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IMDbPro

Mongol

  • 2007
  • R
  • 2h 6min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,2/10
51 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Mongol (2007)
This is the theatrical trailer for Mongol, directed by Sergei Bodrov.
Reproducir trailer2:21
9 vídeos
58 imágenes
Historical EpicPeriod DramaWar EpicActionBiographyDramaHistoryWar

Los primeros años de la vida de Gengis Kan, que fue esclavo antes de conquistar medio mundo en 1206.Los primeros años de la vida de Gengis Kan, que fue esclavo antes de conquistar medio mundo en 1206.Los primeros años de la vida de Gengis Kan, que fue esclavo antes de conquistar medio mundo en 1206.

  • Dirección
    • Sergei Bodrov
  • Guión
    • Arif Aliev
    • Sergei Bodrov
  • Reparto principal
    • Tadanobu Asano
    • Amadu Mamadakov
    • Khulan Chuluun
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,2/10
    51 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Sergei Bodrov
    • Guión
      • Arif Aliev
      • Sergei Bodrov
    • Reparto principal
      • Tadanobu Asano
      • Amadu Mamadakov
      • Khulan Chuluun
    • 195Reseñas de usuarios
    • 163Reseñas de críticos
    • 74Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado para 1 premio Óscar
      • 16 premios y 13 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos9

    Mongol: Theatrical trailer
    Trailer 2:21
    Mongol: Theatrical trailer
    Mongol
    Clip 1:29
    Mongol
    Mongol
    Clip 1:29
    Mongol
    Mongol
    Clip 1:57
    Mongol
    Mongol
    Clip 1:19
    Mongol
    Mongol
    Clip 2:07
    Mongol
    Mongol: Scene 3
    Clip 1:59
    Mongol: Scene 3

    Imágenes58

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    + 52
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    Reparto principal30

    Editar
    Tadanobu Asano
    Tadanobu Asano
    • Temudjin
    Amadu Mamadakov
    • Targutai
    Khulan Chuluun
    • Börte
    Honglei Sun
    Honglei Sun
    • Jamukha
    Liya Ai
    • Oelun - Temudjin's Mother
    • (as Aliya)
    Baasanjav Mijid
    • Esugei - Temudjin's Father
    • (as Ba Sen)
    He Qi
    • Dai-Sechen
    Ben Hon Sun
    • Monk
    Ji Ri Mu Tu
    • Boorchu
    Ayuur
    • Sorgan-Shira
    • (as A You Er)
    Huntun Batu
    • Altan
    • (as Hong Jong Ba Tu)
    Deng Ba Te Er
    • Daritai
    • (as E Er Deng Ba Te Er)
    Bao Di
    • Todoen
    Su Ya La Su Rong
    • Girkhai
    • (as Su You Le Si Ren)
    Sai Xing Ga
    • Chiledu
    Tegen Ao
    • Charkhu
    Zhang Jiong
    • Tangut Garrison Chief
    Odnyam Odsuren
    • Young Temudjin
    • Dirección
      • Sergei Bodrov
    • Guión
      • Arif Aliev
      • Sergei Bodrov
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios195

    7,250.5K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    7ccthemovieman-1

    Memorable Photography Highlights Story Of 'Temudjin'

    The most pleasing part of this film, I thought, was the excellent cinematography. Kudos to Roger Stoffers and Sergei Trofimov for an outstanding job photographing this movie, making the most bleak of landscapes look stunning many times and adding some wonderful closeup shots of objects and faces.

    It's not a bad story, either, although not one that will keep you riveted to the screen for the full two hours. However, I wasn't bored, either, although some of the action scenes looked too repetitive with very hokey-looking special-effects concerning blood splashing out of people in the battle scenes. It did not look real, but as if it were drawn. It's ironic in that the production values seem to be so high with a such a nicely-filmed effort, yet the action scenes are staged like a B-movie.

    In a nutshell, this is the story of how "Genghis Kahn," who is "Temudjin" throughout the movie, spent his tough early life and how he became the famous warrior. We just see how many hardships the man endured to become who he was later in life. He was never referred to as Genghis Kahn which, I learned hear, is a title more than a name. That must have come later, after he had control of all the Mongol armies, which is where the film ends.

    Many times, it's a not a pleasant existence for "Temudjin," who was marked man from the age of nine. We see him spend many lonely hours held captive in different places. The looks on his face are memorable. Odnyam Odsuren ad the young "Temudjin" and Tadanobu Asano as the adult "Temudjin" both had extraordinarily photographic faces.

    One of the few problems I had with the movie were understanding "the rest of the story" as certain scenes ended abruptly leaving me (and I assume other viewers) wondering "what happened?" His friends, though, were fun to watch and his bride was a beautiful, kind and strong woman, as pictured in this movie. Actually, I found this just as much of a love story as a war epic, and the romance angle was far more dramatic. The devotion the lead male and female had to each other, and the faithfulness and loyalty were inspiring, to say the least.
    7Delmare

    Weak on writing, but gorgeous to watch

    The first installment of a prospective trilogy, Mongol chronicles the early life of Temudjin, from his childhood on the Asian steppe to his ascension to Khan in 1206.

    The performances are passable – with special thanks to Honglei Sun, with an engaging turn as Temudjin's long-time friend and ally Jamukha – but the film has a rushed quality to it that is predominantly the fault of the screenplay. We jump too quickly from one scene to the next, the tension is constantly disrupted, and the characters are, for the most part, one-dimensional, void of quirks and personal histories and any of the other qualities that might make them relatable. I'm not asking for anything fancy: theirs was a tribal culture constantly engaged in the act of survival, and any philosophical rants or emotive confessionals would feel forced and inorganic, but none of that pardons the film for the simple crime of not giving its characters enough to do. The needs of the plot seem to dictate their actions, rather than the needs of the characters driving the plot.

    The biggest casualty, as always, is the love story. Ironically enough, Temudjin and Borte generate the most chemistry when they meet as children, Borte commanding him – with a freeness of spirit that gets less and less visible as the movie progresses – to pick her as his bride. Unfortunately, their subsequent romance is more about desperate rescues and long-winded goodbyes than it is the simple moments of intimacy that make a relationship believable.

    That said, the cinematography is tremendous and the costumes top-notch, and the casting department deserves a couple extra bushels of brownie points for picking actors who – unlike many a Hollywood ensemble – look like they could actually survive the conditions they supposedly inhabit. The combat scenes are captivating and cleverly shot, and despite the inevitable comparison to such battle-heavy epics as Lord of the Rings and Gladiator, Bodrov keeps a handle on things, never letting any of the battles run beyond the five minute mark, endowing the film with an element of realism and restraint where many of the other so-called epics go completely over the top. True, the movie relies a bit more heavily on CGI than I would prefer, but the Mongolian landscape, the real star of the show, is so gorgeous, so demanding, so jaw-droppingly authentic that we quickly forget our visual grievances and get lost in the rudimentary act of watching.

    A pity we can never lose ourselves completely.
    8excranz

    Great primer for a international audience unfamiliar with Ghengis Khan

    Saw this flick last night and I really loved it. As I understand it many Mongolians hate the film for historical inaccuracies and a heavily accented cast (the lead is from Japan) but if you are unfamiliar with the area and culture you'll find a great story that brings a new light to a historical figure that a surprisingly large portion of the world reviles.

    The cinematography is gorgeous and the subtitle script is excellent.

    What really makes this film great are the performances and the action scenes.

    When he gains followers and unites Mongolia you understand why.

    Hopefully the film will get people to read more about the original man and discover the historical inaccuracies.

    Of course as historical accuracies go it much more accurate then Elizabeth: The Golden Age.
    Thesquiddemuerte

    Look up your history before you knock this

    To the above two comments.

    You know how they say history was written by the victors? That's true for everyone but the Mongols. Most of their history was written by the Chinese, Russians, Arabs, and other conquered peoples who had an interest in perpetuating Genghis Khan = bloodthirsty savage.

    The movie is based on one of the few sources about Genghis khan written in Mongolian. It's called the secret history of the Mongols and was written shortly after he died as a record for the Mongolian royal family. He was just a chieftain's's son of a very minor tribe. That's what makes this story so impressive, he didn't start out as a king or a prince with a huge army, like Alexander. Everything he had, he had to earn. He didn't get to be Genghis Khan until he was in his 30's. He was always aware of how victory wasn't assured but had to be paid for with planning and strategy. He wasn't a saint by any means but he wasn't an unthinking savage. This movie is actually meant to be the first in a trilogy with the second one probably detailing his conquest of north china and the third the conquest of the Khwarezim empire in Iran and Afghanistan.

    This is an approach that I like because the Alexander movie died on account of it trying to condense all of his conquests into one movie.
    7Chris Knipp

    To the right of who?

    'Mongol,' the Russian-directed semi-historical epic (big emphasis on the semi- here) shot for $20 million in China (and Mongolia and Kazhakistan) with a multi-national cast and crew and Japanese and Chinese stars, purports to depict the first thirty-five years of the life of the emperor Genghis Khan. I say "purports," because not much is known of this period and even in depicting legend, Bodrov chooses to leave out many of the essential connectives that make a good story (or fairy tale or legend). Temudjin, as the young super-Khan is called, is a yoked prisoner, for example, awaiting execution; then, inexplicably, the yoke is off and he's free. He sinks through thin ice deep into the frozen water below; then, inexplicably, he's lying on land and getting rescued. He is languishing in a Chinese prison--his face seeming to acquire a patina of dust and sand (I liked that part: Bodrov excels at faces and tableaux); then he's miraculously found by his faithful wife Borte. She throws him a key and sets him free. Then, inexplicably, he is leading a vast army to defeat his arch rival. Over and over, how we get from point A to point B is left on the cutting-room floor. This is enjoyable as spectacle but unsatisfying from other standpoints.

    How Genghis Khan got to be Genghis Khan, in short, is one thing this movie doesn't begin to try to explain. Could anyone? That I don't know; but 'Mongol' presents its biographical narrative without the connectives that make sense of a life. Despite lots of dramatic scenes with snappy dialog, striking images, and above all computer-assisted battles with crunching bones and crackling arrows and ringing swords, the film has an epic style without epic themes because its great issues are not so much resolved as abruptly, magically removed. This may in fact be more an epic love story than anything else. It is that in the backhanded way the 'Odyssey' is a love story, because, though Temudjin is away from Borte a lot of the time as Odysseus is mostly away from Ithaka and Penelope, 'Mongol's' opening sequence gives Borte a primary importance, because she (as played by Bayertsetseg Erdenebat), belonging to another tribe, a liberated young woman of the twelfth century, isn't chosen by but chooses Temudjin when he's nine years old and she's ten. It's not supposed to be that way--and maybe it wasn't; it seems a bit implausible. Temudjin is traveling with his Khan (tribal chieftain) father (Ba Sen) on their way to placate another tribe by choosing the boy's wife from their girls. When they don't, the father is promptly poisoned by the other tribe. And its leader, Targutai (Amadu Mamadakov), vows to kill Temudjin--but not for a year or so, because "Mongols don't kill children."

    Well, what Mongols do or don't do seems up for grabs, and probably at the time, historically, "Mongol" itself must have been a rather vague concept. In fact that is another running theme: what's a Mongol? What are their primary values? There is no satisfactory answer, though killing and stealing are advanced as major concepts.

    Surprisingly, since not too many are "to the right of Genghis Khan," and since he succeeds in wiping out all his enemies, Temudjin as played (as an adult) by the imposing Tadanobu Asano is a gentle-faced, zen-like fellow who's a strong advocate of fair play. Tadanobu, along with the somewhat over-histrionic Chinese actor Honglai Sun as Jamukha, his childhood blood brother and eventual arch rival, are both impressive. But the real star, with some substantial help from computer-generated effects, is the vast landscape of steppe, snow, mountain, and sky that dominates many scenes. With effective use of lenses and light, the filmmakers have created an epic look, and it's this, plus the authoritative acting, that make this film worth viewing--but only if you like this kind of thing and if you don't mind that you're not going to emerge from it with any historical knowledge. Said to be the first of a trilogy. One will approach the sequels with a certain reserve.

    Shown as part of the San Francisco International Film Festival April-May 2008 and in US theatrical release June 2008.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Director Sergei Bodrov and Production Designer Dashi Namdakov visited Mongolia's chief shaman in the capital city of Ulan Bator, so that they could ask permission to film a movie about Genghis Khan's life. The shaman told them that of all the people who have talked about making such a film, they were the only ones to ask his permission.
    • Pifias
      The Mongolian tribes, including the hordes that conquered their vast empire, rode on a very peculiar race of horses, stocky build, with relatively short legs and a large head. The horses used in the movie look like ordinary western horses
    • Citas

      Jamukha: I want to ask you: All Mongols fear the thunder... but not you?

      Temudjin: I had no place to hide from the thunder... so I wasn't afraid anymore.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in The 80th Annual Academy Awards (2008)
    • Banda sonora
      Beginning
      Composed By Tuomas Kantelinen

      Performed by Hamburg Film Orchestra, The London Session Orchestra, One Orchestra, Altan Urag

      © 2008 X-Filme Creative Pool GmbH.

      (p) 2008 Kinofabrika GmbH & Tuomas Kantelinen Ensemble.

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    Preguntas frecuentes34

    • How long is Mongol: The Rise of Genghis Khan?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Is 'Mongol: The rise of Genghis Khan' based on a novel?
    • Is it true that the characters in the movies are speaking Mongolian?
    • Why doesn't Targutai kill Temudgin when he is a child?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 5 de diciembre de 2008 (España)
    • Países de origen
      • Rusia
      • Alemania
      • Kazajistán
    • Idiomas
      • Mongol
      • Mandarín
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Mongol: The Rise of Genghis Khan
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Inner Mongolia, China(location)
    • Empresas productoras
      • CTB Film Company
      • Andreevsky Flag Film Company
      • X-Filme Creative Pool
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • 18.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 5.705.761 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 135.326 US$
      • 8 jun 2008
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 26.527.510 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      2 horas 6 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital EX
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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