El infierno de Henri-Georges Clouzot
Título original: L'enfer d'Henri-Georges Clouzot
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,4/10
2,1 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaHenri-Georges Clouzot's unfinished masterpiece, L'enfer (1964), is reconstructed in this film which is part drama and part documentary.Henri-Georges Clouzot's unfinished masterpiece, L'enfer (1964), is reconstructed in this film which is part drama and part documentary.Henri-Georges Clouzot's unfinished masterpiece, L'enfer (1964), is reconstructed in this film which is part drama and part documentary.
- Premios
- 4 premios y 2 nominaciones en total
Romy Schneider
- Odette Prieur
- (metraje de archivo)
Serge Reggiani
- Marcel Prieur
- (metraje de archivo)
Dany Carrel
- Marylou
- (metraje de archivo)
Jean-Claude Bercq
- Martineau
- (metraje de archivo)
Mario David
- Julien
- (metraje de archivo)
André Luguet
- Duhamel
- (metraje de archivo)
Maurice Garrel
- Le docteur Arnoux
- (metraje de archivo)
Barbara Sommers
- Madame Bordure
- (metraje de archivo)
Maurice Teynac
- Monsieur Bordure
- (metraje de archivo)
Henri Virlojeux
- L'homme sur la terrasse
- (metraje de archivo)
Blanchette Brunoy
- Clotilde
- (metraje de archivo)
Henri-Georges Clouzot
- Self
- (metraje de archivo)
Reseña destacada
Presuming that you have not yet seen it, here is a description.
Henri-Georges was a remarkable filmmaker. Though contemporary with those normally tagged new wave, he was interested not in ideas but the effectiveness of cinema. His special talent was internal perturbations of reality. After a long period of silence, he embarked on his most ambitious project: a film about a jealous man, showing his torture through practically achieved cinematic effects.
He got a huge budget from Hollywood and lavished it on the film, not on sets, costumes, actors. Much was shot, and then the thing unraveled, largely because of the filmmaker's own obsessions. Production halted.
Later, in 2009, this film was made about the making of the previous one, weaving the movie and the making of the movie together. The format is superficially simple: we have seated interviews with people who were involved, while relevant footage runs behind them. We see much of that footage without the original sound, though some slight, small effects have been added. Most of the footage are strange optical experiments. Some is the action in "reality." We also, separately, have two contemporary actors reading the lines from the shooting script so at least we know the story such as it is.
The result is remarkable. As collaborators, one after the other, testify to the growing madness of Clouzot, or apparent madness. Or perhaps genius. It is effective as a documentary, perhaps unique in its form. It merges fiction and non-fiction, story on story, folded so that it matters. The main actor walks off, the filmmaker has a heart attack, the lake on which filming occurs literally disappears. Trains come. Anxieties mount as loves and the obsession to create clash.
We wonder about projects started but unseen from Welles, Hopper, Kurosawa. Like unimagined dreams we might reach, they perhaps have more power without us encountering them. Frankly, I never heard of this failed project before. I am grateful to have encountered it now, in this way.
Unfortunately, you may find the optical effects strange, dated. They all are "real" in the sense of being generated according to physical laws and properties. These days, we normally denote the unreal by effects done virtually and supposedly unconstrained by reality. So the shock is reverse: the film we are examining (in black and white) is the fiction, while the madness within that film (in color) is real.
"You have to see the madness through," is the last line of this. Clouzot could not. Let's hope you, dear reader, do.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
Henri-Georges was a remarkable filmmaker. Though contemporary with those normally tagged new wave, he was interested not in ideas but the effectiveness of cinema. His special talent was internal perturbations of reality. After a long period of silence, he embarked on his most ambitious project: a film about a jealous man, showing his torture through practically achieved cinematic effects.
He got a huge budget from Hollywood and lavished it on the film, not on sets, costumes, actors. Much was shot, and then the thing unraveled, largely because of the filmmaker's own obsessions. Production halted.
Later, in 2009, this film was made about the making of the previous one, weaving the movie and the making of the movie together. The format is superficially simple: we have seated interviews with people who were involved, while relevant footage runs behind them. We see much of that footage without the original sound, though some slight, small effects have been added. Most of the footage are strange optical experiments. Some is the action in "reality." We also, separately, have two contemporary actors reading the lines from the shooting script so at least we know the story such as it is.
The result is remarkable. As collaborators, one after the other, testify to the growing madness of Clouzot, or apparent madness. Or perhaps genius. It is effective as a documentary, perhaps unique in its form. It merges fiction and non-fiction, story on story, folded so that it matters. The main actor walks off, the filmmaker has a heart attack, the lake on which filming occurs literally disappears. Trains come. Anxieties mount as loves and the obsession to create clash.
We wonder about projects started but unseen from Welles, Hopper, Kurosawa. Like unimagined dreams we might reach, they perhaps have more power without us encountering them. Frankly, I never heard of this failed project before. I am grateful to have encountered it now, in this way.
Unfortunately, you may find the optical effects strange, dated. They all are "real" in the sense of being generated according to physical laws and properties. These days, we normally denote the unreal by effects done virtually and supposedly unconstrained by reality. So the shock is reverse: the film we are examining (in black and white) is the fiction, while the madness within that film (in color) is real.
"You have to see the madness through," is the last line of this. Clouzot could not. Let's hope you, dear reader, do.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
- tedg
- 27 jul 2010
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Argumento
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- ConexionesEdited from L'enfer (1964)
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- How long is Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Anglards-de-Saint-Flour, Cantal, Francia(hotel and lake)
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 25.489 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 3981 US$
- 18 jul 2010
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 52.003 US$
- Duración1 hora 40 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was El infierno de Henri-Georges Clouzot (2009) officially released in India in English?
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