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John McCabe

Titre original : McCabe & Mrs. Miller
  • 1971
  • 12
  • 2h
NOTE IMDb
7,6/10
29 k
MA NOTE
Warren Beatty and Julie Christie in John McCabe (1971)
Trailer for McCabe & Mrs. Miller
Lire trailer1:57
1 Video
99+ photos
DrameOccidental

Un joueur de poker et une prostituée s'associent dans une ville minière isolée du Far West et leurs affaires prospèrent jusqu'à ce qu'une grande entreprise arrive sur les lieux.Un joueur de poker et une prostituée s'associent dans une ville minière isolée du Far West et leurs affaires prospèrent jusqu'à ce qu'une grande entreprise arrive sur les lieux.Un joueur de poker et une prostituée s'associent dans une ville minière isolée du Far West et leurs affaires prospèrent jusqu'à ce qu'une grande entreprise arrive sur les lieux.

  • Réalisation
    • Robert Altman
  • Scénario
    • Edmund Naughton
    • Robert Altman
    • Brian McKay
  • Casting principal
    • Warren Beatty
    • Julie Christie
    • Rene Auberjonois
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,6/10
    29 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Robert Altman
    • Scénario
      • Edmund Naughton
      • Robert Altman
      • Brian McKay
    • Casting principal
      • Warren Beatty
      • Julie Christie
      • Rene Auberjonois
    • 186avis d'utilisateurs
    • 104avis des critiques
    • 93Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Oscar
      • 1 victoire et 4 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    McCabe & Mrs. Miller
    Trailer 1:57
    McCabe & Mrs. Miller

    Photos101

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux64

    Modifier
    Warren Beatty
    Warren Beatty
    • John McCabe
    Julie Christie
    Julie Christie
    • Constance Miller
    Rene Auberjonois
    Rene Auberjonois
    • Sheehan
    William Devane
    William Devane
    • The Lawyer
    John Schuck
    John Schuck
    • Smalley
    Corey Fischer
    Corey Fischer
    • Mr. Elliott
    Bert Remsen
    Bert Remsen
    • Bart Coyle
    Shelley Duvall
    Shelley Duvall
    • Ida Coyle
    Keith Carradine
    Keith Carradine
    • Cowboy
    Michael Murphy
    Michael Murphy
    • Sears
    Antony Holland
    Antony Holland
    • Hollander
    Hugh Millais
    • Butler
    Manfred Schulz
    • Kid
    Jace Van Der Veen
    • Breed
    • (as Jace Vander Veen)
    Jackie Crossland
    • Lily
    Elizabeth Murphy
    • Kate
    Carey Lee McKenzie
    • Alma
    Thomas Hill
    Thomas Hill
    • Archer
    • (as Tom Hill)
    • Réalisation
      • Robert Altman
    • Scénario
      • Edmund Naughton
      • Robert Altman
      • Brian McKay
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs186

    7,629.3K
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    Avis à la une

    tedg

    Within

    Spoilers herein.

    Filmmakers - intelligent ones - have to choose where they live in a film. The ordinary ones attach themselves to the narrative, usually the spoken narrative, so we get faces and clear, ordered speech to tell us what is going on. These are the most formulaic because there are after all only so many stories that are presentable.

    Some attach themselves to characters, dig in and let those characters deliver a tale and situation. Often with the Italians and Italian-Americans, the camera swoops on a tether attached to these characters. I consider this lazy art unless there is some extraordinary insight into the relationship between actor and character.

    And then there the few who attach themselves to a sense, a tone, a space. That situation has ideas and stories and talk, but they are only there as reflections from the facets of the place. Of the three, this is the hardest to do well; that's why so few try. And of those that do, most convey style only, not a place, not a whole presentation of the way the world works.

    This film is about the best example I know where the world is 'real,' the situation governs everything and the primary substance is the presentation of a Shakespearian quality cosmology of fate.

    The camera moves not so much with the story, but it enters and leaves. And there is not just one story, but many that we catch in glimpses. Words just appear in disorder as they do in life. Not everything is served up neat. We drift with the same arbitrariness as McCabe. It is not as meditative as 'Mood for Love' as it has something we can interpret as a story to distract us.

    So as a matter of craft, this is an important film, one with painful fishhooks that stick. Beatty had already reinvented Hollywood with 'Bonny,' and was a co- conspirator in this. (If you are into double bills, see it with 'The Claim,' which is intended as a distanced remake/homage, that obliquely references Warren.)

    Quite apart from the craft of the thing, and the turning of the Western on its head long before 'Unforgiven,' there are other values:

    • the notion that actors are imported into a fictional world as whores. Not a new idea for sure, but so seamlessly and subtly injected here, it becomes just another one of the background stories. (Also referenced in 'Unforgiven.')


    • the business about the preacher trying to wrestle some old school order from the overwhelming mechanics of arbitrary fate. This is the director's stance.


    • the final concept that the whole thing, McCabe and church and all is an opium dream of the aptly named 'Constance,' dimly reinterpreting other events after the fashion of 'Edwin Drood.'


    Ted's Evaluation -- 4 of 3: Every cineliterate person should experience this.
    10Derek237

    A tale of the American dream; with hookers

    Behind every great man is a great woman. McCabe is the man, Mrs. Miller is the woman, and together they form a pretty successful team. Both are in search of the American dream: freedom, fortune, security. Mrs. Miller, a prostitute, and the real brains behind the operation helps make this possible for the couple. She doesn't want to be nothing but a whore for the rest of her life. They partner up and establish the best lil' whorehouse in town. This is quite the unconventional western, and it is executed so perfectly as only the great Robert Altman could do.

    I loved the whole process of the film. I liked the characters and wanted to see them succeed. When things go bad, as they often do, some very tense sequences ensue. Men are hired to kill McCabe for not negotiating with the right people. There is one part where he first meets the man hired to kill him that is so nerve-wrecking, but so amusing at the same time. I mean, it's pretty clear early on that McCabe is a bit of a buffoon, but I think this is the crucial point in the film when we know we really care about his fate.

    Wonderfully acted by Warren Beatty and Julie Christie in the lead roles(as well as the supporting cast), being in the hands of Robert Altman, and with some great music by Leonard Cohen, McCabe & Mrs. Miller proves itself as a great, great movie. It's a comedy, a tragedy, a classic, a true masterpiece.

    My rating: 10/10
    10marissas75

    Haunting, wintry Western

    The first thing to know about Robert Altman's revisionist Western "McCabe & Mrs. Miller" is that it takes place in Washington state. Typical Westerns are set in arid semi-deserts, full of blazing skies, blazing shotguns, and blazing tempers. Here, the dank, chilly Pacific Northwest permits, or rather demands, a different range of emotions: poignancy, regret, wintry melancholy. This film takes many risks, using Leonard Cohen's haunting ballads on the soundtrack and shooting scenes in very low light, but remarkably, everything coheres.

    The film features Altman's trademark group scenes with overlapping dialogue, but not his typical interlocking plot lines. True to its title, the story centers on gambler and brothel owner John McCabe (Warren Beatty) and his shrewd business partner, Mrs. Constance Miller (Julie Christie). Still, supporting characters always hover at the edges, taking part in vignettes that underline the movie's themes and occasionally provide some humor. In this way, the movie avoids the chaos and confusion of some Altman films, while always remaining aware that the main characters are part of a larger community. It's a perfect balance: both clear and complex.

    Still, "McCabe & Mrs. Miller" is more a study of place and character than a narrative drama. The small, isolated settlement of Presbyterian Church is newly built, but already seems to molder. Ironically, McCabe's brothel is the most "civilized" place in town: it is built quickly and even gets painted, while the church remains half-finished. No families, parents or children live in this bleak town, just a bunch of weary miners and whores who delude and distract themselves. They all have dreams, but barely know how to achieve them; for this reason, they're sympathetic and all too human. McCabe is a true anti-hero, a guy who thinks he's a slick, wisecracking gambler, but his jokes fall flat and he lacks common sense. Mrs. Miller seems confident and shameless, but she secretly uses opium to dispel the pain of living.

    At times, the movie is well aware of how it subverts the clichés of the Western genre to reflect what would really have happened out West. For instance, there is a final shootout, but it arises because of a quarrel over business—there are no Indians, no outlaws, and no sheriffs here! But "McCabe & Mrs. Miller" is much more than just a clever exercise in revisionism; it's never overtly satirical or mean-spirited. It keenly observes its world and then comments on it, overlaying everything with a delicate sense of poignancy and loss. This is the kind of film that stays with you, but not because of sharp dialogue, beautiful images, or showy performances. Greater than the sum of its parts, "McCabe & Mrs. Miller" is memorable for the pervasive but understated mood that runs through every frame, creating a truly atmospheric and humanistic film.
    Benedict_Cumberbatch

    The stranger, the winter lady & the sisters of mercy

    Leonard Cohen's songs don't seem an ordinary choice for a western, but Robert Altman was no ordinary director, and his "McCabe & Mrs. Miller" was definitely not your traditional western. This film can be called a western because of its settings, but if anything, this is a "revisionist western" (à la Clint Eastwood's more recent "Unforgiven", a film that also subverted all the clichés and morales of this traditionally macho genre). And, more than anything, it's a love story.

    John McCabe (Warren Beatty), charismatic but no so smart, sets up a whorehouse in the Old West. Constance Miller (Julie Christie), beautiful, strong and determined, soon arrives in town and offers to run the "business" and share the profits with McCabe. They start a tempestuous relationship while business thrives... but when a major corporation tries to buy McCabe & Mrs. Miller's enterprise, McCabe refuses to sell it. It's the beginning of his, her and the town's doom.

    Even when exploring such a visual genre as the western (and visually the film is also very compelling, with great use of real snow and a beautifully shot "duel" on a bridge), Altman uses one of his most notorious trademarks: the overlapping dialogue, commonly used in ensembles but also wisely used in a more intimate, character-driven story like this. It works very well, although the 1 on 1 dialogues are deeply insightful themselves (the scene when Christie teaches a very young widow, played by Shelley Duvall, how she is supposed to behave in her new job, is brief, human, and dry). Beatty gives one of his most subtle, captivating performances, and Christie empowers Mrs. Miller with flesh and blood - she was definitely one of the most beautiful and intriguing actresses of her time, alongside Faye Dunaway and Jane Fonda, who set up a standard for beautiful, strong women who were much more than sheer eye candy. McCabe and Mrs. Miller's relationship is so fascinating that even the bang bang fans will be drawn into it and root for them to end together.

    So, next time someone says Clint Eastwood reinvented the western with his masterpiece "Unforgiven", remember: 21 years before, Altman had experimented and succeeded on that with his "McCabe & Mrs. Miller". Because love stories are more than kisses and happy endings, and westerns go beyond blood and testosterone.
    8RARubin

    Anti-John Wayne

    This is one of those groundbreaking films that that put the whammy on a genre; in this case, the Western can never come back. Oaters traditionally are the realm of strong male characters righting wrong, loving their horses, and ignoring the school marm. Robert Altman, a political and cultural man of the 1960's Left simply says "horse feathers." The hero is a corrupt bawdyhouse owner. The school marm makes her living in a crude manner and normal everyday middle-class types don't really exist in the hardscrabble world of capitalism.

    The town in Vancouver, Canada sits in a mountains and wilderness. The film company built the town. That's real snow there folks and blizzards as our anti-hero Beatty shoots it out with the company men while his best "girl" Julie Christy hides out in an opium den, her brown eyes realistically glassy. John Wayne's, The Searchers was one of the best films ever made. McCabe & Mrs. Miller tries to undo all that.

    Fascinating look at the underbelly of frontier life and a forerunner of the HBO series Deadwood, the West may not be a better place for it.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      For a distinctive look, Robert Altman and Vilmos Zsigmond chose to "flash" (pre-fog) the film negative before its eventual exposure, as well as use a number of filters on the cameras, rather than manipulate the film in post-production; in this way the studio could not force him to change the film's look to something less distinctive. However, this was not done for the final 20 minutes of the picture, as Altman wanted the danger to McCabe to be as realistic as possible. Note the change when McCabe wakes up, grabs a shotgun, and starts off to the church.
    • Gaffes
      The steam engine was deployable very shortly after the fire was discovered, which would have been possible only if the engine had already been lit.
    • Citations

      [repeated line]

      John McCabe: If a frog had wings, he wouldn't bump his ass so much, follow me?

    • Connexions
      Featured in McCabe & Mrs. Miller: Excerpts from Two 1971 Episodes of the Dick Cavett Show (1971)
    • Bandes originales
      The Stranger Song
      Written and Performed by Leonard Cohen

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    FAQ

    • How long is McCabe & Mrs. Miller?Alimenté par Alexa
    • How does the film compare to the Edmund Naughton novel "McCabe"
    • Was McCabe really a gunfighter?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 22 décembre 1971 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Site officiel
      • Warner Bros.
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Cantonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • John Mac Cabe
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Squamish, Colombie-Britannique, Canada(town: Bearpaw)
    • Sociétés de production
      • David Foster Productions
      • Warner Bros.
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Montant brut mondial
      • 36 146 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      2 heures
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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