Résumés(1)

Dunkirk opens as hundreds of thousands of British and Allied troops are surrounded by enemy forces. Trapped on the beach with their backs to the sea they face an impossible situation as the enemy closes in. (Warner Bros. US)

Vidéo (20)

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Critiques (22)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français L'enfer de guerre non fonctionnellement coupé, plein de superbes prises de vue et d'une atmosphère rétro, agréablement soutenu par les saletés celluloides dans l'image et l'absence évidente d'éléments numériques. La tension dans le film (même dans les scènes qui n'en ont pas besoin) est créée uniquement par la bande son. Mais à la fin, j'étais heureux d'avoir le silence précieux. ()

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Un vrai travail d’orfèvre dont l’aspect formel est tellement déroutant que je me suis parfois demandé, face à l’enchaînement rapide, où et quand l’action avait lieu. Un film réussi qui, d’un point de vue technique et si on le regarde au cinéma, offre une expérience sensationnelle au spectateur. Kenneth Branagh est capable d’incarner des personnages représentant les deux camps du conflit. ()

Annonces

Matty 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Though Nolan’s previous films were more refined in terms of narrative and intellectually more ambitious, their ostentatious structure often overshadowed emotion. Dunkirk, which stays more grounded in a number of respects, is his most functional prototype of the epic movie that Hollywood currently needs, a major film that you will want to see not only in a technically well-equipped cinema (preferably IMAX), but also repeatedly. Thanks to Nolan’s focused direction, everything in the film is subordinated to the maximum sensory experience, the intensity of which rises with each viewing, as you become better oriented in the temporal relationships between the individual storylines and can experience more while working less on solving the narratological puzzle. Dunkirk is intoxicating, dizzying and unrelenting in its intensity from start to finish. (Viewed three times in the cinema, of which IMAX twice.) 90% ()

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Pomo, you just didn't get it. This isn't "sloppily edited", this is the brilliant creative intent of Nolan. The way he works with time in this film, how he tells three storylines through different time spans and then glues them together with the surgical precision of a master watchmaker, letting them intersect at the end to achieve a cathartic effect is simply admirable. Brilliant screenwriting. And this film has such high production values that I wouldn't hesitate to compare it to David Lean's war epics. This film will be the subject of extensive essays in film schools in the future, and film theorists will discuss it until judgement day. And it’ll get Oscars for sure. ()

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Emotionally, it flew over my head. Like, really, zero experience. Dunkirk looks nice, but that’s all there is to it. What fascinates me somehow is that Nolan, who’s always been a better storyteller than a director of action scenes, chose for his latest film a plot-lacking reconstruction of one action scene. He only gave the shape of a film to a historical event, which, given his cold approach, wasn’t enough for me. He made an unconventional war movie, yes – without Germans, almost without dialogue, alternating three storylines of different lengths … but to me the result is nothing. I never got the impression that the intertwining storylines supported each other in any way. If only their overlaps had some kind of reinvigorating effect (which was 100% de case in the escalating climax of Inception). Here, there’s nothing but chaos, which, IMHO, is also strangely missing some rather important parts of the story (the pier line: the conversation between the commanders, while two boys are hidden under the pier, that no other ship can sink by he pier … and voilà, in the next chronologically linked scene there’s another ship sinking? How did it get there? Did the boys try to get on it? How much time passed? Or was it the ship that sailed in the previous scene?). And though it all somehow fits together temporarily (although, at least for me, nothing comes out it, no catharsis, no satisfaction), in terms of spacial orientation, a couple of the scenes are a real mess. The pathos in the end unpleasantly surprised me, given the course so far. The concept is great, but the execution lacks any subjective effect. ()

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