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Tolstoï, le dernier automne

Titre original : The Last Station
  • 2009
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 52min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
19 k
MA NOTE
Helen Mirren, Christopher Plummer, Kerry Condon, and James McAvoy in Tolstoï, le dernier automne (2009)
A historical drama that illustrates Russian author Leo Tolstoy's struggle to balance fame and wealth with his commitment to a life devoid of material things.
Lire trailer2:06
9 Videos
99+ photos
Period DramaBiographyDramaRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA historical drama that illustrates Russian author Leo Tolstoy's (Christopher Plummer's) struggle to balance fame and wealth with his commitment to a life devoid of material things.A historical drama that illustrates Russian author Leo Tolstoy's (Christopher Plummer's) struggle to balance fame and wealth with his commitment to a life devoid of material things.A historical drama that illustrates Russian author Leo Tolstoy's (Christopher Plummer's) struggle to balance fame and wealth with his commitment to a life devoid of material things.

  • Réalisation
    • Michael Hoffman
  • Scénario
    • Michael Hoffman
    • Jay Parini
  • Casting principal
    • Helen Mirren
    • James McAvoy
    • Christopher Plummer
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    19 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Hoffman
    • Scénario
      • Michael Hoffman
      • Jay Parini
    • Casting principal
      • Helen Mirren
      • James McAvoy
      • Christopher Plummer
    • 95avis d'utilisateurs
    • 182avis des critiques
    • 76Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 2 Oscars
      • 5 victoires et 18 nominations au total

    Vidéos9

    The Last Station
    Trailer 2:06
    The Last Station
    The Last Station
    Clip 1:34
    The Last Station
    The Last Station
    Clip 1:34
    The Last Station
    The Last Station
    Clip 0:53
    The Last Station
    The Last Station
    Clip 1:14
    The Last Station
    The Last Station
    Clip 1:27
    The Last Station
    The Last Station
    Clip 1:05
    The Last Station

    Photos154

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 148
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    Rôles principaux16

    Modifier
    Helen Mirren
    Helen Mirren
    • Sofya
    James McAvoy
    James McAvoy
    • Valentin
    Christopher Plummer
    Christopher Plummer
    • Leo Tolstoy
    Paul Giamatti
    Paul Giamatti
    • Chertkov
    John Sessions
    John Sessions
    • Dushan
    Patrick Kennedy
    Patrick Kennedy
    • Sergeyenko
    Kerry Condon
    Kerry Condon
    • Masha
    Anne-Marie Duff
    Anne-Marie Duff
    • Sasha
    Tomas Spencer
    Tomas Spencer
    • Andrey
    Christian Gaul
    • Ivan
    Wolfgang Häntsch
    • Priest
    David Masterson
    • Reporter
    Anastasia Tolstoy
    • Mourning Girl
    Maximilian Gärtner
    • Kind
    • (non crédité)
    Nenad Lucic
    • Vanja
    • (non crédité)
    Henning Mosselman
    Henning Mosselman
    • Conductor
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Hoffman
    • Scénario
      • Michael Hoffman
      • Jay Parini
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs95

    6,919.4K
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    Avis à la une

    10jamesdelf

    Wonderful film, this will go far

    I just saw this at the Telluride Film Festival. It was just fantastic. The story and characters are very well drawn and engaging. Tolstoy is wonderfully presented as a man who is aware he cannot live up to his own ideals. It shows how his image and words are corrupted into the ideals and beliefs of others who have lost their way. The acting, cinematography, costumes, all was superb. It is a film about love. The portray and comparisons of old love and new love. Love of a man and love of an ideology. Well done to all who worked on it. I hope this does not get misunderstood as a dry drama, as it is a very funny and moving film. I cannot wait to see it again.
    9richard-1787

    A very enjoyable movie

    There is nothing to fault in this movie, really, and pretty much everything to praise.

    The script is very good. The characters are fleshed out and developed in complexity as the movie goes along. You continue to learn more about them, see more facets of their character.

    And they are realized by first-rate performances. There is not a weak one in the batch.

    The direction is also very fine. There is not really much of a plot here; it's more of a character study. Still, the director keeps things moving along, never veering into the sentimental or the cute. You grow to like these characters a lot, but there is no attempt to yank your emotions.

    My only very slight reservation about this movie is just a personal preference. I went into it knowing virtually nothing about Tolstoy's life or the movement that was developed out of his later writings. I would have appreciated a little dialogue somewhere explaining more about that. I realize, however, that that is not the norm in modern movies, and I certainly had no problems following what was going on without it. Viewers such as myself will just have to go read a book about Tolstoy for that additional information, which is certainly not a bad thing.

    This is not a film for the ages, a Citizen Kane or a Rules of the Game, a Potemkin or such. Still, it is a very well-crafted movie, one that I could easily watch again with no diminished pleasure. One that, as well, I can recommend to anyone who enjoys good acting and watching interesting characters being developed by and through it.
    cliffhanley_

    The return of big cinema

    The Last Station is described as a melodrama - and I would say that's a fair description. It's the kind of film they don't really make any more. The spirit of David Lean lives on. It's beautiful to look at, for a start, and the music is genuinely incidental, lushing away in the background. We all know that Leo Tolstoy wrote a book, although few of us have the nerve to actually sit down and get to grips with War And Peace. But there was more to the great man than that - in his time he was regarded as godlike, and enjoyed a fairly big cult following, the Tolstoyan Movement, devoted to goodness, purity and equality - as long as it didn't mean the end of the deferential lower classes.

    Tolstoy's young secretary Valentin is dropped into this, at the deep end. The 19th century Russian hippies, the fanatically devious disciple Chertkov who wants the great man to sign away the rights to his work, to the Russian People; the hard-pressed but manipulative wife determined to keep it in the family. And the girl who introduces the young man to the pleasures of the flesh. It's a great cast, headed by the unrecognisable Christopher Plummer, and the always marvelous Helen Mirren. The constant undertone in Tolstoy's saga is the disparity between his wish for a good life for the peasants, and the sight of those peasants beavering away in the background while the upper classes get on with their lives of pampered angst.

    It's the growing struggle between the disciple and the wife, with the secretary pulled between new and conflicting loyalties, that will grab your attention. You really will care about these people. And what follows is the melodrama. I will say no more, except that it's a big story, told big. Just what Norma Desmond told us we had lost.
    8ClaytonDavis

    This Station is all Clear...

    If you took a Leo Tolstoy class in college or read one of his works during your time at the library and wanted to know a bit more about the man, don't really look to The Last Station. Does that make it a poor film? Not by a long shot.

    The film follows the story of Leo (Christopher Plummer) and Sofya Tolstoy (Helen Mirren), married couple for 43 years, and the battle that raged between them at the end of Leo's life. As Leo's health is ailing, his long time friend Vladimir Chertkov (Paul Giamatti) urges Leo to write a new will, renouncing his material possessions, leaving his wife and family with nothing. All of this is in order to have Leo's movement of peace to go to the majority. Chertkov sends a young follower of the Tolstoyan movement, Valentin Bulgakov, to investigate and inscribe all of Sofya's exaggerated and histrionic antics to work against her campaign.

    Firstly, the film is A-typical period piece with all the correct elements of that type of film. Art Direction by Mark Rosinski and Heike Wolf, stunning costume design by Monika Jacobs, and a score to die for by Sergei Yevtushenko is pitch perfect and exalted brilliance. Nothing is wrong with this film technically.

    An extraordinary narrative beautifully adapted by the director Michael Hoffman is one of the crowning achievements of his career. Dedicating his all for the sake of the art form, Hoffman writes and directs the screen with meticulousness and accuracy. Playing that extra special detail to smooth out an rough edges paid off for Hoffman immensely.

    The cast presented in The Last Station is stellar and one of the best cast ensembles of the 2009. James McAvoy, proving once again, that you don't just lay down the words of your acting, you let the spirit fight its way through your soul and remain a tangible entity for your audience to engage. McAvoy proves he's one of Hollywood's most outstanding talents. Helen Mirren, riding the see-saw with her viewers, never declares any type of emotion until the bitter end. Mirren shows no apparent ambiance of mood or expression. She sizzles through the film, igniting every scene on fire along the way. Christopher Plummer as the lovable Leo is amiable, captivating, and entrancing. Plummer, a talent long overdue for Oscar recognition is enticing. Paul Giamatti, in a more villainous role we haven't seen of him before, is always dependable and alluring. Anne-Marie Duff and Kerry Condon are both enthralling in their roles respectively.

    The Last Station is a definite contender for a Best Picture nomination. It's a delightful film full of heart, love, and heartbreak. The temptation of the films aura will lure you in and surely leave you in tears.

    ***½/****
    JohnDeSando

    Operatic

    "Your works are the birthright of the Russian people." Vladimir Chertkov (Paul Giamatti) in The Last Station

    Like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Leo Tolstoy drifted at the end of his life into spiritualism but of a more naturalistic kind, which disavowed materialism, espoused celibacy, and talked about the simple power of love. Michael Hoffman's The Last Station chronicles in historical drama fashion Tolstoy's (Christopher Plummer) struggle with his wife, Countess Sofya (Helen Mirren), over his desire to bequeath his works to the Russian people and thus, as she thought, deny her and her family rightful inheritance.

    The film has an operatic tone due in large part to Mirren's occasional histrionics as she argues with Tolstoy and faces off Chertkov, Tolstoy's close friend and a force for the Tolstoyan movement, which espoused the writer's philosophy of austere life, feeling at times like a stripped down transcendentalism popular in 19th century America. The first half of the film has some electric moments because of Sofya's dramatics and her attempt to win over Tolstoy's new personal secretary, Valentin Bolgokov (James McAvoy). When the film turns to the business of Tolstoy dying, matters become slowly boring with overwrought lamentation and a slow up of the frenetic family dissonance of the first part.

    The Last Station is a study in life's ironies: Tolstoy has been far from a celibate in life and therefore not a good Tolstoyan. Bolgokov is annoyingly enthusiastic about his new position and the tenets of the movement, except when he makes love to his new girlfriend, Masha (Kerry Condon) and even then he is such a prig as to be even more annoying than the histrionic Sofya. Recently innocent Richard narrated the story in Me and Orson Welles, and famously, Nick in The Great Gatsby. All three share in varying degrees intimacy with a famous person, with Bolgokov the least impressive.

    Tolstoy does eventually die, Sofya gets the copyright, and I got an hour of splendid family invective along with my thoughts about the great writer of War and Peace and Anna Karenina reduced to annoying bickering about inheritance. Yet I enjoyed those thoughts about a sublime writer as a flawed human being whose final philosophy was about love and peace. Love he had in abundance; peace did not arrive.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Marks the first joint venture of real-life spouses James McAvoy and Anne-Marie Duff on a feature film. While still married they would appear together in several episodes of Shameless: Very Important Punk (2004) and after divorcing they would both have their voices in the animated series La colline aux lapins (2018) and appear in His Dark Materials : À la croisée des mondes (2019).
    • Gaffes
      Early in the film one of the characters refers to "flashbulbs," when there was no such thing in 1910 and in fact later in the film photographers are shown using trays of flash powder.
    • Citations

      Leo Tolstoy: "Your youth and your desire for happiness reminds me cruelly of my age and the impossibility of happiness for me." When I was courting Sofya, she was so young and pure, it seemed impossible that I'd ever have her. I didn't want to tell her how I felt and I wanted to tell her nothing else. So I wrote down a string of letters and asked her if she could decipher them. She looked completely confused, thinking it was a game or... I gave her one clue. The firs two Y's, I said, stand for "your youth" and then the most miraculous thing happened. She simply spoke the phrase, my phrase as if she had read my mind. In that moment, we both knew we would always be together. For those first years, we were incredibly happy, terrifyingly happy.

    • Crédits fous
      Anthony Quinn is thanked in the end credits. Quinn was the first to purchase rights to Jay Parini novel.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Lovely Bones/A Single Man/The Princess and the Frog/Broken Embraces/The Last Station (2009)
    • Bandes originales
      Un bel dì vedremo
      from "Madama Butterfly"

      Giacomo Puccini

      Performed by Miriam Gauci (Soprano), Symfonický orchester Slovenského rozhlasu (as CSR Symphony Orchestra)

      Conducted by Alexander Rahbari

      Licensed courtesy of Naxos Rights International Ltd.

      Libretto by Luigi Illica (uncredited) and Giuseppe Giacosa (uncredited)

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    FAQ24

    • How long is The Last Station?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Is 'The Last Station' based on a book?
    • Is Masha based on a real person?
    • Why are characters sometimes addressed by different names?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 8 décembre 2010 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Allemagne
      • Royaume-Uni
      • Russie
    • Sites officiels
      • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • La última estación
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Yasnaya Polyana, Tulskaya oblast, Russie
    • Sociétés de production
      • Egoli Tossell Pictures
      • Zephyr Films
      • Egoli Tossell Film Halle
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 18 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 6 617 867 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 73 723 $US
      • 17 janv. 2010
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 20 554 320 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 52 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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    Helen Mirren, Christopher Plummer, Kerry Condon, and James McAvoy in Tolstoï, le dernier automne (2009)
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    By what name was Tolstoï, le dernier automne (2009) officially released in India in English?
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