The Saddest Music in the World
- 2003
- Tous publics
- 1h 40min
Une sorte de comédie musicale à Winnipeg, lors de la Grande Dépression, où une baronne de l'industrie de la bière organise un concours afin de trouver la musique la plus triste au monde. Des... Tout lireUne sorte de comédie musicale à Winnipeg, lors de la Grande Dépression, où une baronne de l'industrie de la bière organise un concours afin de trouver la musique la plus triste au monde. Des musiciens des quatre coins du monde arrivent en ville pour tenter de remporter le prix de... Tout lireUne sorte de comédie musicale à Winnipeg, lors de la Grande Dépression, où une baronne de l'industrie de la bière organise un concours afin de trouver la musique la plus triste au monde. Des musiciens des quatre coins du monde arrivent en ville pour tenter de remporter le prix de 25 000 dollars.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 6 victoires et 7 nominations au total
- American Mother
- (as Nancy Drake)
Avis à la une
First off, Guy Maddin's films are an acquired taste. Second, it helps to be a film fan and to have a knowledge and love of early cinema to truly appreciate them. Third, you must be willing to give yourself over totally to his particular vision. Don't even try to fight it. Do all this and get ready to enjoy.
"The Saddest Music in the World " is a wonderful amalgam of comedy, drama,
tragedy and farce. It's got a cast of characters that are familiar and yet strange at the same time. Just when you think it's heading in one direction, it yanks you in another. It has an internal logic just like a dream.
The photography, art direction and sound design add to the uniqueness of the
experience. The film feels like an artifact, a lost film that was hidden away by a studio in the '30s because it was too wild and broke too many rules. In fact, it's film-making that defies the system.
The DVD contains a making of featurette that is enjoyable to watch. There are also 3 short films. Only Maddin could make a film with the title "Sissy Boy Slap Party" and make it funny.
Please take a chance and rent/buy this film. It's not the typical Hollywood
product (although it mines Hollywood's past) and for that we should be glad.
I also have to recommend another film by Guy Maddin- "Dracula: Pages from a
Virgin's Diary", a silent film ballet. I got it sight unseen and love it. The director's commentary was worth the price alone.
I'm a Guy Maddin fan. I have developed an addiction for his work. Thank God!
Winnipeg has been declared by the London Times `the world capital of sorrow' for the fourth year in a row. What happens in the film can be categorized as surrealism of the sort that marries the Melies brothers in their `Trip-to-the-Moon' wackiest to `The Twilight Zone' in Rod Serling's most hilarious (and that's pretty unusual) moments. Shot in distressed mode with 8 mm blown up to be grainy and silent movieish, `Saddest' has blue-grays and silvers and occasional bursts of washed-out color that give it an otherworldly cast meant to satirize the old movies and create a new look built on nostalgia and freedom from convention that some call expressionism.
Some of the bizarre acts vying for the prize are Fyodor (David Fox), a veteran of World War I representing Canada, who plays a deathlike version of ''The Red Maple Leaves'' on an upright piano he has turned over, and Indian singers in Eskimo costumes, who dance to ''California Here I Come'' with sitars and banjos commemorating a 19th-century kayaking accident. All the time an iris lens blurs the edges of the film to recreate the ancient look of film found in a vault after 50 years.
That Lady Port-Huntly needs artificial legs is not as bizarre as the back story of how she came to need them, and that the new glass legs have local beer coursing through them is just another creative and absurdist touch. With a resemblance to the robot in `Metropolis,' she is an amalgam of strange and prophetic moments in film and culture. I know I'm not making much sense here-Trust me that this film is bizarre enough to satisfy the geekiest cultist in our audience. For the rest of us, just trying to appreciate all the signposts Maddin constructs to further his absurd and funny vision is exhausting. Wordsworth's thoughts apply because we at least hear `the still, sad music of humanity.'
The film might have been a collaboration between David Lynch, Orson Welles, Eisenstein, and the Brothers Quay - each of them disagreeing what the film should be about. It was worth trying. I quickly got used to the extremely smudgy effect - as if the lens had been smothered in vaseline - and I appreciated Isabella Rosselini (looking and sounding like her mother) and the big-eyed Maria de Madeiros.
The backdrop was a music contest between international contestants to find the world's saddest music. The face-off heats was pure Python but it was all kept strangely distant. There were several problems: the emotional drama between the father and the two sons was dreary, as such issues always are. Secondly, it wasn't funny, and that was because it was all art and no emotional intelligence. Thirdly, it said nothing. It was full of ideas, but they were all microscopic, worked out at scene level - or even frame level. The whole thing put together didn't add up to anything. In the end, the images were everything, and that is always going to be disappointing.
That's not to say the movie doesn't have its fair share of the absurd, the bizarre, and the dark (it *is* a Canadian film, after all). Lines are delivered with strange inflections, characters' motivations are screwy, filmic styles are mixed. None of these, however, comes off as pretentious or forced.
The film explores the interesting paradox that despite the reality and ubiquity of real sadness, authentic expressions of sadness are difficult and rare.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSome actors are given an "additional camera" credit, as they shot footage on handheld Super8 cameras.
- Citations
Lady Port-Huntley: If you are sad and like beer, I'm your lady.
- Bandes originalesThe Song is You
Music by Jerome Kern
Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II
Used by permission of Universal - Polygram International Publishing, Inc.
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Saddest Music in the World?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- La canción más triste del mundo
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 3 500 000 $CA (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 699 225 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 37 743 $US
- 2 mai 2004
- Montant brut mondial
- 854 994 $US
- Durée1 heure 40 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1