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More

  • 1969
  • 12
  • 1h 52min
NOTE IMDb
6,4/10
3,4 k
MA NOTE
Mimsy Farmer and Klaus Grünberg in More (1969)
CriminalitéDrameRomance

Stefan, jeune diplômé, fait du stop d'Allemagne à Paris où il rencontre une expatriée américaine, Estelle. Ils vont chercher le soleil à Ibiza. La vie idyllique sur l'île dégénère lorsqu'ell... Tout lireStefan, jeune diplômé, fait du stop d'Allemagne à Paris où il rencontre une expatriée américaine, Estelle. Ils vont chercher le soleil à Ibiza. La vie idyllique sur l'île dégénère lorsqu'elle lui fait découvrir l'héroïne et qu'ils en deviennent accros.Stefan, jeune diplômé, fait du stop d'Allemagne à Paris où il rencontre une expatriée américaine, Estelle. Ils vont chercher le soleil à Ibiza. La vie idyllique sur l'île dégénère lorsqu'elle lui fait découvrir l'héroïne et qu'ils en deviennent accros.

  • Réalisation
    • Barbet Schroeder
  • Scénario
    • Paul Gégauff
    • Barbet Schroeder
    • Mimsy Farmer
  • Casting principal
    • Mimsy Farmer
    • Klaus Grünberg
    • Heinz Engelmann
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,4/10
    3,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Barbet Schroeder
    • Scénario
      • Paul Gégauff
      • Barbet Schroeder
      • Mimsy Farmer
    • Casting principal
      • Mimsy Farmer
      • Klaus Grünberg
      • Heinz Engelmann
    • 47avis d'utilisateurs
    • 22avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:35
    Trailer

    Photos129

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    Rôles principaux7

    Modifier
    Mimsy Farmer
    Mimsy Farmer
    • Estelle
    Klaus Grünberg
    • Stefan
    Heinz Engelmann
    Heinz Engelmann
    • Dr. Ernesto
    Michel Chanderli
    • Charlie
    Henry Wolf
    • Henry
    Louise Wink
    • Cathy
    Georges Montant
    • Seller
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Barbet Schroeder
    • Scénario
      • Paul Gégauff
      • Barbet Schroeder
      • Mimsy Farmer
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs47

    6,43.3K
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    Avis à la une

    7claudio_carvalho

    A Trip to the Hell of Heroin

    In the late 60's, after graduating in Mathematics, the German Stefan Brückner (Klaus Grünberg) hitchhikes from Lübeck to Paris to see the world without money. He befriends Charlie (Michel Chanderli) in an arcade and they go to a party. When Stefan meets gorgeous American Estelle Miller (Mimsy Farmer) in the party, Charlie advises him to stay away from her. However, the straight Stefan falls in love with Estelle and after breaking in a house with Charlie to rob, he follows her to Ibiza. Stefan seeks out the hotel of his fellow citizen Dr. Ernesto Wolf (Heinz Engelmann) where Estelle is lodged. He asks her to leave the place and stay with him in an isolated seaside house. Before leaving the hotel, Estelle steals some money and a pack from Wolf. Sooner Stefan learns that Estelle had stolen 200 doses of heroin and he decides to try one fix with her, in the beginning of his trip to hell.

    "More" is a cult-movie from the late 60 that became famous due to the music score by Pink Floyd. The film is a sort of response to the counterculture of apology to the drugs of the 60's and 70's and is dated in the present days. My great interest to see "More" was the Pink Floyd soundtrack, and I found it s great film, developed in slow pace to a predictable climax in the very end. Mimsy Farmer is amazing in the role of a destructive woman with face of angel but of death. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "More"
    7Quinoa1984

    on the failure of the hippies... featuring Pink Floyd!

    I would be interested to hear from the director, Barbet Schroeder, as to why he decided to make More his first film, and more specifically what his interest in hippies- or rather this form of the Euro-hippie paradise- and about their demise. The film is, at least, true enough to keep one interested, but in its own kind of truth it's strange, biased. It's a given heroin (aka, "Horse") is awful stuff, rotten, the conclusion for many a dumb-headed drug user that sees that as the be-all-end-all, because it basically is: after that everything else stops, that becomes the life, and it's either a continuous run for more of the same or death. More starts off as something concerning a romance between a New York girl and a German man, but it becomes something else, for better or worse (sometimes both in the same scene).

    It's basically about two "young" people, Estelle and Stefan, who meet in a city where Stefan has come as a sort of wanderer away from his home country. She's wandering too, sort of, and is maybe too friendly with a big-time pusher named Wolf. They end up on a remote island somewhere nearby and, after a somewhat daring grab for some "horse" by Estelle, they also find a pad in the form of a seemingly remoter house along the seashore. Schroeder's comment on youth and sex and drugs isn't too simplistic, which makes the film actually lucid and intelligent so many years later. It's both direct and subtle, more about the characters and then about the fact that what he's depicting could in other hands just be a propagandistic hippie-exploitation picture. Perhaps most pleasantly, and this is just a guess, Schroeder uses as inspiration the sort of long sequence from Bergman's Summer with Monika: two kids in an inexorable connection, some good some definitely not so good, set against (too?) perfectly shot landscapes.

    On the one hand, I should mention that there are problems, some big ones in fact. The performances aren't very convincing throughout; a few scenes strike some power or have the actors in a good connection with one another, but Klaus Grumberg overplays himself even if he is an ornery German by nature (in that case I would've preferred Klaus Kinski in the part to make it crazier but deep enough for the subject matter) as does Farmer to her own degree. And there's gaps of naiveté in the screenplay that keep it from being as deep as it really thinks it is. On the other hand, there are two big things going for it: Nestor Almendros, the great cinematographer (i.e. Days of Heaven) is DP and is a big boost for a first time director like Schroeder. Nearly every image is seen with an awesome purpose or artistry, be it a shot of the cliffs by the sea or sun or something as simple as the seemingly natural light of a room.

    The other thing is Pink Floyd, probably the main reason I and many others have heard of the film in the first place (years before I knew really who Schroeder was I saw the "More" soundtrack whenever I looked up Pink Floyd albums). It's very good music throughout, occasionally the mind-blowing variety that gives them the reputation they deserve. Some of it, too, is a little tedious, even as it is a movie that concerns free love and lots of drugs and sometimes both at the same time. I wouldn't rank it anywhere near as high as a Meddle or Animals, certainly not Dark Side, but it too helps to elevate the subject matter another notch, particularly when one least expects it or in low tones or floating in and out of buildings as Stefan or other walks on the streets. It's almost better atmosphere than the movie itself deserves, but overall More is still worth watching as a period piece- dated, but potent, like a less ambitious but more substantial Zabriskie Point.
    10faversham

    Classic 60s Drug Tragedy, really one-of-a-kind, a small classic.

    Has there ever been an Angel of Death like MIMSY FARMER in Barbet Schroeder's 1960s heroin opus? Sort of Jean Seberg with a hypodermic. Pink Floyd score. Despite some ultimately insignificant weaknesses, a classic, shamelessly ripped off by Erich Segal/Noel Black for their inept JENNIFER ON MY MIND (1971), although Tippy Walker, playing a similar character, is herself very junkie-appealing in the latter mess. MORE, though, is terrific, a great 60s drug movie and, simply, an important document of its time. Very much a cult film so join the cult.

    No American movie then, as far as I can remember, charts the same territory. MIMSY's an astonishing archetype, elevating this into mythic realms. Not for the faint-hearted. Great sex scenes too.
    7gcleary

    Beautiful sights and sounds

    Like most people, I was interested in "More" solely because of the Pink Floyd soundtrack, which has turned out to be the only Pink Floyd album that I still listen to after all these years. It was quite a surprise to run across the film in a local video store, in a digitally remastered version. It was an even bigger surprise to find that it is a pretty good movie.

    Visually it is quite beautiful, especially when the two main characters are cavorting on the rocks on the Spanish island of Ibiza. And the use of the soundtrack music, which as far as I can tell is exclusively by Pink Floyd, is excellent. It was a joy to watch the film with my copy of the album alongside me, mentally ticking off each track as it was used in the film. Dave Gilmour's brief "A Spanish Piece" was the only one I didn't hear, and several tracks are used quite prominently, especially "Cymbaline," "Main Theme," and "Quicksilver." That latter track is tedious on the soundtrack album but works very well during the title sequence of the film, resurfacing at least once later on. Maybe now I can appreciate it on the album, now that I have some visuals to accompany it in my mind.

    The plot of "More" is a little hard to take at times, especially in the early going, when the film appears to be merely a vehicle to demonstrate the hipness of those involved in making it. But eventually the film proves that it has much more than that to offer, as the plot becomes more focused. Why does Stefan take heroin? Why does ANYBODY take heroin, fully knowing the possible consequences? The film does not attempt to answer that question directly, but Stefan's heroin use seems a logical extension of his single-minded pursuit of pure pleasure.

    I strongly recommend this film to any Pink Floyd fan who has an appreciation of the vastly underrated "More" soundtrack. I also recommend it to anyone who has an interest in sixties counterculture and how it was portrayed in the media. I have no idea how realistic this movie is, since I am too young to have experienced the sixties firsthand, but it does seem to capture the spirit of the times in a way that no other movie does.
    8michelerealini

    A cult of love, sex and drugs

    "More", maybe, is mostly remembered for the excellent soundtrack composed by Pink Floyd -in 1969 they weren't superstars yet. Actually they made an album with the film music, no fan can miss it!

    But this is also the first film of German-French director Barbet Schroeder: it's a cult movie. When it was released, censorship everywhere cut several scenes of sex and drugs. It is also one of the first films to treat explicitly the theme of drug slavery.

    A German boy travels to Paris and meets an American girl: they fall in love. Together they search for sun and exoticism. But it's a too high price love: she initiates him into drugs.

    In the Sixties anti-drug campaigns were not like today, there wasn't much information. On the contrary, in many milieus taking drugs was a sort of spiritual experience... So it's quite surprising to see a film of that period which describes a nightmarish heroin experience.

    The film is simple, not vulgar at all and shot in a "cinema-verité" style. Actors Mimsy Farmer and Klaus Grünberg are very convincing. "More" is a document of the end of the Sixties -and a document of the end of the hippies illusions as well.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The soundtrack was composed by Pink Floyd. The band was given £600 and complete ownership to all of the material for their work, and some of the songs on the album were still in their live set list by 1971. The band also scored the music for another Barbet Schroeder film, La vallée (1972).
    • Gaffes
      David Gilmour's last name is misspelled "Gilmore" in the opening credits.
    • Citations

      Stefan Brückner: [opening voice-over narration] I had imagined this journey as a quest. I finished my studies in math. I wanted to live. I wanted to burn all the bridges, all the formulas, and if I got burned, that was okay, too. I wanted to be warm. I wanted the sun and I went after it.

    • Versions alternatives
      The 2003 UK BFI DVD is cut by 1 min 23 secs and removes much of the scene where Stefan prepares the heroin for injection.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Étoiles et toiles: L'érotisme au cinéma (1983)
    • Bandes originales
      Cirrus Minor
      (uncredited)

      Written by Roger Waters

      Performed by Pink Floyd

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ15

    • How long is More?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 21 octobre 1969 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
      • Espagne
      • Luxembourg
      • Allemagne de l'Ouest
    • Site officiel
      • Les Films du Losange (France)
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Allemand
      • Espagnol
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Gier nach Lust
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Au niveau de la station Stalingrad, Boulevard de la Chapelle, Paris 19, Paris France(Stephan arriving in Paris)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Jet Films
      • Les Films du Losange
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 301 244 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 52 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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