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L'homme qui voulut être roi

Titre original : The Man Who Would Be King
  • 1975
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 9min
NOTE IMDb
7,7/10
54 k
MA NOTE
Sean Connery and Michael Caine in L'homme qui voulut être roi (1975)
Two former British soldiers in 1880s India decide to set themselves up as Kings in Kafiristan, a land where no white man has set foot since Alexander the Great.
Lire trailer1:06
2 Videos
99+ photos
AventureDrameGuerre

Deux anciens soldats britanniques décident de devenir rois au Kafiristan, une terre où aucun homme blanc n'a mis les pieds depuis Alexandre le Grand.Deux anciens soldats britanniques décident de devenir rois au Kafiristan, une terre où aucun homme blanc n'a mis les pieds depuis Alexandre le Grand.Deux anciens soldats britanniques décident de devenir rois au Kafiristan, une terre où aucun homme blanc n'a mis les pieds depuis Alexandre le Grand.

  • Réalisation
    • John Huston
  • Scénario
    • John Huston
    • Gladys Hill
    • Rudyard Kipling
  • Casting principal
    • Sean Connery
    • Michael Caine
    • Christopher Plummer
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,7/10
    54 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • John Huston
    • Scénario
      • John Huston
      • Gladys Hill
      • Rudyard Kipling
    • Casting principal
      • Sean Connery
      • Michael Caine
      • Christopher Plummer
    • 225avis d'utilisateurs
    • 51avis des critiques
    • 91Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 4 Oscars
      • 9 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:06
    Official Trailer
    The Man Who Would Be King
    Trailer 2:54
    The Man Who Would Be King
    The Man Who Would Be King
    Trailer 2:54
    The Man Who Would Be King

    Photos200

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 194
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux17

    Modifier
    Sean Connery
    Sean Connery
    • Daniel Dravot
    Michael Caine
    Michael Caine
    • Peachy Carnehan
    Christopher Plummer
    Christopher Plummer
    • Rudyard Kipling
    Saeed Jaffrey
    Saeed Jaffrey
    • Billy Fish
    Larbi Doghmi
    • Ootah
    • (as Doghmi Larbi)
    Jack May
    Jack May
    • District Commissioner
    Karroom Ben Bouih
    • Kafu Selim
    Mohammad Shamsi
    • Babu
    Albert Moses
    Albert Moses
    • Ghulam
    Paul Antrim
    • Mulvaney
    Graham Acres
    • Officer
    The Blue Dancers of Goulamine
    • Dancers
    Shakira Caine
    Shakira Caine
    • Roxanne
    Nadia Atbib
    • Dancer
    • (non crédité)
    Yvonne Ocampo
    • Dancer
    • (non crédité)
    Gurmuks Singh
    • Sikh Soldier
    • (non crédité)
    Kimat Singh
    • Sikh Soldier
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • John Huston
    • Scénario
      • John Huston
      • Gladys Hill
      • Rudyard Kipling
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs225

    7,754.1K
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    Avis à la une

    bob the moo

    Great story, great acting and great fun

    Danny and Peaches are two officers in the British army who find themselves at a loss when their services are no longer required in Asia. While blackmailing a local Raj, the pair are exposed by author Rudyard Kipling and brought before an officer. They are warned but released. Later the visit Kipling to get him to witness a contract for their latest plan – to become kings of a small country by training a village to conquer the rest of the villages and then leave months later with riches. The conquest begins in earnest, but when Danny's vigour in battle makes him appear to be a god to the villagers new dangers are introduced.

    I have seen two interviews recently with the two leads (separately) and both time clips of this film were shown that made me think `I must watch that again'. Come Christmas and the repeats on all channels gave me the chance to see it. I had forgotten just how funny the film is and it really helps the film to be an enjoyable adventure to add to the dark edges. The plot is from a Kipling story so it is of a good stock and stands up well. The addition of humour is well pitched and really helps.

    It is a great adventure story, with a cautionary twist in the tale and can be enjoyed on all levels. The directing is as good as you'd hope from Huston but what really made the film for me was the two leads on top form. Both Connery and Caine have a great chemistry and totally convince as the old school military types. They bring the roles to life and make them enjoyable and get us behind them effortlessly. Admittedly most of the support cast are only jabbering natives who aren't allowed characters with the odd exception. Plummer is good in a minor role but this is the Connery/Caine show all the way.

    Overall this is a great story that is well told by director Huston. The film is made even better by the gentle camaraderie between Connery and Caine and the good vein of humour that underpins the strong story and quite downbeat climax to Caine's story.
    8The_Void

    An epic masterpiece

    Based on a short story by Rudyard Kipling, The Man Who Would Be King tells the story of two friends; Peachy Carnehan (Michael Caine) and Daniel Dravot (Sean Connery) that go to Kafiristan in order to rule the country as kings and become rich in the process. The tale itself if relatively simple, but through great storytelling, the film is lifted into the realms of the masterpiece. The Man Who Would Be King tells a story on two levels; on the one hand, it's an epic masterpiece, spanning across Asia and embracing the Eastern culture, but on the other hand; it's a simple tale of two friends that are out for all they can get. The film switches between the two sides of it's story with great ease, and the smaller, more intimate side of the story is actually complimented by the epic battle sequences that run alongside it.

    This movie is headed by two of the very finest actors of all time - Sean Connery and Michael Caine (both British too, I might add). The two have a great chemistry, and seeing them on screen together is an absolute treat. Both actors have a very defined style as to how they act and how their lines are delivered; in fact, they're perhaps two of the most defined styles ever, and they play off each brilliantly to give fantastic performances in this movie. Michael Caine always seems to be more willing to give a better performance when he is on screen with another fine actor, and they don't come much finer than Sean Connery. The great John Huston directs the movie, and this is easily one of his best movies. In fact, I rate it as his number one colour film. He's got a good story to work with, and he makes the best of it, not to mention that he gets the best from his cast. Many of the locations are fabulous and the battle sequences, although not on the same scale as some other films of the same nature, are well choreographed and an epic sense is captured through the utilisation of many extras.

    This film is a masterpiece. All the players have come together to create a film that is both intimate, intelligent, interesting and on a massive scale all at the same time. A must see.
    samsloan

    This story is about a real place!

    What most viewers do not realize about The Man Who Would Be King (1975) is that it is not about a legendary place, although Rudyard Kipling may have thought so when he wrote the story, because no white man had ever been there and returned to tell about it.

    The place was then known as Kafiristan and is now known as Nuristan. It is in Eastern Afghanistan next to Chitral, which is in Northwest Pakistan.

    Place names in the movie, such as Kamdesh and Bashgal, are real places in Nuristan. The explorer Robertson, whom Billy Fish reports has having died, did not die in real life but was rescued by a British military force in 1895, after Kipling wrote his story.

    The people of Nuristan are believed to be descendants of Alexander the Great, who came there in 328 BC, just as the movie states. They had a pagan religion as the movie describes until they were forcibly converted to Islam in 1892. There are still some believers of the old religion in the Kalash Valleys of Pakistan.

    For more about these people see http://www.samsloan.com/damik.htm

    I know about all this because I have been there and I married a woman named Honzagool there. She did not bite me as did the wife of Sean Connery in the movie, however.

    Sam Sloan
    j_loome

    A work of genius

    Outside of the obvious reflections on the immoral and absurdly hypocritical nature of early British colonialism, it's just a damn entertaining movie.

    But you have to think that Rudyard Kipling, who grew up under British rule in India, was certainly trying to shake some sensibilities when he first wrote the story as part of an 1890 package called The Man Who Would Be King and Other Stories, nearly a century before it was made into a film and during an era when the British Empire was still very much a reality.

    From the perceptive realization that even the staunchly important Masonic Lodge -- which had infilitrated every aspect of Britain's upper classes -- could be easily corrupted; to the arrogance as Sean Connery's character Daniel Dravot, who elevates what he sees as mere social superiority into a god-like status; to the inevitable humbling of both men at the hands of the 'savages' they profess to rule, the film is ultimately about the humility all men should exhude, particularly in the face of the unfamiliar.

    Kipling's tale also preached tolerance, though you might not consider that to be the case based on the film's climax: consider that if Daniel and Peachy had shown an iota of respect for the religion that they instead decided to fleece, how differently the tale might have played out.

    The film owes much of its success to the chemistry between Caine and Connery, who regardless of later plaudits, gave the finest performances of their careers. Connery is particularly nuanced, with Daniel Dravot starting the tale as a somewhat lackwitted second fiddle to the scheming Peachy but later seeing his limited vision help him surpass his friend in terms of villainy with an equally heavy price. Caine plays, to some degree or another, the same charming British sheyster/teddy boy he popularized in the Harry Palmer films. But without a backdrop of similarly disaffected cockney bad guys, it's stunningly effective.

    John Huston's direction is among the best of his career, and in terms of his ability to use both sprawling vistas and tight, almost claustrophobic photography, owes a nod to his earlier work, including The African Queen, Night of the Iguana and the Treasure of the Sierra Madre. As examples, witness the zenith of Peachy and Daniel's hazardous trek through the mountains played out in full panoramic detail, only to be followed 90 minutes later by the tight shot of Kipling's face, the revulsion fairly etched into every crease as we reach the climax.

    But perhaps the true hero of this film was Boaty Boatright, who also cast Connery's classic "The Wind and The Lion." He managed to take some of the most strident, forceful personalities in the film industries, threw them together and came up with a film about humility. Magic.
    jay4stein79-1

    Adventure! Excitement! Exotic Locales! You too can experience these in the Queen's Army!

    My friend threw this DVD at my head one night while we were arguing about film. I said all adventure movies left me feeling a little hollow - adventure movies tended to abandon story, really, in favor of plot (important distinction: stories are interesting, plots boring; consequently a film with a story to tell is better than a movie with a plot to move forward). I think he hurled the disc at me out of pure frustration with my point of view. In doing so, he also won the argument.

    The Man Who Would Be King is the single greatest adventure film I've ever seen. It's a story - It's a tale - It's not a series of plot developments (to me, to go further with this plot/story dichotomy, a plot is mechanical (and sometimes that machine is well-oiled) while a story is organic and feels less contrived (though the story, as organic matter sometimes is, can be rotten)). It's a very good story at that. The Man Who Would Be King (I believe as a result of its derivation from Kipling) has a depth and development of character that is foreign to most adventure tales. Few films are as rousing as this and few films that are this rousing have nearly as much to say about mankind.

    John Huston, of course, is a master of instilling greatness into traditionally tedious genres. He transformed the mystery, the western, the swashbuckler. Why not the adventure story too? As evidenced in The Maltese Falcon and Treasure of the Sierra Madre, Huston can take what might wind up a plot and transform it into a story. He understands that characters - human, conflicted, devious characters - are essential to creating genre pictures that transcend their genre. Without Huston, this film would have undoubtedly faltered; his steady and determined hand guides this film from the hazards of superficiality without sacrificing entertainment and adventure.

    He does not create a great film single-handedly though, as Connery and Caine, who both give tremendous performances, bestow upon Peachy and Daniel immense likability despite their scoundrel airs. Caine proves again why he may be the greatest living British actor and Connery reminds us that there's more to him than 007.

    As I said, this is one of the greatest adventure tales brought to the screen. Though some may disagree, in particular my friend who threw the DVD at my head, it's better than any of the late 30s swashbucklers and better than most shoot-em-ups made since.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Kafiristan is part of modern-day Afghanistan (Nuristan Province) and Pakistan (the city of Chitral).
    • Gaffes
      Billy Fish acts as an interpreter for Daniel and Peachy to the people of Kafiristan. In fact, Billy speaks Urdu to the Kafiristanis and they reply in Moroccan Arabic, two entirely different languages (this is due to the fact the film was shot in Morocco and Moroccan extras were used).
    • Citations

      Daniel Dravot: Peachy, I'm heartily ashamed for gettin' you killed instead of going home rich like you deserved to, on account of me bein' so bleedin' high and bloody mighty. Can you forgive me?

      Peachy Carnehan: That I can and that I do, Danny, free and full and without let or hindrance.

      Daniel Dravot: Everything's all right then.

    • Connexions
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson: Michael Caine/Sean Connery/David Brenner/Burt Mustin (1975)
    • Bandes originales
      The Minstrel Boy
      (uncredited)

      Written by Thomas Moore

      Performed by Sean Connery and Michael Caine

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    FAQ

    • How long is The Man Who Would Be King?
      Alimenté par Alexa
    • What is the song Danny sings as stands on the bridge?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 21 avril 1976 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Arabe
      • Urdu
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • El hombre que sería rey
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Atlas Mountains, Maroc
    • Sociétés de production
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Devon/Persky-Bright
      • Allied Artists Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 8 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 12 678 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 9 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • 4-Track Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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