Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA beautiful young man has been summoned to an eerie meditation retreat by a dying theatre director. The young man has been given a tape of instructions; over a weekend he must perform scenes... Leer todoA beautiful young man has been summoned to an eerie meditation retreat by a dying theatre director. The young man has been given a tape of instructions; over a weekend he must perform scenes from the director's life. He visits different rooms encountering five actresses who all p... Leer todoA beautiful young man has been summoned to an eerie meditation retreat by a dying theatre director. The young man has been given a tape of instructions; over a weekend he must perform scenes from the director's life. He visits different rooms encountering five actresses who all portray key women in the director's life. They rehearse the boy to play the lead role in an... Leer todo
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Opiniones destacadas
It sets its standard (I think a high one) at least in terms of it achieving what it sets out to do) and maintains a graceful and lyrical quality throughout.
The script is particularly hard to follow, and seem purposefully obscure at times (at least as far as recent preoccupations in world cinema go). I didn't struggle with this but found myself dipping in and out of understanding which as far as I can tell, expanded the film universe to bring my own daydreams and musings to the story. I guess that is a way of viewing a film and I quite enjoy doing that as much as being told a good story. It's a different kind of movie experience and for that, I'm thankful.
I think there's an irreverent immaturity about the script's obscurity and it seems broadly relevant. This is the writer's and directors first work. But there is no sign here that the filmmakers are lacking in talent, simply time and resource and some of the production limitations do show on the screen in particular shots, scenes etc. Having said that the general level of artistic integrity was maintained throughout.
Some of the dialogue (particularly real life dialogue, outside of the "performed scenes") felt too theatrical for my liking. Perhaps stripping it back further would have helped the film's intention.
I'd like to particularly mention the costumes and art direction which were really beautifully rendered. The performances were also very interesting. It is true that some actresses carried their scenes better than others but because the film is about acting it didn't bother me.
I really liked the lead boy. He had a strong presence on the screen even though he was really only playing himself. A hard thing I imagine. Some of his improvised dialogue (as himself) was not so good but all things considered he did an admirable job.
I am not sure I understood a lot of the film. It tore at all the logical and everyday humdrum notions of what films are usually all about or how predictable they are, in the way they appeal to the popular masses. Perhaps I could be critical about some parts of the film but only if I could truly come up with an alternative reality but that would ultimately only be subjective and not my prerogative, for I am a mere onlooker and observer.
Many questions are summoned to the forefront of my at times feeble consciousness.....as a lover of aesthetically beautiful and visual feasts, I would have to say that Conor afforded a lavish smörgåsbord of assorted visual treasures which the film takes with it, bringing Conor from an obscure unknown and unassertive stance into the drama which then unfolded in all its personal and yet impersonal and at times cold and abstract way... The distances are accentuated from person to person, the private dramas of some of the characters seem to create distance or there is a quality of estrangement from the characters in the film. A deliberately undeveloped feeling of the characters is created.
I found this quote which betokens a meaning I might ascribe to the film:
"I want very much to tell, to talk about, the wholeness inside every human being. It's a strange thing that every human being has a sort of dignity or wholeness in him, and out of that develops relationships to other human beings, tensions, misunderstandings, tenderness, coming in contact, touching and being touched, the cutting off of a contact and what happens then." (Bergman in John Simon's book Ingmar Bergman Directs, 1972)
The long takes, actors wandering in and out of the frame, the faded childlike colors evoking a nostalgia but also witty reference to the type of theatrical story it is.
I was most impressed by the acting. The boy is really good, and he gets better as the film goes on, which is clearly the intention of the film. And the actresses are really interesting. Particularly the hypnotist woman, who I have seen in other films but is especially good here. I also thought the spitting actress was very good too, quite detestable and quite warm also.
I also think the composition of the shots is one of the strong points of the film. Some beautiful attention to detail throughout gives the story a painterly feel.
Reading the other reviews, a few people lament the lack of story and dramatic signposts. I understand their sentiment, but I don't think it's really this kind of film. Maybe, because it's Australian that's what they expect.
If anything, the dramatic story moments such as the dark haired boy, (son of the director?) let down the film's austere quality. That's my opinion.
On a world scale, I'd give it a 6.5/7 .... but on an Australian scale.... I have to give it a 10.
A haunting experience of intense beauty and restraint. A must for anyone who loves cinema.
You very likely already are saying 'Huh?' to all this and you are right. I couldn't make head nor tail (nor tale either) of this farrago, apparently an attempt at some form of sub-Alain Resnais sensibility, so I deputised the job to the DVD cover blurb. That was the first paragraph. The second para was an opinion from Megan Spencer on radio JJJ. The only way I could account for it was that Ms Spencer must be the director's mum.
There were occasional hints that it was all some sort of unscripted play, but the film failed to convey its plot across to me. Even less did it induce me to care.
In the end, the only way I found to survive through to the end was to pretend it was an allegory. The prologue up country bus journey was really the midnight coach ride to Borgo Pass, the setting (in the spa at Hepburn Springs) was Castle Dracula, the shadowy 'director' was a behind the scenes Count, the actresses his brides, and the BYM a bewildered and bewitched Jonathan Harker. Certainly the mind control and blood motifs were there.
I still didn't care for it. The soonest these vampires shot through to harvest jugulars in the big smoke was never going to be soon enough.
I was a bit surprised by the film's 'beautiful young man'. I was expecting a Dorian Gray type, but Conor O'Hanlon who played his namesake here wouldn't have looked out of place in the Wallabies front row.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaConor O'Hanlon wasn't given a script and only clues he had were the yellow pages he reads from in the movie.