Résumés(1)

Depuis le décès de sa femme et son licenciement, Ove se sent vieux et terriblement inutile. À longueur de journée, il erre dans sa maison comme une âme en peine. Pour s'occuper, il multiplie les rondes de sécurité au sein de sa copropriété et harcèle ses voisins pour le moindre manquement au règlement intérieur... À 59 ans, grincheux et dépressif, Ove n'attend plus qu'une seule chose de la vie : la mort ! Il décide donc d'en finir... mais ses tentatives de suicide échouent lamentablement. La situation se corse lorsque de nouveaux voisins emménagent, affreusement sympathiques : Parvaneh, une jeune Iranienne, son mari et leurs charmants enfants. Sans cesse importuné, Ove n'a plus un instant à lui pour se pendre tranquillement. Pire : à force de nouvelles rencontres et d'amitiés improbables, il se pourrait bien qu'Ove reprenne goût à la vie... (Paradis Films)

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Vidéo (6)

Bande-annonce 3

Critiques (6)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Une réflexion de vie sur un vieillard brisé et grognon - seulement à première vue. Ironique et touchante, captivante du point de vue narratif; avec des personnages que vous avez envie de connaître. Les acteurs jouant le vieux et le jeune Ove sont si bien joués que vous ne pouvez pas croire qu'ils ne sont pas eux-mêmes. Tout en étant précis comme des caricatures dans le portrait du personnage principal pour que tout le film repose sur sa personnalité. ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I've been loving movies about old age and taking stock lately, and this one is just that. It’s a story of a grumpy grandpa, his life, and his love life. Maybe he's a jerk, but perhaps he has his reasons. Life is beautiful and it's only us who make it ugly. The film has a nice human message and it's not boring. ()

Annonces

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais With The Hundred-Year Old Man, the Swedes created a new type of comedies that mixes absurd situations with the reality of everyday lives, which is something that Scandinavian cinematography quite agrees with. A Man Called Ove has its very nice and human story speak for it, which is once sad, only to make us laugh a moment later. On top of that, the setting is very interesting and original and it gives rise to a whole series of interesting situations which may seem absurd, but which are evidently based on the life experience of every Swedish person. For instance, the Volvo vs. Saab rivalry is absolutely genius. I was laughing so hard whenever I saw the cars in the film. I felt so good watching the movie that five stars are not enough for a movie like this. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Quite an overrated film that, although has some moral lessons, for my taste didn't quite hit the mark. The stubborn grumpy grandpa in the lead role disgusted with life and fed up with people was great and there were some funny situations, but overall my entertainment index stopped somewhere around 65%. Interesting piece of work anyway. ()

Othello 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Scandinavian mainstream films have a grateful Czech audience, because they speak their language, are not afraid of black humor, do not indulge in grand gestures, and lately, even with their squinting plots, give the impression that we are finally watching a domestically produced film. In other words, I have the impression that behind the success of Scandinavian cinema in our own backyards is the activation of the viewer's self-deception, where the usual altruism of "decent for a Czech film" is replaced with the personal pride of "I went to a good Nordic film", while still giving the person in question the stamp of a film explorer and connoisseur. Except that the target group is the same for both variants. Sure, compared to the slimy little dog-eat-dog opinion pond of the Czech mainstream, the cinematic North is more progressive in its opinions yet unafraid to dabble in "controversial" topics such as immigration, homosexuality, and in short the entire transformation of the world through the eyes of an old conservative pragmatist, but in any case it still accurately processes to death the mining of empathy for the character based purely on respect for the aged. Otherwise, there's no other reason to connect get on the same wavelength as the protagonist because he's a truly insufferable bastard who doesn't have a single character trait capable of engaging you. That's why the empathy is built up based on the incredibly parareal flashbacks about his love for his wife, who obviously must be suffering from something like hypertrophied altruism, because otherwise it really doesn't make sense how a likable, educated young woman can throw herself away on an autistic moron who permanently makes faces like Albert Fish. The emotion is then squeezed out of the viewer by the contrast of the old man's present-day loneliness compared to those flashbacks, which are so overwrought that, for example, the hero's wife is laughing in every situation, it’s a wonder she didn’t bite me through the screen. She reads and laughs, she goes on the bus and laughs, she eats soup and laughs. Ugh. The thrown-together handling of the entire story, which appeals to strong neighborhood cohesion in satellite suburban homes, also drives me to the brink of suicide and shows all too clearly who this adventure is intended for. ()

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