Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBased on the events on the last day of World War One.Based on the events on the last day of World War One.Based on the events on the last day of World War One.
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Eleven is a very moving film, showing the last few hours of World War 1. The fear felt by soldiers was well captured, as was the sense of comradeship. It was great to see such attention to historical and period detail in the sets and uniforms and the camera work was superb.
All the actors were excellent, with standout performances by Sean Cronin as Friedrich Muller and Jo Stone-Fewings as Captain Mullen. A special mention must also be made of the wounded French soldier, Jerome Bernard, played by the very talented Guillaume Rivaud, who so beautifully captured the look of thoughtful sorrow and acted with great compassion and feeling.
It was fitting to include the powerful 'soldier's prayer' at the beginning and one can easily imagine that many prayed such a prayer on the battlefields. It was a great shame therefore that the name of Jesus was taken in vain several times during the film.
All in all, this film was a well-made reminder of the horrors of World War 1 and the friendships that must have been made during that time.
All the actors were excellent, with standout performances by Sean Cronin as Friedrich Muller and Jo Stone-Fewings as Captain Mullen. A special mention must also be made of the wounded French soldier, Jerome Bernard, played by the very talented Guillaume Rivaud, who so beautifully captured the look of thoughtful sorrow and acted with great compassion and feeling.
It was fitting to include the powerful 'soldier's prayer' at the beginning and one can easily imagine that many prayed such a prayer on the battlefields. It was a great shame therefore that the name of Jesus was taken in vain several times during the film.
All in all, this film was a well-made reminder of the horrors of World War 1 and the friendships that must have been made during that time.
Released to coincide with the 100 year anniversary of armistice day, Eleven started it's life as a small independent film project of its writer and co-director, Rock Salt and for a film with such limitations its not short on ambition. Historical period pieces are notoriously difficult to shoot for a low budget, so its no small feat that this production manages to achieve both a feeling of scale and emotionally engage its audience for its tight 82 minute running time.
The plot, loosely based on true events, concerns a group of British soldiers in the trenches of World War 1, who are forced to commit one more meaningless offensive as peace is about to be declared between the Allies and Germany on the Western Front. Knowing this to be the case an unhinged British General still orders the men in his sector to attack German lines one last time. So the debate rages between the lower ranks and officers alike if the orders should be followed or should they just wait for peace to be declared. Meanwhile families on both sides at home wait for news of their loved ones, praying that all will return home safely.
On paper with it's minuscule budget, Eleven really shouldn't have worked but thanks to some well framed production shots, clever use of locations and a very committed and talented cast co-directors Sean Cronin and Rock Salt manage to pull it off. The story explores the futility of war and the clash of egos among the different range of characters. The cast and script must take much of the credit for bringing such an interesting range of different personas to life and while some are more memorable than others there's several stand out performances from Joe Bryant as Corporal Reeves, Richard Dee Roberts as Sgt Jones and Julian Gamm as Private Harry Blount all of whom were exceptionally good. Touching moments too come on the home front scenes through the performances from Grace Blackman and Sean Cronin during the films more intimate moments with their characters respective families. Nice too, to see a cameo from Lucy Benjamin supporting such a worthy production. There's not a huge number of films being made about the Great War. It was a muddy, dirty war, where the battlefields all looked the same and the tactics from both sides rarely changed so its nice to see a film bring this period to life again so convincingly. The ending too packs an emotional wallop that only the most cynical would fail to be moved from.
Occasionally the limits of the budget betray itself on screen, there's some continuity issues and not all the performances are even but minor quibbles aside this is still a well made, extremely moving piece of cinema. So set expectations aside and enjoy the well crafted story and characters as you go back to a time that has been all but forgotten.
The film ultimately offers a message of hope for the future but we know of course, with this being world war one, such words ultimately fell on deaf ears.
The plot, loosely based on true events, concerns a group of British soldiers in the trenches of World War 1, who are forced to commit one more meaningless offensive as peace is about to be declared between the Allies and Germany on the Western Front. Knowing this to be the case an unhinged British General still orders the men in his sector to attack German lines one last time. So the debate rages between the lower ranks and officers alike if the orders should be followed or should they just wait for peace to be declared. Meanwhile families on both sides at home wait for news of their loved ones, praying that all will return home safely.
On paper with it's minuscule budget, Eleven really shouldn't have worked but thanks to some well framed production shots, clever use of locations and a very committed and talented cast co-directors Sean Cronin and Rock Salt manage to pull it off. The story explores the futility of war and the clash of egos among the different range of characters. The cast and script must take much of the credit for bringing such an interesting range of different personas to life and while some are more memorable than others there's several stand out performances from Joe Bryant as Corporal Reeves, Richard Dee Roberts as Sgt Jones and Julian Gamm as Private Harry Blount all of whom were exceptionally good. Touching moments too come on the home front scenes through the performances from Grace Blackman and Sean Cronin during the films more intimate moments with their characters respective families. Nice too, to see a cameo from Lucy Benjamin supporting such a worthy production. There's not a huge number of films being made about the Great War. It was a muddy, dirty war, where the battlefields all looked the same and the tactics from both sides rarely changed so its nice to see a film bring this period to life again so convincingly. The ending too packs an emotional wallop that only the most cynical would fail to be moved from.
Occasionally the limits of the budget betray itself on screen, there's some continuity issues and not all the performances are even but minor quibbles aside this is still a well made, extremely moving piece of cinema. So set expectations aside and enjoy the well crafted story and characters as you go back to a time that has been all but forgotten.
The film ultimately offers a message of hope for the future but we know of course, with this being world war one, such words ultimately fell on deaf ears.
Terrible acting even for a low budget film not worth watching and a disgrace to real events of WW1. Wasted my money.
We tried to watch this but when they fail to get the simple details right, for example British Servicemen NEVER salute without any headgear, yet a junior officer does this ten minutes in, my wife pointed out that he had holes in his tunic where his regimental badges should be.
Then the senior officer, taken directly from Blackadder goes forth, at least that was satire. The makers obviously thought no one under 40 would have seen Blackadder.
What could have been a good story was ruined, we gave up after 15 minutes.
Then the senior officer, taken directly from Blackadder goes forth, at least that was satire. The makers obviously thought no one under 40 would have seen Blackadder.
What could have been a good story was ruined, we gave up after 15 minutes.
How anybody can rate this 10/10 or call it a masterpiece is beyond me. Purely out of respect, this should never have been released as it's impossible to take it seriously, despite it being such an awful time in world history. The end of the first world war, all crammed into 79 minutes with such unconvincing acting, at times it was hard to believe this was actually a serious film. Embarrassing at times to watch.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis film was released exactly 100 years after World War One had ended on the 11th hour, of the 11th day and of the 11th month.
- Bandes originalesCome Home To Me
by Caitlin Grey and Neil Harvey
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- How long is Eleven?Alimenté par Alexa
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