Résumés(1)

Following their father's shocking death, Hollywood animal wrangler OJ (Daniel Kaluuya) and his sister Emerald (Keke Palmer) begin observing unexplained phenomena on their vast Southern California ranch that leads them down an obsessive rabbit hole as they plot attempts to capture the mystery on camera. Along with a former child star turned family theme park ringmaster (Steven Yeun) who neighbours the siblings, the pair's efforts to chase the spectacle soon bring terrifying consequences and unimaginable horror. The result is a complex social thriller that unpacks the seeds of violence, risk and opportunism that are inseparable from the romanticised history of the American West... and from show business itself. (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment)

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Critiques (11)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Pour un spectateur qui connaît le talent de réalisateur de Peele ainsi que les limites de son écriture, Nope est exactement le genre de plaisanterie annoncée par la bande-annonce. Peele sait filmer pratiquement n'importe quelle scène de manière engageante. Cependant, quand ces scènes, qui durent cent minutes, n'évoquent que peu de choses et que certaines d'entre elles n'ont aucun sens significatif pour une histoire déjà peu dense (l'Asiatique et le chimpanzé), cela devient simplement une manipulation superficielle. Le mélange inhabituel de motifs de genres de Peele (ici la science-fiction d'horreur et le western) peut sembler audacieux et original, mais dans un film qui veut effrayer mais en même temps est en train de balancer vers la parodie, la vision créative est perdue. Nope se situe quelque part entre Get Out, qui reposait sur une idée géniale, et Us, qui était une absurdité ridicule. ()

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais For two thirds the film is a compelling, engrossing and carefully constructed horror-thriller mystery that kept me engaged as the characters struggled to get to the bottom of the mystery. This part of Nope, which I was very pleased with, culminated in a magnificent night scene with "blood rain" that made me glow with bliss and consider awarding five star to a horror flick for the first time in a long time. But, as you can see, I didn’t go further than three. Because the film then turns into an action charade, where you don't care about the characters and just try to catch the design of the weird contraption and figure out if you like it or not. And what shocked me above all is that it doesn't actually come to anything. After his previous two films, you'd expect Jordan Peele to be ... smarter than that? Us may have been logically leaky, but I found its social references were very stimulating (and that goes twofold  for Get Out). There's nothing like that in Nope, or I don't see it there at first. Many people, often dismissively, refer to Peele as the king of "elevated horror", but this is, in the end, more or less an ordinary genre film. In the space of half an hour, the film shoots two or three banal ideas (what people are willing to risk for fame and success / the fascination with tragedy / the stupid notion that man can tame everything), which it then repeats to the point of foolishness, but doesn't take them anywhere. I don't want to sound overly critical, Nope is definitely nice to look at, it has a number of impressive scenes and it's certainly a good film to see in the cinema, but after the excellent first two acts I can't help feeling disappointed at the end. ()

MrHlad 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Siblings OJ and Emerald are struggling with a failing farm, their own relationship, and now with something hiding in the clouds, and as it soon turns out, it's pretty damn dangerous. Only how do you expose this thing, which is good at hiding and doesn't like to let witnesses in, to the world? And how to survive it? Jordan Peele delivers a science fiction film that doesn't quite work in the first half, and he as a director doesn't quite manage to build the tension as well as he might have liked. But he makes up for it all with the final act, when the humans and the mysterious something from the clouds have a fair fight. The closer we get to the end, the smarter and more entertaining Nope gets. And it looks really beautiful. But Peele still can't do real fear and terror. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Best UFO movie in decade? Nope. Actually god damn YES! Jordan Peele is back and will once again divide audiences into two camps, though this time he'll get a bigger ovation than he did with the overrated Us thanks to the awesome material. Peele is a bit unconventional here, the social undertones aren’t as intense as in his previous films, there is a fair amount of humour and there are considerably fewer symbols and metaphors, yet he's made a unique and impressive genre film that again isn't as horror as it could have been, but I'm very pleased. Nope is definitely a horror film that manages to win the audience over with its strong cinematic aspects, and it looks really beautiful, especially in IMAX. The cinematography by Hoytema is a masterpiece in itself, some of the shots are breathtaking (and that's not something you see often in the horror genre), and the casting is great. Kaluuya is good, but next to Keke Palmer he seemed slightly like a shadow, because here she gives perhaps the strongest female performance in 15 years (emotions, screaming, speech, voice), an absolute acting tour-de-force from an unknown actress, whom I immediately want to see somewhere else. The music is well chosen and especially the atmosphere works fantastically, it's very uncomfortable, creepy, weird and unnerving in places. There are quite a few exciting and spectacular horror scenes that I will remember in the future (The chimp, a house covered in blood, a horse's head in a car, the digestive process of the villain and the screaming of the dead still ring in my ears). I'm perhaps only the final act away from a full score, which ironically is weaker than the previous ones (most people complain about the action-packed finale, but I wouldn't call it so, you can immediately imagine a spectacular Secret War style alien massacre and it doesn't really happen). I just wasn't sure if I liked the final scene or not, but you can't deny the creativity. Peele will definitely be making horror films in the future and I'd quite like to see a slasher or pure ghost story from him. Better than Arrival for me. Story 4/5 Humour 2/5 Violence 3/5 Fun 4/5 Music 4/5 Visuals 5/5 Atmosphere 4/5 Suspense 4/5 Emotion 4/5 Actors 5/5 Total: 8/10. ()

JFL 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais One could easily give in to the temptation to declare Peele the new Tarantino in an attempt to elevate him as one of the most distinctive and unique talents of the contemporary American overground. Except the fundamental difference between the two filmmakers is that Tarantino is a self-regarding nerd who adores the mythology of cinema and fictional heroes, whereas Peele turns to reality, as he is not only a cinephile, but also a creator who reflects on society and the bizarre paradoxes of its apparatuses and status quo. Therefore, his films are not merely sophisticatedly enthusiastic games played with film formulas and eclectic monuments to fringe movies and filmmakers, but biting satires and multi-layered works that can be simultaneously entertaining and chilling. Peele’s third feature-length project is fascinating as a uniquely unpredictable narrative that builds a stunning monument to cinema and its pioneers on a foundation of mystery and contact with something alien. In his equivalent of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Peele doesn’t go the way of Tarantino’s illusory fiction and enchanted, adoring pathos, but creates a film that consciously works with paradoxes and contradictions. Nope is thus both a sci-fi movie and a western dealing with the bitterness of the entertainment industry, which catches itself in its own trap as it grooms viewers who demand ever newer and more spectacular attractions. It thus seems inevitable that this changing industry should leave its old strivers and pioneers in the dust. Peele pays homage to the obsession with the perfect shot, but he paradoxically does so with the background of a time when that perfection is already artificial and created without risk thanks to computer-generated effects and digital post-production. What is most surprising about Nope is that, though it deals with old Hollywood and its magic and pathos, it does not address tearful old men, but conveys that ethos to the younger generation weaned on YouTube and hanging around on social networks every day. ()

D.Moore 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais An amazing atmosphere and so many original ideas... I'm glad that they still make (and get into cinemas) films like this that are probably impossible to fully understand at first, but which have such charm that you want to watch them again and only fully understand them afterwards. Original plot, realistic story, great (and well acted) characters, a sense of constant mystery… It's not horror, because then Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which Peele combines with Jaws, Signs and more, would have to be horror. I haven't seen a more original design of an alien "something" since Arrival, a number of scenes are without exaggeration unforgettable and I look forward to seeing them again. I think Nope is in many ways on par with Christopher Nolan's films, and if Nolan or Dennis Villeneuve had made it instead of Peele, the ratings here would be quite different. ()

lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Playful, but without balls and a proper climax. Peele again pretends to amass all the wit in the world for a thrilling finale, but in sum, he just patiently teases and misses the mark. There were a lot of suggestions and I appreciate especially the reference to the history of motion picture and its representative or media function, but I enjoyed the more mysterious and yet more down-to-earth Signs much more. ()

Goldbeater 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Après le présomptueux Us, dans lequel la critique et la métaphore sociales laminaient le fonctionnement du film dans son ensemble, Jordan Peele revient, dans Nope, à une idée simple enchâssée dans un spectacle de genre fonctionnel, tel qu’il l’avait fait avec Get Out. Et il a reproduit parfaitement ce charme spielbergien où l’on s’émerveille devant l’élément surnaturel, avec des touches mesurées de comédie, des moments d’horreur glaceuse de sang et, surtout, de l’aventure. Un film d’aventure aussi épique avec en plus l’impression de vivre cette aventure exclusive avec les personnages, ça faisait longtemps ! Pour moi, c’est clairement un pouce en l’air. Avec ce film, Jordan Peele se dévoile-t-il en génie du septième art et en maître du film d’épouvante, comme les médias américains et la critique essaient de le présenter ? Pas du tout. Mais est-il un cinéaste intéressant et talentueux dont la filmographie vaut-la peine d’être suivie ? Absolument. ()

rikitiki 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais OK, so this sci-fi horror movie has a nice, solid atmosphere, carefully building tension. The monster is only hinted at most of the time, it is only revealed at the end and the artwork on it is pretty good. The high-quality, but not well-known actors are a joy to watch. The flashbacks affording glimpses into the past, leading back to one similar incident, were carefully rationed, appearing at just the right times, giving away only what was absolutely essential. So the viewer is clear about what happened back then, and is just left wondering how much will be revealed in the next flashback. I give a big plus point for the fact that there is no love interest in the film. _____ However, I was annoyed by the music, as well as the hero's whiny, selfish sister, and I got a bit bored at times during some of the waiting. IN A NUTSHELL: Sentence: "He must be watching us from the cloud...," may have a completely different meaning than you think. ()

Othello 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Excellent in terms of Peele's creative limits, and in terms of the current creative limits of the contemporary mainstream it’s one of the films of the year. Anyway, who am I kidding, the movie itself is divine. If, like me, you're lucky enough to have seen the film as a complete "tabula rasa", you're in for a magical hour and a half of gradually unraveling mysteries in Hollywood Hills, during which various scripted red herrings and plot contrivances scramble around you, hilariously referencing the magical idiocy of 1990s American TV that Tarantino, for example, was so fond of talking about. After all, after his last film, I think Peele is much closer to him than to the oft-cited Hitchcock. It works as a genre piece, but with even a minimum of knowledge of American pop culture it starts to become apparent how insanely great the whole film is. The charm of big horse eyes, Harambe, the haunted aura of Hollywood ranches, cameramen measuring guns, Wincott pulled out of somewhere by his collar, a soundtrack that steals from both Morricone and Badalamenti, and a cloud that doesn't move for six months without anyone noticing. And Hoytema behind the camera. Yep. ()

Remedy 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Once again Jordan Peele didn't refrain from his typical contrasts and semi-hidden meanings, and that strong commitment to his work will forever (logically) be his trademark. Thank goodness that engagement isn't as spastic and annoying as it was in Us, which was a mega-miss and made me almost embarrassed for him. Nope is definitely the most cinematic work he's done to date, in terms of quality of craft and especially mise-en-scene. Peele can build a scene like few others, he's almost unmatched in that. The problem is that on some levels the script doesn't even give seemingly satisfactory answers, which unfortunately costs it credibility overall and the viewer is forced to wonder if he’s pulling some of the meanings out of his ass. And the "problem" is also that I started thinking this way only after the viewing, because the bulk of the film is, plain and simple, electrifying and absorbing. During the greatest audiovisual highlights, I was put in mind of Nolan or Villeneuve (probably the latter the most). Jordan Peele will probably never make a typical blockbuster (unlike those two), and his work will always be somewhat on the fringes of Hollywood production, but his narrative skill is so polished that I'll be quite interested in every one of his efforts to follow. Seen and experienced in IMAX. [75%] ()