Extase

  • anglais Symphony of Love (titre non officiel) (plus)
Bande-annonce

Résumés(1)

Eva vient d’épouser un homme plus âgé qu’elle, mais elle découvre qu’il est obsédé par l’ordre et ne laisse que peu de place à la passion au sein de leur vie de couple. Déprimée, elle décide de le quitter et de retourner vivre chez son père. Un jour, alors qu’elle se baigne dans un lac, elle fait la rencontre d’un beau jeune homme dont elle tombe immédiatement amoureuse… (Bach Films)

(plus)

Critiques (3)

NinadeL 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Due to the unpopular dialogue, I liked the Austrian version better. But that doesn't change the fact that there's a huge difference between loving Ecstasy and simply respecting it as a signboard for 1930s Czech cinema (even though it is a co-production). Being in the movie theater for the fourth time was just a symbiosis with the editing track... and Becce's music... and Zvonimír's gradation and Hedy's perfection. Hooray for work! ()

D.Moore 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Fantastic filmmaking, beautiful. If I had to pick one of Machatý's films I've seen so far that appealed to me the most, I'd pick From Saturday to Sunday, but that doesn't detract from Ecstasy's impact. It's a cinematic poem, one implied and literal metaphor after another, a meaning here, another there… Hedy Lamarr is magical and Machatý's beautiful shots, along with Becce's music, make even the simple act of waking up and opening the blinds an experience. Lastly, the finale with František Halas reciting... Yes, it's a strange finale, but it's again so well shot and gripping that it just belongs to the whole story, and anyone who wishes to can find cautionary tales as well (work shouldn't stand still = wife shouldn't go unnoticed?). ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Gustav Machatý shows that he was able to shoot human dramas and that this film is not just about the fact that there is a nude woman in it, which is still quite bold for its time. Well, let's face it, even in today's mainstream, it's not that traditional. The way the lives of individual heroes change here is brilliantly written and acted. ()