NOTE IMDb
6,2/10
3,6 k
MA NOTE
Désespérée d'aider son père dans une mission héroïque et de sauver sa ville, Georgia se déguise en un jeune homme appelé "Joe" et rejoint un petit groupe de pompiers qui tentent d'arrêter un... Tout lireDésespérée d'aider son père dans une mission héroïque et de sauver sa ville, Georgia se déguise en un jeune homme appelé "Joe" et rejoint un petit groupe de pompiers qui tentent d'arrêter un incendiaire.Désespérée d'aider son père dans une mission héroïque et de sauver sa ville, Georgia se déguise en un jeune homme appelé "Joe" et rejoint un petit groupe de pompiers qui tentent d'arrêter un incendiaire.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Vincent Cassel
- Shawn
- (voix)
Valérie Lemercier
- Pauline
- (voix)
Claudia Tagbo
- Miss Divine
- (voix)
Elie Semoun
- Chef Neil
- (voix)
Emmanuel Garijo
- Ricardo
- (voix)
Alexandre Nguyen
- Jin
- (voix)
- (as Alexandre N'Guyen)
Olivia Cooke
- Georgia
- (voix)
- …
Laurie Holden
- Pauline
- (voix)
Ryan W. Garcia
- Ricardo
- (voix)
- (as Ryan Garcia)
Mara Junot
- Laura Divine
- (voix)
Avis à la une
It's your typical kids movie with a lesson at the end. This time, it's a movie about the fire female firefighter in the FDNY... set in 1932. I think it contains just the right amount of action for a movie, if you count the part where they drive a taxi onto the Empire State building under construction.
Enjoyable and easy to watch.
Decent animation and the story is ok also.
Only major annoying thing for me was the main characters voice. She's supposed to be 16 but the voiceover is from a 40 year old woman who doesn't sound 16!
Decent animation and the story is ok also.
Only major annoying thing for me was the main characters voice. She's supposed to be 16 but the voiceover is from a 40 year old woman who doesn't sound 16!
As with most animated movies you have to appreciate they are aimed at children - the initial storyline was easy to follow and accounted for the pack of attention span of children - there were some funny moments and the animation was good so perfectly fine as an adult watching.
The only bit I wasn't convinced by was the villain/weapon element which I think was a bit far fetched for children to follow and popped out of nowhere. This wasn't anything that spoiled the film for us and our little one was watching until the last minute which is always nice for parents!
The only bit I wasn't convinced by was the villain/weapon element which I think was a bit far fetched for children to follow and popped out of nowhere. This wasn't anything that spoiled the film for us and our little one was watching until the last minute which is always nice for parents!
Set in 1930s New York, young woman Georgia Nolan (Olivia Cooke) as a child dreamed of becoming a fireman, but her father, retired fire captain Shawn Nolan broke the news that women can't be firefighters. Georgia has seemingly accepted that and works alongside her father as a seamstress for his tailor business but still holds that dream close to her heart training every opportunity she can get. When a rash of mysterious blazes featuring colored smoke and eerier music occur at various Broadway theaters, the city's firefighters begin disappearing without a trace. Mayor Jimmy Murray (William Shatner) as a last resort finds Shawn Nolan and asks him to come out of retirement to lead a volunteer team to help fight the arsonist which Shawn reluctantly agrees to. Georgia overhearing this decides to dress up as a man named Joe and dons a disguise working under her father along with neurotic science expert Ricardo (Ryan Garcia) and daredevil driver Jin (Wilex Ly) who's prone to fainting spells to stop the arsonist from turning New York to ashes.
Fireheart is the latest film from Canadian animation studio L'Atelier Animation who may not be a household name, but did score a reasonably big hit in 2016 with the animated feature Ballerina also known as Leap! In its U. S. release, earning $100 million worldwide against its $30 million budget. Much like Ballerina, Fireheart is co-produced by both French and Canadian sources, and like many films of this ilk it's on the lower end of the budget for this type of movie with estimates ranging from $35-40 million. Fireheart has gotten a very quiet release, especially in the United States where it appeared on Hulu earlier this month and doesn't seem to have much presence. While Fireheart isn't an overlooked gem or anything, it's a solid smaller scale animated film that I did enjoy.
The best asset of the film is definitely in its animation. While Fireheart doesn't have the resources and polish of something from Disney or Dreamworks, it's more than capable of competing against the likes of Illumination even with half the budget of a typical Illumination production. The movie does a decent job of creating a version 1930s New York, not perfectly but there are some nice background details in things like Times Square with various posters and ads that do feel like they're of the era. I thought Olivia Cooke and Kenneth Branagh were really good in the film and there is a natural chemistry that comes through in their interactions so you buy their relationship as father and daughter. And the firefighting scenes are really good, the arsonist scenes in particular are nicely atmospheric with this colorful smoke and a suit disguise that looks really good and even a little unnerving at certain points.
The movie itself is pure formula especially with its very Twelfth Night/Mulan type protagonist and all the humor that entails. If you remember movie's like She's the Man or Disney's Mulan where the characters attempt to act "manly" by inserting the word "man" into every other sentence we do get some of that here, and there is a running gag about Georgia/Joe's mustache made of dog hair falling off or being on when it shouldn't. The movie is pretty similar to firefighting movie Backdraft if you filtered it through the lens of something like Zootopia (save for the anthropomorphic animals part) and if you've seen Zootopia or 70% of animated films of the past 10 years you'll probably be able to spot the arsonist as soon as they appear. The movie's humor is mostly okay, it's not great or anything but it's serviceable for its target audience. But then you have headscratching moments like a character named Captain Neil of the NYPD who speaks throughout the movie in this exaggerated falsetto with mannerisms that feel like a less restrained Jack from Will & Grace that makes this movie seem like it's about 15 years out of date. I will say that despite this being a "liar revealed" story, the path they take doesn't go exactly the same direction you'd think they go, considering how often this story beat is often tapped I was considerably more accepting of it here.
Fireheart won't set any fires, but it's a solid animated film that can be enjoyed as a suitable time killer. The animation is solid, the voicework is decent (captain Neil notwithstanding), and there are some thrilling or inventive sequences in the movie. The movie does use some rather familiar elements with its central mystery pretty easy to solve even by the least jaded viewer, but other elements such as the conflict of Georgia's lie are handled better here than similar plot points in other films. If you have children who like action/adventure or firefighting this is probably a decent sit for them.
Fireheart is the latest film from Canadian animation studio L'Atelier Animation who may not be a household name, but did score a reasonably big hit in 2016 with the animated feature Ballerina also known as Leap! In its U. S. release, earning $100 million worldwide against its $30 million budget. Much like Ballerina, Fireheart is co-produced by both French and Canadian sources, and like many films of this ilk it's on the lower end of the budget for this type of movie with estimates ranging from $35-40 million. Fireheart has gotten a very quiet release, especially in the United States where it appeared on Hulu earlier this month and doesn't seem to have much presence. While Fireheart isn't an overlooked gem or anything, it's a solid smaller scale animated film that I did enjoy.
The best asset of the film is definitely in its animation. While Fireheart doesn't have the resources and polish of something from Disney or Dreamworks, it's more than capable of competing against the likes of Illumination even with half the budget of a typical Illumination production. The movie does a decent job of creating a version 1930s New York, not perfectly but there are some nice background details in things like Times Square with various posters and ads that do feel like they're of the era. I thought Olivia Cooke and Kenneth Branagh were really good in the film and there is a natural chemistry that comes through in their interactions so you buy their relationship as father and daughter. And the firefighting scenes are really good, the arsonist scenes in particular are nicely atmospheric with this colorful smoke and a suit disguise that looks really good and even a little unnerving at certain points.
The movie itself is pure formula especially with its very Twelfth Night/Mulan type protagonist and all the humor that entails. If you remember movie's like She's the Man or Disney's Mulan where the characters attempt to act "manly" by inserting the word "man" into every other sentence we do get some of that here, and there is a running gag about Georgia/Joe's mustache made of dog hair falling off or being on when it shouldn't. The movie is pretty similar to firefighting movie Backdraft if you filtered it through the lens of something like Zootopia (save for the anthropomorphic animals part) and if you've seen Zootopia or 70% of animated films of the past 10 years you'll probably be able to spot the arsonist as soon as they appear. The movie's humor is mostly okay, it's not great or anything but it's serviceable for its target audience. But then you have headscratching moments like a character named Captain Neil of the NYPD who speaks throughout the movie in this exaggerated falsetto with mannerisms that feel like a less restrained Jack from Will & Grace that makes this movie seem like it's about 15 years out of date. I will say that despite this being a "liar revealed" story, the path they take doesn't go exactly the same direction you'd think they go, considering how often this story beat is often tapped I was considerably more accepting of it here.
Fireheart won't set any fires, but it's a solid animated film that can be enjoyed as a suitable time killer. The animation is solid, the voicework is decent (captain Neil notwithstanding), and there are some thrilling or inventive sequences in the movie. The movie does use some rather familiar elements with its central mystery pretty easy to solve even by the least jaded viewer, but other elements such as the conflict of Georgia's lie are handled better here than similar plot points in other films. If you have children who like action/adventure or firefighting this is probably a decent sit for them.
In my honesty, not just fire fighters but all those around the world that are still fighting despite being held back for obvious reasons of gender neutrality, this movie was the voice dedicated too you, taking keep fighting for what you want and not otherwise what people tell you, am no motivator but i guess the movie speaks for all of us, am just pointing out why my opinions on this movie matters, can't categorize it in any favorite but at the end like always plus the fact that i did ebony it i must comment it by saying it was truly touching that at the end everything worked out fine for them.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMolly Williams, a former slave in New York City, is often reported to be the first known female firefighter. She became a member of Oceanus Engine Company #11 in about 1815.
- GaffesThe movie is set in 1930, but near the end of the movie the main character attempts to use CPR which isn't invented until 1954.
- Crédits fousEnd credits show photos of real first female firefighters from around the world.
- ConnexionsReferences Vive la liberté (1929)
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- How long is Fireheart?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 35 000 000 $CA (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 49 848 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 2 744 $US
- 29 mai 2022
- Montant brut mondial
- 6 245 634 $US
- Durée1 heure 32 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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