NOTE IMDb
5,5/10
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MA NOTE
L'histoire d'un jeune homme qui, après avoir perdu sa mère, va travailler avec un médecin spécialisé dans les lobotomies et les thérapies.L'histoire d'un jeune homme qui, après avoir perdu sa mère, va travailler avec un médecin spécialisé dans les lobotomies et les thérapies.L'histoire d'un jeune homme qui, après avoir perdu sa mère, va travailler avec un médecin spécialisé dans les lobotomies et les thérapies.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 2 victoires et 2 nominations au total
Lollie Jensen
- Skater Mom
- (as a different name)
Adam Daveline
- Hospital Doctor
- (as Adam John Daveline)
Avis à la une
I believe the film is an incredible piece. It is, on the surface about a young man who's recently lost his father who goes onto follow a famous lobotomist who had treated his late mother by working as the lobotomoist's photographer.
This film is a walk through hell and it is beautiful.
I'd say this film isn't for everyone, but I hate that because I believe this film should be for everyone. I really like, admire, and respect films like this one. It is slow moving and existential and it completely and totally builds the atmosphere of desperation.
It certainly speaks on the banality of evil and all of our places in it, how we walk alongside next to evil and moral corruption.
The performances are great, Ty Sheridan really shows his talent here. Jeff Goldblum ads an importance to the film.
The end does get a little winding, it could perhaps have been edited a bit better in the last 1/4 of the film. There's two long monologues by an older actor that take the film to some other places than where it was before.
This is similar to films by Michael Haneke and other European existential filmmakers. If you're into that, this film is certainly for you.
It has very touching moments (Like Sheridan's character having a brief physical connection with a patient in her hospital room earlier in the film. It is a brief moment but is touchs your heart so). The film also excels in portraying very alienating moments.
It's truly a special piece and it should be seen but you do need to know what kind of film you will see. It is abstract and it holds no prisoners but it is a hugely important piece.
This film is a walk through hell and it is beautiful.
I'd say this film isn't for everyone, but I hate that because I believe this film should be for everyone. I really like, admire, and respect films like this one. It is slow moving and existential and it completely and totally builds the atmosphere of desperation.
It certainly speaks on the banality of evil and all of our places in it, how we walk alongside next to evil and moral corruption.
The performances are great, Ty Sheridan really shows his talent here. Jeff Goldblum ads an importance to the film.
The end does get a little winding, it could perhaps have been edited a bit better in the last 1/4 of the film. There's two long monologues by an older actor that take the film to some other places than where it was before.
This is similar to films by Michael Haneke and other European existential filmmakers. If you're into that, this film is certainly for you.
It has very touching moments (Like Sheridan's character having a brief physical connection with a patient in her hospital room earlier in the film. It is a brief moment but is touchs your heart so). The film also excels in portraying very alienating moments.
It's truly a special piece and it should be seen but you do need to know what kind of film you will see. It is abstract and it holds no prisoners but it is a hugely important piece.
This film tells the story of a young man who gets a job as the assistant for a psychiatrist.
The film is very very slow, but that does not bother me. Just a few minutes in, I can tell the director and cinematographer work very hard to make each scene aesthetically beautiful. However, there is very little plot. As the film progresses, I get increasingly lost. The last fifteen minutes is inexplicable, and the five minute monologue in French (which is not subtitled) confuses me even further. Another point which I dislike is Tye Sheridan's constant same expressionless expression. I see why he acts this way, but almost all the psychiatric patients are more interesting than this protagonist. Overall, I find this film too artistic, inaccessible and very dull.
The film is very very slow, but that does not bother me. Just a few minutes in, I can tell the director and cinematographer work very hard to make each scene aesthetically beautiful. However, there is very little plot. As the film progresses, I get increasingly lost. The last fifteen minutes is inexplicable, and the five minute monologue in French (which is not subtitled) confuses me even further. Another point which I dislike is Tye Sheridan's constant same expressionless expression. I see why he acts this way, but almost all the psychiatric patients are more interesting than this protagonist. Overall, I find this film too artistic, inaccessible and very dull.
Fair enough that this film is a vehicle for Jeff Goldblum, and a character loosely based on the infamous neurosurgeon who invented the transorbital lobotomy ought to give him plenty to work with. In those days, there were no meds yet, to control patient behavior, and lobotomies were a response to that urgent need. The real-life Dr. Freeman was obsessed with the need for social conformity, and thought that his compliant, lobotomized patients were an improvement on disorderly nature. So, how could Goldblum turn him into someone so bland? His Dr. Fiennes has no insight into his own status as monster. He seems to be a latter-day Don Quixote, meaning well, riding the roads with his '52 Plymouth (instead of a horse named Rocinante) with his faithful Polaroid-Land-Camera carrying sidekick, Andy (instead of Sancho) by his side. Maybe its a statement about the banality of evil. It does not work for me.
Of course we could spend countless hours discussing the theme subject, but it is to The Mountain's credit that instead of dumping information and opinions on us it simply daunts with actions and situations. It is more of a mood than a film... A tone poem -harrowing and pristine.
Sheridan & Goldblum is perfectly cast.
At the end of this movie you will feel just just like its ending - cold and unfeeling.
If you want to know what life looks like through a lobotomized person - watch this movie!
That's my best I can write about The Mountain.
If you want to know what life looks like through a lobotomized person - watch this movie!
That's my best I can write about The Mountain.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesTalking about the aspect ratio in which the film was shot (4:3), cinematographer Lorenzo Hagerman said that, while being a beautiful ratio to work with, it also managed to help in the framing of Jeff Goldblum (6'4", 1.94m) and Tye Sheridan (5'7", 1.71m) in their scenes together, without it looking funny.
- ConnexionsFeatured in A Picture of the Mountain (2019)
- Bandes originalesThe Sight of You
Written by Rick Alverson and Erik Hall
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- How long is The Mountain?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 61 035 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 15 785 $US
- 28 juil. 2019
- Montant brut mondial
- 61 035 $US
- Durée1 heure 46 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Mountain: une odysée américaine (2018) officially released in India in English?
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