Gallipoli
- 1981
- Tous publics
- 1h 50min
Deux sprinters australiens font face aux réalités cruelles de la guerre lorsqu'ils sont envoyés pour combattre dans la campagne de Gallipoli en Turquie pendant la Première Guerre mondiale.Deux sprinters australiens font face aux réalités cruelles de la guerre lorsqu'ils sont envoyés pour combattre dans la campagne de Gallipoli en Turquie pendant la Première Guerre mondiale.Deux sprinters australiens font face aux réalités cruelles de la guerre lorsqu'ils sont envoyés pour combattre dans la campagne de Gallipoli en Turquie pendant la Première Guerre mondiale.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 11 victoires et 6 nominations au total
- Zac
- (as Charles Yunupingu)
Avis à la une
Mark Lee and Mel Gibson play two young sprinters who meet as competitors, become friends, and then enlist together in the war. Not taking much seriously, they both think serving will be a bit of a lark, and indeed it begins that way, with a lot of carousing, drinking, whoring and some goofball antics during combat training. But then they arrive at their destination, and the reality of what war actually looks and sounds like begins to sink in.
This movie does a great job of showing that transition from young man bluster and naive belief in the good of a cause to scared everyman, being sent out to certain death for reasons he can no longer comprehend. The film is paced very well, and the trench warfare scenes at the film's end are so expertly juxtaposed with the buddy movie that precedes them, that the effect on the audience is that of a punch to the groin. The very end is devastating and haunting in a way few movies anymore would have the guts to be.
Peter Weir directed this before he became known for more popular and Oscar-baity films like "Witness" and "Dead Poets Society."
Grade: A
The very young and handsome and Aussie sounding Mel Gibson is very convincing as are the entire cast. Peter Weir crafted a heart wrenching film which ends with a moment that you just can not shake from your mind. Great film and very moving.
"Gallipoli" is one of his older films, from 1981, and it stars a huge cast of names - most famous today, of course, Mel Gibson...whose name is now splattered across the front of the DVD case.
The story is a true one and follows a group of young Australian men who join the ANZACs in World War I. They are sent to Gallipoli, and amidst personal and emotional turmoil they must learn to band together and fight the Turkish Army.
The movie is long, as another reviewer on the site points out. But all of Weir's films are. What I didn't like about his most recent - "Master & Commander" - is that it used special effects (exteriors of ships, etc.) and action sequences (raging storms) to compensate for the slow bits... and came across (to me anyway) as quite dull and down-trodden.
"Gallipoli" is a great film - slow, subtle, low-key. It's a bit like an Australian version of "All Quiet on the Western Front." I'd recommend it to anyone who enjoys slower films and can appreciate character-driven dramas. Don't go near it if your attention span was dimming during "xXx2."
The story is well told, focusing on the development of the two main characters rather than battle sequences. The two contrast each other. Frank is worldly, and cynical, not ready to die for a foolish cause, while Archy is naive and idealistic. It is an excellent study the way the two personalities react to the war.
"Gallipoli" will rarely be mentioned in the same breath as most of the most famous war movies, but it is certainly one of the best at revealing the humanity that exists at the front lines. It is a well made film, and an extremely moving story.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAlthough he is wears an AIF uniform, Colonel Robinson is often mistaken for an Englishman because he has a clipped Anglo-Australian accent, typical of the time.
- GaffesThe Battle of the Nek was not a diversion for the British landing at Suvla, it was a diversion for an attack by New Zealand attack on Sari Bair.
- Citations
[first lines]
Jack: What are your legs?
Archy Hamilton: Springs. Steel springs.
Jack: What are they going to do?
Archy Hamilton: Hurl me down the track.
Jack: How fast can you run?
Archy Hamilton: As fast as a leopard.
Jack: How fast are you going to run?
Archy Hamilton: As fast as a leopard!
Jack: Then let's see you do it!
- Bandes originalesAdagio in G Minor for Strings & Organ
Composed by Tomaso Albinoni
Performed by Orchestre de Chambre Jean-François Paillard
R.C.A. Records
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Galipolje
- Lieux de tournage
- Gallipoli Beach, Coffin Bay, South Australia, Australie(setting: Anzac Cove)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 2 600 000 $AU (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 5 732 587 $US
- Montant brut mondial
- 5 738 604 $US