malgré lui dans des coups tordus, comme le cambriolage du voisin bijoutier du toiletteur... (Arte)

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Critiques (5)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Humain et glacial à la fois. Accrocheur du premier au dernier plan. Tant par son thème particulier que par son traitement, en adéquation avec la tristesse de l'histoire et la grisaille de l'environnement dans lequel elle se déroule. Il est difficile de croire que quelque chose de tel fasse partie de l'UE. Et il est appréciable que Garrone, avec son talent particulier, se soit penché sur ce visage particulier de l'Italie. J'aurais souhaité un petit peu plus du final, mais c'est quand même bon – et il m’a permis de comprendre la décision déroutante du personnage central. En tout cas, la performance de Marcello Fonte mérite d'être récompensée ! [Cannes] ()

Othello 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I sincerely envy anyone who found what they were looking for here. For my part, Garrone doesn't provide any guide to a character where I couldn't understand what defined her identity and motivations, so I've decided to accept my suspicion that he simply decided to sell a melodramatic story of a naive well-meaning outsider (cute little girl and doggies included) who somehow falls hard on his luck. And with the bonus of a double feature, in the touching tale of a marginalized actor who was discovered in a ditch somewhere and given a Cannes Palme d’Or by morning. Unfortunately, the fantastic cinematography, production design, and acting fail to obliterate the biggest problem of all, which is that I simply don't buy it. ()

Annonces

EvilPhoEniX 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Matteo Garrone, who made the great morbid horror anthology Tale of Tales, now comes up with a dense, raw drama whose authenticity and bleakness will make you uncomfortable. The protagonist, played by Marcello Fonte (a perfect performance), is a typical good guy to the bone who loves his dogs and his only beloved daughter, but his life is terrorized by the local bully, a cocaine addicted former boxer who terrorizes everyone in the neighborhood, and everyone in town wishes him nothing but the worst, really, a man like a rabid dog worthy of being put down. The whole film is set in a bleak seaside town in dirty Italy and the two leads make the film very entertaining and engaging. The finale is grittier than I expected and you end up rooting for the main character to the max, even if some of his decisions were very ill-considered. A solid Indie affair that is both sad and chilling. 80% ()

angel74 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Who would have guessed at the beginning that antagonizing the gunman Marcello could have fatal consequences? The submissive good-natured Dogman didn't exactly have an easy time, but in a way, he brought many of his troubles upon himself. Nonetheless, he also managed to extricate himself from them in the end. Italian director Matteo Garrone made an excellent social drama, which has several strong and very unpleasant scenes. The great Marcello Fonte, who plays the title role, captivated me so much with his authentic performance that there was very little missing for me to give the film five stars. (85%) ()

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The main character of Dogman is probably the most interesting film character I have seen in a long time. You simply can’t stop rooting for him, but on the other hand you get pissed at him at certain moments because of where the story is going. The film’s setting is the right amount of bleak, the people are the right amount of Italian. Everybody fits in, like a deck of card fits into its box. And since everything is quite accurate and some of the shots are like the most beautiful ones from the rather unsightly Italian seacoast in autumn, you would expect that the revenge, which is what this movie is truly about, turns out like it usually would in a movie… and in the end, it turns out to be sort of… absurd. In my opinion, the ending could have been a bit more consistent and factual, but other than that it was one of my best Italian film experiences. ()

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