En Arizona en 1873, un vaisseau spatial arrive pour prendre le contrôle de la Terre, à commencer par la région du Far West. Une bande de cow-boys et d'indigènes se dressent sur leur chemin.En Arizona en 1873, un vaisseau spatial arrive pour prendre le contrôle de la Terre, à commencer par la région du Far West. Une bande de cow-boys et d'indigènes se dressent sur leur chemin.En Arizona en 1873, un vaisseau spatial arrive pour prendre le contrôle de la Terre, à commencer par la région du Far West. Une bande de cow-boys et d'indigènes se dressent sur leur chemin.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 17 nominations au total
- Luke Claiborne
- (as Matt Taylor)
- Maria
- (as Ana De La Reguera)
Avis à la une
The wasted potential comes in the form of an unimaginative, mindless monster alien race that doesn't match the depth of the western characters, instead acting as little more than a plot device. I can see why it wanted to avoid becoming too silly, but I feel like there was more middle ground to lean into the absurdity of the premise without sacrificing the tone. The elements are there to make it work, but Favreau chose to play it safe with monsters. I respect that, but I found myself wanting it to realize its potential for a Woody and Buzz level blending of two worlds.
Would love to see the idea rebooted or expanded. In some ways I feel it's a victim of the time it came out in 2011 right in the upswing of the superhero wave. Parts of the movie, especially the VFX-heavy battle scenes, feel like it's trying to compete with those movies when it could have been something entirely unique.
There's something kooky about the title Cowboys and Aliens, B-movie-ish, yet, exciting, enticing and genius. However, even with the star talents including Daniel Craig and Harrison Ford, with the striking Olivia Wilde and excellent Sam Rockwell Cowboys and Aliens still falls short of expectations. The script is bland, every effort has gone into developing the two main leads but at a cost of the rest of the characters, the basic story and plot.
The special and practical effects are well integrated and executed but while fantastic they are nothing that hasn't been seen before, reminiscent of District 9, Independence Day to name a few. Considering director's Jon Favreau fun and exciting Iron-man outings this offering is less satisfying. It's not the mishmash of classic genres that's the problem, it's the lazy, predicable story telling.
The films opening is strong and intriguing, building up to the tension of Ford's character Colonel Woodrow Dolarhyde meeting with Craig's Jake; its Jones meets Bond, perfect. Both are excellent giving weight to the proceedings. Horses are flipped, guns and gauntlets go wild, aliens leap and stomp on cowboys. But after the first few alien attacks the film wavers onto familiar territory. Although it has a fabulous cast beneath its hat and sweeping, breathtaking Western landscapes under it's belt - it buckles under it's own weight.
Even with its somewhat serious tone it's not brave enough to explore or commit to its own themes leaving it underdeveloped. But it also omits much needed fun leaving the whole film unseasoned and as empty as the plains of Arizona. Debatably, flop Wild Wild West (1999) infused the sci-fi and Western genre more successfully.
Cowboys and Aliens is entertaining, it looks good, has a superb cast but it's painfully predictable and just not that great.
Daniel Craig was born to play a man with no name. The strong silent type is a natural fit for him and considering the overly serious tone, his performance makes for the ideal lead. As a gruff rancher with a heart of gold, Harrison Ford is also playing squarely to his strengths and Olivia Wilde does her best with the weakest character who the script completely mishandled.
Jon Favreau's direction struggles with the logistics of staging action involving cowboys, aliens and spaceships but he's really good at using the cinematic language of the western. In that first half hour, the film commits wholeheartedly to being a stereotypical western which makes the hard pivot into sci-fi (and a pretty nasty one at that) all the more effective.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhen the sheriff pulls Jake Lonergan's (Daniel Craig) wanted poster off the wall, the poster underneath is of director Jon Favreau.
- GaffesWhen Jake and the newly-formed posse run into Jake's old gang, he punches one of the members in the mouth, breaking one of his front teeth. Later in the movie this gang member has all his teeth.
- Citations
Jake Lonergan: I've been shot.
Meacham: Only two kinds of men get shot: criminals and victims. Which one are you?
Jake Lonergan: I don't know.
Meacham: You got a name, friend?
Jake Lonergan: I don't know that either.
Meacham: Just what do you know?
Jake Lonergan: English.
- Versions alternativesAn extended version is available on home video running ~17 minutes longer.
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Hour: Épisode #7.104 (2011)
- Bandes originalesApache War Dance
Written and Performed by The Mescalero Apache Tribe
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Cowboys et Envahisseurs
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 163 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 100 240 551 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 36 431 290 $US
- 31 juil. 2011
- Montant brut mondial
- 174 822 325 $US
- Durée
- 1h 59min(119 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1