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24 frames est un projet expérimental réalisé par le cinéaste Abbas Kiarostami au cours des trois dernières années de sa vie. Il s'agit d'un recueil de 24 courts-métrages de quatre minutes et... Tout lire24 frames est un projet expérimental réalisé par le cinéaste Abbas Kiarostami au cours des trois dernières années de sa vie. Il s'agit d'un recueil de 24 courts-métrages de quatre minutes et demie inspirés par des images fixes, notamment des peintures et des photographies.24 frames est un projet expérimental réalisé par le cinéaste Abbas Kiarostami au cours des trois dernières années de sa vie. Il s'agit d'un recueil de 24 courts-métrages de quatre minutes et demie inspirés par des images fixes, notamment des peintures et des photographies.
- Réalisation
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 3 victoires au total
Avis à la une
Most people want to compare this movie to non-narrative visual art, and that's not what I saw. Really, it reminded me more of The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, another collection of short stories which feels meticulously plotted yet like an illusion that vanishes when you try to make literal meaning out of it. The two are the best evocation of the era when short story collections mattered to normal people and vice versa. There are almost no humans, but the movie is full of perfectly observed character moments that are orchestrated with thematic precision. This is the Winesburg, Ohio of avant garde filmmaking, and probably a better cinematic version of that book's accomplishments in micro-observation than the adaptation.
I find it puzzling that some critics found this last work by Abbas Kiarastam, made as he knew he was approaching the end of his days, disappointingly uncinematic. 24 Frames seems to me the logical end point for the arc of the career of one of the fundamentally cinematic artists. Surely, the Kiarastami aesthetic can best be boiled down to an Ozu style static camera mounted on a car window, a still, pensive acknowledgement of a world in flux.
Or perhaps one can see this work as an inversion of that aesthetic. For here, Kiarastami uses digital animation to bring movement to still images: a painting, a post-card, and 22 of his own still photographs, trying to inject temporality back into a "frozen moment". The movement comes mostly in the form of animal life, a nature that seems very much in peril. The few contributions by human characters are generally destructive, as if the humans think they live in frozen moments, a world that cannot end. Kiarastami seems to be trying to remind the viewer of the fragility of life in this world, how quickly we may be approaching it's end, as of course, he was approaching his as he made the film.
Or perhaps one can see this work as an inversion of that aesthetic. For here, Kiarastami uses digital animation to bring movement to still images: a painting, a post-card, and 22 of his own still photographs, trying to inject temporality back into a "frozen moment". The movement comes mostly in the form of animal life, a nature that seems very much in peril. The few contributions by human characters are generally destructive, as if the humans think they live in frozen moments, a world that cannot end. Kiarastami seems to be trying to remind the viewer of the fragility of life in this world, how quickly we may be approaching it's end, as of course, he was approaching his as he made the film.
I can't review this like a typical movie, because it's not a typical movie. This is an experimental art film, so there are two questions; Does this movie achieve what it set out to do? and How did it affect me?
I do believe it achieved what it wanted to, It's beautiful and an interesting idea (seeing what could happen before and after a photograph).
It mostly kept my interest due to the beauty of the shots and what the subjects are doing within the shot. This is definitely a great background movie to have on at a casual party similar to a music streaming channel.
The only failings come with some the the effects, certain things feel and look worse than others.
I would recommend it if you want to see something calming and are interested in the premise. It's a decent watch.
I do believe it achieved what it wanted to, It's beautiful and an interesting idea (seeing what could happen before and after a photograph).
It mostly kept my interest due to the beauty of the shots and what the subjects are doing within the shot. This is definitely a great background movie to have on at a casual party similar to a music streaming channel.
The only failings come with some the the effects, certain things feel and look worse than others.
I would recommend it if you want to see something calming and are interested in the premise. It's a decent watch.
As contemplative as watching ocean waves eternally roll in, as soaring as listening to Ave Maria while pigeons flutter about, as mysterious as daydreaming while clouds billow past, and as somber as watching death come from nowhere to stop life in its tracks, yet knowing that nature will simply continue on. Maybe these are the images an artist nearing his own end has in mind, an homage to the beauty of life in its simple, underappreciated moments, and at the same time, a calm acceptance of death.
I loved the concept of this film, particularly in the life that Kiarostami breathed in to Bruegel's Hunters in the Snow in frame 1, but found that what followed a little too similar, and that not knowing the source of inspiration for 21 of the next 23 frames to be a detractor. It's certainly immersive and meditative, demanding patience of the viewer or a frame of mind that allows simple images to wash over oneself, but at 114 minutes, nearly 5 minutes a frame, it seemed too much for me.
The final frame, containing the kiss between Teresa Wright and Dana Andrews at the end of The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) played in very slow motion on a computer screen, while trees sway outside in the darkness, is stirring, powerful stuff. The only thing we have are these moments when we cling to one another, and if only we could slow them down. I just wish the music selected for this piece was something more poetic than Andrew Lloyd Weber's Love Never Dies, and that it hadn't taken so long to get to it.
I loved the concept of this film, particularly in the life that Kiarostami breathed in to Bruegel's Hunters in the Snow in frame 1, but found that what followed a little too similar, and that not knowing the source of inspiration for 21 of the next 23 frames to be a detractor. It's certainly immersive and meditative, demanding patience of the viewer or a frame of mind that allows simple images to wash over oneself, but at 114 minutes, nearly 5 minutes a frame, it seemed too much for me.
The final frame, containing the kiss between Teresa Wright and Dana Andrews at the end of The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) played in very slow motion on a computer screen, while trees sway outside in the darkness, is stirring, powerful stuff. The only thing we have are these moments when we cling to one another, and if only we could slow them down. I just wish the music selected for this piece was something more poetic than Andrew Lloyd Weber's Love Never Dies, and that it hadn't taken so long to get to it.
Gr8 Background !
It's like living wallpaper for your TV !
24 LIVING FRAMES !
.hence the name.
And some gr8 tunes too.
Frame 13 was brutal ! True and touching !
Frame 13 was brutal ! True and touching !
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis is Abbas Kiarostami's final work. It consists of 24 four-and-a-half-minute shorts shot by Kiarostami over a period of three years. The style has been described as fixed tableau with the use of blue screen.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Film: The Living Record of Our Memory (2021)
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- How long is 24 Frames?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 34 482 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 8 101 $US
- 4 févr. 2018
- Montant brut mondial
- 39 808 $US
- Durée1 heure 54 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1
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By what name was 24 Frames (2017) officially released in Canada in English?
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