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Seis hombres enfermos

Título original: Six Men Getting Sick
  • 1967
  • TV-PG
  • 4min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.6/10
7 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Seis hombres enfermos (1967)
AnimaciónAnimación en stop motionCortoTerror

Una animación corta en bucle continuo de seis figuras humanas grotescas vomitando.Una animación corta en bucle continuo de seis figuras humanas grotescas vomitando.Una animación corta en bucle continuo de seis figuras humanas grotescas vomitando.

  • Dirección
    • David Lynch
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.6/10
    7 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • David Lynch
    • 29Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 15Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Fotos12

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    + 6
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    Opiniones de usuarios29

    5.66.9K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7dbborroughs

    Impossible to rate correctly

    This is the film portion of a sculpture that had images projected on it.

    Its basically abstract people getting sick and throwing up.

    Sort of.

    As I said its all abstract so the figures are only reasonably human.

    The image runs about a minute and then is repeated several times, which was then looped into endless illness.

    How do you rate that?

    I don't know. Its fine for what it is but as anything beyond that it isn't much.
    6Groverdox

    Lynch's first movie is typically bizarre and inscrutable

    David Lynch has been one of my favourite filmmakers for most of my life now.

    Having seen all of his feature-length films, I finally decided to watch some of the shorts, in chronological order.

    "Six Men Getting Sick" had to come first, then, because it's the first movie Lynch made. He made it while in college, and when he intended to become a painter, not a filmmaker. In fact, the cost of making the movie caused Lynch to swear off filmmaking forever, but luckily for us he was tempted back to make another film.

    There's not a whole lot to say about this movie. It reminded me less of a short film than a video installation, kind of like a (barely) animated painting. We see six abstracted figures in the background, unmoving, presumably from a painting of Lynch's. Overlaid is some basic animation, mostly showing bright fluid travelling up the figures' bodies and coming out their mouths.

    A siren sound plays on a loop all the while.

    What is it supposed to say, and what is it about? Who knows. Probably few people will be satisfied with it. I do find that it shares a common thread with much else of Lynch's filmography, though, and that is experimentation. Lynch's movies are always inches away from collapsing into an abyss that always feels like it's just barely being kept off-screen. But there's always light in his movies, too. And that light mostly comes from the joy he gets from experimentation, and invites us to share with him.
    10NePerfectionist

    "Oh,the moving painting!"

    David Lynch once said about how he came to start making films.

    • "One night I was drawing a garden in my studio, immersed in a thick black night, where green grass seemed to dilute this bottomless darkness, and I sat down beside my picture, began to peer at it, and I heard the wind blowing and My picture was rustled with grass, and then I thought, "Oh,the moving painting!" "


    And so he realized that he wants to shoot / draw "moving pictures" called films. And this work, his first work, is so simple, so genius. In its essence, this is the true image of the philosophy with which Lynch still pictures his paintings. This is nothing more than a painting that constantly changes its state, and all this translates into a moving picture.

    It is with this thought you need to look at this picture. It is she who will give you a complete idea of ​​the primary thought Lynch shot his greatest works ("Mallholland Dr.", "Eraserhead", "Blue Velvet").

    Looking at this disturbing picture, you can experience the same sensations as when looking at pictures of surrealists, such as Salvador Dali. And if you are suddenly not familiar with the works of Lynch at all, then I advise you to understand and feel his view of the cinema precisely from this work, and what undisclosed potential the cinematography possesses, not playing with your intellect, and not even with your eyes, but with your subconscious mind ...
    6redryan64

    Make it 7

    WHEN WE SAW this recently thanx to our good friends at TURNER CLASSIC MOVIES we were quite surprised: A) That there really was such a film with such a title, B) That an outfit like TCM actually did televise such, C) That we watched it and finally D) That we are doing a review.

    IN MANY WAYS the very brief tidbit of what can only be referred to as limited (very limited) animation. In some respects it appears to be a sort of intentional throwback to the very earliest animation to be committed to film. In our mind, that means the short (3 + minute) titled HUMOROUS PHASES OF FUNNY FACES (Stuart Bracton/Vitagraph, 1906).

    IN SOME AREAS, the cartoon succeeds in doing this as an homage to both the artist, as well as to the art-form as well. It is in the beginnings of animation in this embryonic stage and form that started both artist and producer on the road to the shorts and full length features that we take for granted.

    IN SHORT, without HUMOROUS FACES, there'd be no FANTASIA.

    ON THE OTHER hand, we get the distinct impression that the cartoonist and the producer really did want to gross out the audience and induce gastro-intestinal maladies. This would seem to be superfluous as we don't learn anything that we don't already know and have all experienced for ourselves.

    SO SORRY TO report to Animator/Director/Producer Mr. David Lynch, that no one was edified in the extended display of vomiting, puking, wreching, hurling and heaving; nor by displays of dysentery, diarrhea, the runs or the scutters.

    WELL SCHULTZ, DO you think anyone's shocked?
    6Red-Barracuda

    David Lynch's first feature is a moving painting

    This first film from David Lynch is not really a film at all. It is better to think of it as a moving painting. Its origins bear this out. Lynch was working on a picture while studying at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts when he felt a 'little wind' and wished that the painting could move. This set him to work on creating an animated composition which became Six Men Getting Sick.

    It consists of a screen with three sculptures built into its top left corner. These three figures are casts of Lynch himself. This screen then has an animation projected onto it. The animation adds a further three figures. It connects the stomachs to the heads. They fill up, hands appear over the distressed heads, the word 'Sick' flashes up and the heads catch fire and vomit. All of this is accompanied by a repetitive siren wail.

    Because the image is projected onto a sculpture it's fair to say that this is really a 3D art installation rather than a film. When it was shown at an art competition it was repeated on a continual loop. On DVD this is reduced to six cycles. The repetition does make sense though as it allows you to see different things each time. It certainly indicates what an original artist Lynch was even at this early stage.

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      Edited into Los cortometrajes de David Lynch (2002)

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    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 1967 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Ninguno
    • También se conoce como
      • Six Men Getting Sick
    • Productora
      • Pensylvania Academy of Fine Arts
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 4min
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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