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6,5/10
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MA NOTE
L'histoire du massacre de Peterloo en 1819 où les forces britanniques attaquèrent un rassemblement pacifique en faveur de la démocratie à Manchester.L'histoire du massacre de Peterloo en 1819 où les forces britanniques attaquèrent un rassemblement pacifique en faveur de la démocratie à Manchester.L'histoire du massacre de Peterloo en 1819 où les forces britanniques attaquèrent un rassemblement pacifique en faveur de la démocratie à Manchester.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 4 victoires et 8 nominations au total
Avis à la une
As with most movies today, the extremes are over-represented and the underlying issues barely addressed. England was reeling from a Napoleanic, banker-funded war, ending in oppressive debt for the major powers of Europe. The Bank of England and the Bank of France were both formed to lend money to their respective governments, with few constraints on the pyramiding, in order to fund regular wars. The French revolution was trying to spread its socialist conclusions. Men are represented as either cruel, money-grubbing wealthy industrialists or poor, woe-is-me peasant labor, although one could hardly call people who had several sets of clothes, a house and sets of dishes as poor. The gratuitous men-oppress-their-more-intelligent-women folk is consistent with modern social justice bleatings. Consequently, what we see is the plight of what the French called the bourgeoisie, or the merchant and skilled labor class. The entrenched oligarchies were hanging on to their power, generated by industrial technological expansions (in this case the mechanical loom), which ironically needed skilled laborers and supporting merchants, who also were gaining wealth, counter to the woe-is-me picture. Much of the problem was the government-imposed lack of producers' and laborers' ability to negotiate the price of their labor and the markets for their products. The many government-oligopoly controls on cloth production are not presented, but were responsible for most of the tension. Of course, these issues would hardly sell to uninformed viewers.
As with the onset of the French revolution, the key issue is never quite resolved in these movies, or in the social justice bleatings of today: after the dust settles, who will be in charge and what will the new rules be? Will the current oppressors be replaced by worse oppressors? Meet the new boss, same as the old boss, both in labor and management. Government meddling has and will cause tragedy.
As with the onset of the French revolution, the key issue is never quite resolved in these movies, or in the social justice bleatings of today: after the dust settles, who will be in charge and what will the new rules be? Will the current oppressors be replaced by worse oppressors? Meet the new boss, same as the old boss, both in labor and management. Government meddling has and will cause tragedy.
Peterloo is the Best Mike Leigh picture I've seen. Yes it is too long & speech filled but the Manchester massacre of 1819 is horribly dramatic. You see how the forces of the status quo combine to send in the cavalry & yeomanry to charge at peaceful protestors, maiming hundreds and killing 15. The protestors wanted the right to vote, reform in Parliament (Manchester didn't have an MP) & lower food prices. The film is very well shot with an excellent performance as always from Maxime Peake. Oddly after a long build up to the massacre there is no focus on what happened afterwards.
This is the first review I've ever done, but was moved to do so by some reviews that I have read on here since watching the film. So apologies to you experts, but here's my tuppenceworth. On the down side, a bit overlong, could have been a bit less wordy and faster paced. But, I left the cinema with the same feeling that I did in the early 70s after seeing Soldier Blue: stunned by the brutality of "the authorities" over the disenfranchised. Forensic in its drama/documentry approach and absolutely true to events (I have since checked various historical sources). This is what happens when people feel they lack a voice and does resonate with today's UK. I thought the lighting was superb and the epic, grand scale setting rare in a UK film. A must watch for teenagers who will not have heard of this event in history at school.
16 August 2019 is the 200th anniversary of the Peterloo massacre in Manchester.
Peterloo begins after Napoleon's defeat in Waterloo in 1815. Joseph is a young shell shocked soldier who returns home to Manchester to no job and no prospects. The spoils of victory is only shared by the wealthy. The poor suffer increased prices due to the corn laws.
Voting rights also belong to the rich and the powerful. The ordinary man wants the extension of the franchise and parliamentary reform, the wealthy resist. They also fear that a visit to Manchester from orator and reformer Henry Hunt (Rory Kinnear) will lead the rabble to riot. The local gentry and magistrates are intent on putting down any protest and have the army on standby. On the fateful day the army panics leading to the deaths of 18 people and many hundreds injured even though the protest was peaceful.
Mike Leigh intended to make a working class epic that is still relevant today. There is humour, Hunt is a rich pompous dandy who himself is unable to connect to the ordinary man he likes to champion. However much of the film feels like a sermon with long lengthy speeches and ideals which repeat themselves. The landed, the military and the judges are painted as two dimensional baddies with only one possible exception. It also has a very strong Lancashire dialect, which some might find difficult to follow.
Leigh does add intrigue. Radical agitators are watched by government spies. Letters are intercepted by the Home Office.
Peterloo is an angry film to commemorate a terrible event. It is wonderfully shot but its running time needed to be drastically reduced and some of the speeches needed to be cut down. As for young Joseph, his fate was signposted.
Peterloo begins after Napoleon's defeat in Waterloo in 1815. Joseph is a young shell shocked soldier who returns home to Manchester to no job and no prospects. The spoils of victory is only shared by the wealthy. The poor suffer increased prices due to the corn laws.
Voting rights also belong to the rich and the powerful. The ordinary man wants the extension of the franchise and parliamentary reform, the wealthy resist. They also fear that a visit to Manchester from orator and reformer Henry Hunt (Rory Kinnear) will lead the rabble to riot. The local gentry and magistrates are intent on putting down any protest and have the army on standby. On the fateful day the army panics leading to the deaths of 18 people and many hundreds injured even though the protest was peaceful.
Mike Leigh intended to make a working class epic that is still relevant today. There is humour, Hunt is a rich pompous dandy who himself is unable to connect to the ordinary man he likes to champion. However much of the film feels like a sermon with long lengthy speeches and ideals which repeat themselves. The landed, the military and the judges are painted as two dimensional baddies with only one possible exception. It also has a very strong Lancashire dialect, which some might find difficult to follow.
Leigh does add intrigue. Radical agitators are watched by government spies. Letters are intercepted by the Home Office.
Peterloo is an angry film to commemorate a terrible event. It is wonderfully shot but its running time needed to be drastically reduced and some of the speeches needed to be cut down. As for young Joseph, his fate was signposted.
Like most working-class Brits, I knew nothing of Peterloo (and I am from Manchester into the bargain).
Mike Leigh has done an excellent job, documenting this momentous event in British history, an event conveniently airbrushed out of my secondary school education. Imagine that.
A good 2.5 hrs long, it would make a decent 12 part Netflix drama. Though, he'd never get the funding for that.
It is long, it is educational, it is historical, it is incredibly worthy. Watch it and draw parallels with the Britain of today. FPTP electoral system, zero-hours contracts, food banks, Brexit, et al.
i gave it a 9.
Mike Leigh has done an excellent job, documenting this momentous event in British history, an event conveniently airbrushed out of my secondary school education. Imagine that.
A good 2.5 hrs long, it would make a decent 12 part Netflix drama. Though, he'd never get the funding for that.
It is long, it is educational, it is historical, it is incredibly worthy. Watch it and draw parallels with the Britain of today. FPTP electoral system, zero-hours contracts, food banks, Brexit, et al.
i gave it a 9.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film was released 200 years after the Peterloo Massacre.
- GaffesThe young Waterloo veteran who continues to wear his redcoat during the film can be seen in one shot with Corporal stripes whereas the rest of the film his tunic is that of a Private.
- Citations
Prince Regent: I know what is good for my people better than they know themselves!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Granada Reports: 16 August 2018: Evening Bulletin (2018)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- La tragèdia de Peterloo
- Lieux de tournage
- Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Workers being drilled before marching)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 151 971 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 26 002 $US
- 7 avr. 2019
- Montant brut mondial
- 2 159 214 $US
- Durée
- 2h 34min(154 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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