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Les oiseaux de passage

Titre original : Pájaros de verano
  • 2018
  • Tous publics avec avertissement
  • 2h 5min
NOTE IMDb
7,5/10
14 k
MA NOTE
Les oiseaux de passage (2018)
Torn between his desire to become a powerful man and his duty to uphold his culture's values, Rapayet enters the drug trafficking business in the 1970s to secure a dowry to marry Zaida and finds quick success despite his tribe's matriarch Ursula's disapproval. Ignoring ancient omens, Raphayet and his family get caught up in a conflict where honor is the highest currency and debts are paid with blood.
Lire trailer2:05
1 Video
35 photos
CriminalitéDrame

Durant la « Bonanza Marimbera », une décennie violente qui a vu naître le trafic de drogue en Colombie, une famille d'indigènes s'engage dans une guerre pour contrôler l'activité qui finira ... Tout lireDurant la « Bonanza Marimbera », une décennie violente qui a vu naître le trafic de drogue en Colombie, une famille d'indigènes s'engage dans une guerre pour contrôler l'activité qui finira par détruire leur vie et leur culture.Durant la « Bonanza Marimbera », une décennie violente qui a vu naître le trafic de drogue en Colombie, une famille d'indigènes s'engage dans une guerre pour contrôler l'activité qui finira par détruire leur vie et leur culture.

  • Réalisation
    • Cristina Gallego
    • Ciro Guerra
  • Scénario
    • Maria Camila Arias
    • Jacques Toulemonde Vidal
    • Cristina Gallego
  • Casting principal
    • Carmiña Martínez
    • José Acosta
    • Natalia Reyes
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,5/10
    14 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Cristina Gallego
      • Ciro Guerra
    • Scénario
      • Maria Camila Arias
      • Jacques Toulemonde Vidal
      • Cristina Gallego
    • Casting principal
      • Carmiña Martínez
      • José Acosta
      • Natalia Reyes
    • 45avis d'utilisateurs
    • 143avis des critiques
    • 85Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 30 victoires et 42 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    U.S. Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    U.S. Trailer

    Photos35

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 27
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    Rôles principaux42

    Modifier
    Carmiña Martínez
    • Úrsula
    José Acosta
    • Rapayet
    Natalia Reyes
    Natalia Reyes
    • Zaida
    Jhon Narváez
    • Moisés
    Greider Meza
    • Leonídas
    José Vicente
    • Peregrino
    • (as José Vicente Cote)
    Juan Bautista Martínez
    • Aníbal
    Miguel Viera
    • The Pupil
    Sergio Coen
    • Singing Shepherd
    Aslenis Márquez
    • Indira
    José Naider
    • Miguel Dionisio
    Yanker Díaz
    • Leonidas as a Child
    Víctor Montero
    • Isidoro
    Joaquín Ramón
    • Gabriel
    Jorge Lascarro
    • Sigifredo
    Germán Epieyu
    • Minister
    Luisa Alfaro
    • Victoria
    Merija Uriana
    • Herminia
    • Réalisation
      • Cristina Gallego
      • Ciro Guerra
    • Scénario
      • Maria Camila Arias
      • Jacques Toulemonde Vidal
      • Cristina Gallego
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs45

    7,513.6K
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    Avis à la une

    8Filmlover-43

    Not like any film I've seen before

    Birds of Passage (Pájaros de verano in Spanish) is a striking and fascinating look into an 'alien' world, a term I use here because this film is a deep dive into another time and far different culture. It could be another planet almost. The film is about events in the 60's and 70's especially regarding the Wayuu of northern Colombia, an Indigenous culture quite divorced from Columbia proper with a distinct language and customs quite different from the rest of Columbia. The English translation presented is always that they are 'Indians' but quite unique if you compare only to the Indians of America. If you look at a map of Columbia, the colorful Wayuu inhabit the peninsula that juts out into the Atlantic in the far north. It's a desert area in part but has green agricultural area in the hills, where marijuana was cultivated very successfully. This film is brilliant and riveting but has the drawback in our own culture of having subtitles, but deserves an audience beyond the multiplex. This great work of movie art retells the story of the Wayuu during the late 60's, early-70's, when Peace Corps volunteers were in the area and the gringos were looking for pot. I understand the fascination of tribal cultures from my own Peace Corps service in Iran, also in the late-60's, and the attraction to cannabis from nearby Afghanistan. As is striking in indigenous cultures, the family is everything to the protagonists of the film with trust in the dream world (literally), family tribal elders and the ways of their ancestors. This area had deep poverty before the exporting of the region's very potent marijuana to the states was embraced. The demand was fed by young Americans willing to pay top dollar for it. I can speak to this also as in 1971 Colombian pot was around in New York City that we called the "two puff stuff". I didn't know anything about origins of this marijuana. I did know a pilot, who had served in the Vietnam and flew planeloads of pot out of Columbia into the States so I had some awareness of the demand. There are better descriptions than I will make of plot details of this film here on IMDB. Not noted directly in the film: by the mid-1980's the violent Medellin cartel took over the Marijuana business from the Wayuu and their region descended again into poverty. The Wayuu people stepped away from further drug-related violence, as had been unleased previously within their clan groups who had run their region's elicit trade. I emphasize in my review the universal theme presented in the film of the undoing of greed and betrayal on traditional and humane values. This epic film ends with a 'war' between warring families or clans. This film is from Cristina Gallego and Ciro Guerra, who made the unusual "Embrace of the Serpents", a striking and hallucinatory Oscar nominated film, very highly rated on IMDB, but not by me. I didn't appreciate that film as much Birds of Passage. However, having seen this later film from this incredible team, I'll go back and see 'Serpents' again to give it another view.
    JohnDeSando

    Cartels, lovely and deadly.

    Birds of Paradise takes a familiar subject, the Colombian drug scene in the '60's and '70's, and makes it into a watchable Godfather saga. Family is the center of the action leading to, you guessed it, warring drug kingdoms. The cinematography is lush, the actors authentic, and the themes eternal.

    The stuff that makes the world happy, weed, comes down from the mountains to the small airplanes, which fly north to the US, a pleased customer bringing prosperity to otherwise impoverished Colombians. Marriage promises families forever linked until capitalism, not communism, rends even the strongest familial ties.

    The five "cantos" embrace happiness and misery in equal measure: wild grass, the graves, prosperity, the war, and limbo. The coming out party of gorgeous Zaida (Natalia Reyes) presages a bright future for her Wayuu tribe with a blazing-red silk dress and stunning face paint. However, the imposing mother Ursula (Carmina Martinez) demands an expensive dowry that suitor Rapayet (Jose Acosta) might have difficulty offering. This matriarch gives the lie to any theory that Latino culture is purely patriarchal.

    Ambition leads to drug running, family feuding, and temporary wealth. The riches are embodied in the colorful fabrics that are flamboyant and garish at the same time. The dark downfalls could be written about anywhere.

    Birds of Passage is an engaging and beautiful gloss on the effects of tribalism and the corruptions of wealth and power, exacerbated by the obsession with the belief in family to die for at all costs. It is a glowing and menacing reprise of the Colombian Corleone days set amongst the indigenous Wayuu, for whom only a few moments are in paradise.
    8nikxatz

    If there's family, there's honour

    This film is without a doubt a thought- provoking, chaotic and memorable experience. A lot of films choose to talk about the drug wars and the effects that power and money can have to humans, but this one feels like no other. It is griping and intense and handles its subject material in the best of ways. It is obvious that the creator of the film did everything he could so that the movie feels realistic and interesting to the viewer. Its beautiful and colorful visuals, the exceptional sound design and the strong and immersive soundtrack made you feel as a part of a whole and the film never felt boring or cliche. It is masterfully crafted and really well-paced. Every conversation and direction that the film takes feels logical and you can feel the chaos slowly coming to the surface and destroying this tribe's life. Also, whenever a certain ritual was taking place, like the bird-like dance or the spitting by the old lady that is the matriarch o the tribe, I was instantly hooked by it. Its a movie about life and death and how a small change could lead to a larger one and to a larger one and in the end to death and chaos. Its a story about people which are trapped in their own deadly webs and are unable to escape. Everything that was young and beautiful,the red dress of the young actress, the insects and the kids, the dances and that feel of family, togetherness and spirituality is lost and overshadowed by dullness and corrupted and greedy people, who seek power but in the end find death. Tragic indeed 8/10 and who knows? maybe a 9 on a second watch
    8paul-allaer

    Family drug drama from Colombia: nothing like you'd expect it

    "Birds of Passage" (2018 release from Colombia; 125 min.) is a drug drama about a Wayuu (northern Colombia) family. As the movie opens, Zaida has completed her year of confinement "with grace and dignity" according to her mom, and now the village is celebrating Zaida becoming a woman. Rapayet, a young man in the village, has his eyes on her, and his uncle asks Zaida's family. The family, however, is demanding a dowry of 30 goats and 20 cows, among other things. Rapayet needs to come up with money, lots of money, and by coincidence (when a Peace Corps guy is looking for weed) gets involved in the drug trade... At this point we're less than 15 min. into the movie but to tell you more of the plot will spoil your viewing experience, you'll just have to see for yourself how it all plays out.

    Couple of comments: this is the latest movie from Ciro Guera (who previously brought us the equally excellent "Embrace of the Serpent") and Cristina Gallego. "Birds of Passage" follows one particular family's involvement in the drug trade from 1968 to 1980, and the movie is brought in 5 chapters (called "Songs" in the movie: Song I Wild Grass 1968' Song II The Graves 1971, etc. When you heard the words "drug trade" and "Colombia", we typically associate them with movies like "Escobar: Paradise Lost". "Birds of Passage" is a completely different type drug drama, mostly because this deal with an isolated clan, where family and tradition means everything (literally), and due to the small and remoteness of this clan, everything becomes personal very quickly. The cast, unknowns but for Natalia Reyes (who plays Zaida), is generally outstanding. Last but not least, be sure to check out the scenery, which is almost a character in and of itself.

    "Bird of Passage" premiered at last year's Cannes film festival to great acclaim, and it finally appeared this weekend at my local art-house movie theater, I couldn't wait to see it. The Sunday matinee screening where I saw this at was attended poorly (6 people including myself). If you are interested in seeing a Colombia drug drama from a very different perspective that what you probably envision, I'd readily suggest you check this out, be it in the theater (if you still can), on VOD, or eventually on DVD/Blu-ray, and draw your own conclusion.
    FrenchEddieFelson

    Honor, tradition, family and ... marijuana

    This marvelous movie takes place in Colombia, within the Peninsula of the Guajirain, a sparsely populated and arid area, and mostly played with Wayuu autochthons. This timeless univers is characterized by a rather pronounced communitarianism, each village highlighting its differences with the surrounding ones, while the origin of these differences remains, as often, unexplained and obscure. Nevertheless, they share ancestral traditions, folklore and values such as honor and family bonds. Thus, during the first 30 minutes, we do not really know when the film takes place, until the informative and surprising appearance of cars. Thus, we may guess that we are in the 60s / 70s. A marriage proposal between a man and a woman from two neighboring tribes will be, by a strange combination of circumstances related to an exorbitant dowry, the opportunity to integrate the marijuana trafficking, which is a very lucrative universe while slowly distorting personalities. Like in a Greek tragedy, these families will ineluctably suffer a descent into hell, via the classical 'eye for eye, tooth for tooth' philosophy.

    The film is visually sober and simple, but of an exacerbated aestheticism, with an unusual care about details, including birds. Moreover, the actors are excellent, especially the two main ones: José Acosta (Rapayet) and Carmiña Martínez (Úrsula).

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The directors, Cristina Gallego and Ciro Guerra, were a married couple, but divorced during production of the film.
    • Gaffes
      Toutes les informations contiennent des spoilers
    • Citations

      Victoria's Grandmother: Dreams prove the existence of the soul.

    • Crédits fous
      Acknowledgements include: "A Santa Marta, la Virgen de la Candelaria y de la Guadalupe. Al amor que todo lo puede."
    • Bandes originales
      El Pollo Vallenato
      Composed by Luis Enrique Martínez

      Performed by Adaulfo Brito, Britnis Molino, Wilmer Deluque

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Birds of Passage?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Were animals harmed during the filming?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 10 avril 2019 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Colombie
      • Danemark
      • Mexique
      • Allemagne
      • Suisse
      • France
    • Sites officiels
      • Bord Cadre Films (France)
      • Ciudad Lunar
    • Langues
      • Wayuu
      • Espagnol
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Birds of Passage
    • Lieux de tournage
      • La Guajira, Colombie
    • Sociétés de production
      • Ciudad Lunar Producciones
      • Blond Indian Films
      • Pimienta Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 507 259 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 23 082 $US
      • 17 févr. 2019
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 2 517 405 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 5min(125 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Atmos
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1
      • 2.39:1

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