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IMDbPro

Una zeta y dos ceros

Título original: A Zed & Two Noughts
  • 1985
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 55min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
8 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Frances Barber in Una zeta y dos ceros (1985)
Comedia oscuraComediaDrama

Los zoólogos gemelos pierden a sus esposas en un accidente automovilístico y se obsesionan con los animales en descomposición.Los zoólogos gemelos pierden a sus esposas en un accidente automovilístico y se obsesionan con los animales en descomposición.Los zoólogos gemelos pierden a sus esposas en un accidente automovilístico y se obsesionan con los animales en descomposición.

  • Dirección
    • Peter Greenaway
  • Guionistas
    • Peter Greenaway
    • Walter Donohue
  • Elenco
    • Brian Deacon
    • Eric Deacon
    • Andréa Ferréol
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.2/10
    8 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Peter Greenaway
    • Guionistas
      • Peter Greenaway
      • Walter Donohue
    • Elenco
      • Brian Deacon
      • Eric Deacon
      • Andréa Ferréol
    • 45Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 53Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:49
    Trailer

    Fotos36

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    Elenco principal13

    Editar
    Brian Deacon
    Brian Deacon
    • Oswald Deuce
    Eric Deacon
    Eric Deacon
    • Oliver Deuce
    Andréa Ferréol
    Andréa Ferréol
    • Alba Bewick
    Frances Barber
    Frances Barber
    • Venus de Milo
    Joss Ackland
    Joss Ackland
    • Van Hoyten
    Jim Davidson
    • Joshua Plate
    Agnès Brulet
    • Beta Bewick
    Guusje van Tilborgh
    • Caterina Bolnes
    Gerard Thoolen
    Gerard Thoolen
    • Van Meegeren
    Ken Campbell
    • Stephen Pipe
    Wolf Kahler
    Wolf Kahler
    • Felipe Arc-en-Ciel
    Geoffrey Palmer
    Geoffrey Palmer
    • Fallast
    David Attenborough
    David Attenborough
    • Self - Documentary Narrator
    • (voz)
    • Dirección
      • Peter Greenaway
    • Guionistas
      • Peter Greenaway
      • Walter Donohue
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios45

    7.27.9K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    fact185

    Highly visual post modern film

    A rewarding post modern film about life and decay and the effects of a single moment on a person's life. Great sets and photography by the legendary cinematographer Sacha Vierny, this film makes you ultra aware that you are watching a film, or a sort of theatrical filmed piece. Greenaway is an aquired but very rewarding taste, and no other director makes films as he does. A disturbing somber film for serious fans of modern cinema. Greenaway is a must in your education of film.
    No Nukes

    About as enlightening as watching a zebra rot

    This is definitely one of the more disgusting films I've watched, and not in a good way. This movie made me physically ill, and though it was mind-bending and beautifully coreographed, the subject matter and the lead characters' inevitable decline into utter insanity that is characteristic of Greenaway films was a bit much for me. I'm saying this and I loved Santa Sangre. Go figure.

    A pair of twin brothers (who have different hair color somehow, and as it turns out were originally Siamese twins) become obsessed with the subjects of decay, evolution, and greif when their wives are killed in a car crash at the Zoo. They start conducting utterly repulsive experiments that involve time-elapse films of animals and fruits rotting away. And to top it all off, there's a plot in all of this, by a couple of poachers posing as zoo staff who plan to make a profit from all this. The rest is just entirely too disgusting/weird/complicated to explain clearly, but I will give you some hints about the ending: It involves a rack. And snails. And floodlights. And a record player.
    8bodnotbod

    Appeals to the brain more than the gut

    Peter Greenaway is arty. Painfully so. However he readily admits that this film is "self-conscious", "manufactured" and he says that all cinema is probably as "artificial" a form as you can get.

    This film is beautiful to look at. Greenaway was inspired, visually, by paintings of the mid 17th century, particularly those of Vermeer. Almost every shot is composed like a painting. Many of the shots are symmetrical, walls are filmed flat so that the horizontal lines are parallel with the top and bottom of the frame. Objects are placed on tables as if subjects for a still life. Lighting is used in an alternation of light, shade,light,shade receding to the back of the picture, which is a signature of the type of 17th century, Western art that Greenaway is paying homage to.

    The substance of the film follows weighty themes, all of which are explained in great detail through the director's commentary: evolution, light and twin-ship.

    What is lacking is emotion. This is a cerebral film. Your emotional reaction to it will be through the imagery, be it beautiful or repulsive. You will not engage with the characters on an emotional level. You'll find them hard to relate to. The performances are stilted and amateur theatrical. It is fortunate, then, that Michael Nyman provides a fantastic score (present on almost every scene and almost outstaying its welcome) which prevents the dialogue (the script leaves a lot to be desired too) rendering everything flat.

    Rent this if you enjoy visuals for their own sake, if you wear spectacles and if you like holding your chin in your hand and frowning. I qualify on all those points, so I enjoyed it a great deal.

    Extra points for an extraordinarily thorough director's commentary on the DVD which serves to pull out all the hidden depths. Though one could make the point that an explanation that adds so much extra understanding leaves you feeling that the film failed adequately to convey much of what was intended.

    DVD easter eggs (worth seeing): http://www.dvd.net.au/hidden.cgi?movie_id=10484
    pcu3brg

    The most intelligent film I've seen in years

    This fine film is written in an intelligent, multilayered way of such a degree and quality as I have only seen in top-notch theatre. Greenaway delivers a dark but intoxicating tale of decay, evolution and the crucial importance of symmetry.

    The themes of this film emerge not only through Greenaway's script, but also through the images produced by his tight, clear directing. The choice of images and ability to linger on single shots suggests a creative mind as focused and obsessed as the characters he portrays.

    As with many of Greenaway's works, this certainly isn't a film for anyone wanting a cheap thrill and easy satisfaction. Its particularly dark humour and images of accelerated decay and death are more likely to please those who prefer to view film as a medium of art than those seeking mere entertainment.

    It is a very long time since a film has impressed me quite as much as this.
    chaos-rampant

    Symmetries, broken and renewed

    All you need to make cinema is a point of view (and of course the view to which it points). Or a frame of reference and the reference which it frames. In Greenaway all these exist together, knowingly, as forms within forms.

    A story of twins looking to overcome grief by studying the decay of death is the reference here. Zebras, lizards, swans, we see the empty shells of body decay before the camera. Kept under the scrutiny of our gaze in life, inside cages, they remain under it once dead. At what point do all these symmetries which conjoined together make up the miracle of life stop being the sum of their parts, and by which process; how much of these parts that we understand as the self can be taken out before the self is no longer recognized; and the symmetry once broken, what mystery renews it.

    These obscure ruminations are framed against the question of existence, which implies god and pattern. How come that something so systemised, so perfectly designed and evolved from nothing, from amoeba and algea, can come to pass by the whim of chance? Having taken millions of years for creation to unravel its complexity, why does it take a second to destroy it? Which is to ask, at what point does the system, which in hindsight appears ordained and patterned, become random and meaningless.

    Various eccentricities are enacted in this process, all pointing to some kind of symbolic nakedness.

    When the legless woman gives birth to new life, twins again, the old twins, the blueprint for them, must step aside. The film ends with an poignant thought. Having carefully staged their own death so that the decay that follows may be captured on film, we see how nature intrudes upon this scene and foils the effort.

    An atheist himself, Greenaway here gives us a pessimism that cuts deep; no consciousness survives this.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      This film was Peter Greenaway's first collaboration with cinematographer Sacha Vierny, who went on to shoot virtually all of Greenaway's work in the 1980s and 1990s, until Vierny's death in 2001. Greenaway referred to Vierny as his "most important collaborator".
    • Citas

      Alba Bewick: In the land of the legless the one-legged woman is queen.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Peter Greenaway (1992)
    • Bandas sonoras
      The Teddy Bears' Picnic
      Music by John W. Bratton

      Lyrics by Jimmy Kennedy

      Performed by The BBC Dance Orchestra

      Directed by Henry Hall

      Courtesy of EMI MUSIC PUBLISHING LTD and EMI RECORDS LTD

      Also sung by Venus De Milo (Frances Barber)

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    • How long is A Zed & Two Noughts?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 4 de octubre de 1985 (Reino Unido)
    • Países de origen
      • Reino Unido
      • Países Bajos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
    • También se conoce como
      • A Zed & Two Noughts
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Rotterdam Zoo, Róterdam, Holanda Meridional, Países Bajos
    • Productoras
      • British Film Institute (BFI)
      • Allarts Enterprises
      • Artificial Eye
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 55min(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.66 : 1

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