ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,2/10
17 k
MA NOTE
Deux filles essaient de comprendre le sens du monde et de leur vie.Deux filles essaient de comprendre le sens du monde et de leur vie.Deux filles essaient de comprendre le sens du monde et de leur vie.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
Oldrich Hora
- Playboy
- (as Dr. Oldrich Hora)
Helena Anýzová
- Woman in toilet
- (uncredited)
Miroslava Babúrková
- Woman in the Train Window
- (uncredited)
J. Bartos
- Muscle Man
- (uncredited)
Oldrich Basus
- Musician
- (uncredited)
Václav Chochola
- Muz v cerném
- (uncredited)
A. Drábek
- Musician: Violinist
- (uncredited)
Josef Hruby
- Swimmer
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
Daisies is a wonderful embodiment of the Prague Spring. Hedonism and consumerism get criticised while the inflammatory criticism is coded more subtly. At a time when Stalinism was being re-examined and the reputations of many Czechs were being "rehabilitated", Daisies was a well-masked critique of these reforms. The crazy 1960s cinematography, the strange accents of the two main characters, and the sheer hedonism (the economy was quite poor at the time) give a surreal edge to what is not a surreal film. The film also hints of a Czechoslovakia identifying with Western Europe and impatient with the regime -- despite its reforms. The cinematography is fun and the story is a definite upending of the usual role of women in Czech films. If you're looking for deep symbolism, you'll be disappointed. But as a fun romp, a sign of the times, and a historical piece, Daisies is superb.
Blond Marie and brunette Marie are best friends and chaos creators. Brunette Marie declares that the world is spoiled and they're going to do the spoiling.
The girls are doing sexy baby acting. Their characters are bratty children living off of their sex appeal. Mostly, they are sex teases tricking food out of horny men. The film is experimental, doing a lot of different things all over the place. It's trying very hard to be surreal. Sometimes, it's using wacky sounds. It keeps switching from black and white to color while sometimes doing different color filters. I find a lot of it akin to student films trying to be artistic. It does stumble on some interesting effects once in awhile. The streaming train looks cool and the poker dot dresses are fun. There are intriguing edits. That's this movie. It's throwing a lot of spaghetti on the wall and some of them actually sticks. I just wish that it could limit the number of weird effects to give the best ideas more weight. It's strangely fascinating and an intriguing look into cinema at a certain time in a certain place. It's saying something about the atmosphere in Prague and the approach of spring.
The girls are doing sexy baby acting. Their characters are bratty children living off of their sex appeal. Mostly, they are sex teases tricking food out of horny men. The film is experimental, doing a lot of different things all over the place. It's trying very hard to be surreal. Sometimes, it's using wacky sounds. It keeps switching from black and white to color while sometimes doing different color filters. I find a lot of it akin to student films trying to be artistic. It does stumble on some interesting effects once in awhile. The streaming train looks cool and the poker dot dresses are fun. There are intriguing edits. That's this movie. It's throwing a lot of spaghetti on the wall and some of them actually sticks. I just wish that it could limit the number of weird effects to give the best ideas more weight. It's strangely fascinating and an intriguing look into cinema at a certain time in a certain place. It's saying something about the atmosphere in Prague and the approach of spring.
I first (and only) saw this film in 1967 at Antioch in the auditorium with scores of other impressionable hippies. I was totally in love with this film and thought the final sequences of the wrecked banquet and what followed were very cool. I have looked for his movie for years, even rented "closely watched trains" thinking it might be the one as I couldn't remember the english title. However, and thanks to the WEB, we just found this and I can not recommend it highly enough. It is a blueprint for wonderful female (mis)behavior and should be required watching in women's studies classes. I am so excited to find that I may now be able to rent/buy this that I wanted to share my comments in case some other veteran of those good old days remembers this film. If you are out there, write to me so we can share our pleasure in this film and the radical women film writers/directors/actors!!!
This is really worth seeing. It's hard to explain why. There is no plot. There is no character development. There is a lot of beautiful surrealism. Like with anything from Dada and related art, the full effect only hits you after you stop asking "Why?" and "Whaa?" and "What the hell?". When you past that point, you'll have a great time.
The charming nihilism captured in the movie is something that we couldn't duplicate nowadays, even if we tried.
The charming nihilism captured in the movie is something that we couldn't duplicate nowadays, even if we tried.
This was the most pleasurable thing I've ever watched. The scenes were beautifully put together. The style changed from black and white to sepia to colourful, sometimes with a blueish tint, sometime with other colours. I loved the saccadic camera movements that matched certain sounds, e.g. a phone ringing. The actresses' styling (clothes, hair, makeup) was also beautiful. The music was very good (e.g. an epic battle kind of piece of music during the cake fight between the girls).
I liked the fact that the plot's point was to explore how the girls' reaction to the world's "badness" will end. But there were certain points that I didn't quite understand. I didn't really like how the girls sometimes spoke in a robotic manner, or how they seemed too naive and silly. Maybe that was the point: perfection isn't art anyway.
I appreciate the fact that the director (Vera Chytilova) made this film in a time when women didn't have the freedom they have today. One of the main themes in the film is women breaking the barriers of the society they live in, and the rules dictating their behaviour. It really is emblematic in that sense.
Overall I really enjoyed watching this film, but I didn't get where the plot was going, and where it actually went, plus the details I mentioned. But I would recommend it to anyone.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film was state-approved and had limitations in its production. Many conservative supporters of the communist regime in Czechoslovakia criticized the film for its appropriation of gluttony and the alleged support it shows for the heroines. In an era of the communist regime in Czechoslovakia, Vera Chytilová was "accused of nihilism" at the time of the release of this movie. The film was condemned to be unfit for the socialist ideas of the time. Banned by Czech authorities upon its release for "depicting the wanton".
- Générique farfeluTHIS FILM IS DEDICATED TO THOSE WHO GET UPSET ONLY OVER A STOMPED-UPON BED OF LETTUCE
- Autres versionsFilm restoration performed in 2022.
- ConnexionsEdited into CzechMate: In Search of Jirí Menzel (2018)
- Bandes originalesRecorded Music
(19 themes from Album Supraphonu 3)
Performed by Filmový Symfonický Orchestr (holder of The Order for Excellence, Prague)
Conducted by Frantisek Belfín
Performed by Prazsky Dixieland
Sung by Eva Pilarová
(P) 1966 Státní fond CR pro podporu a rozvoj ceské kinematografie
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 13 692 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 6 576 $ US
- 8 juill. 2012
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 14 672 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 15m(75 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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