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Passchendaele

  • 2008
  • R
  • 1h 54min
NOTE IMDb
6,4/10
9,1 k
MA NOTE
Caroline Dhavernas and Paul Gross in Passchendaele (2008)
The lives of a troubled veteran, his nurse girlfriend and a naive boy intersect first in Alberta and then in Belgium during the bloody World War I battle of Passchendaele.
Lire trailer2:11
1 Video
9 photos
Drames historiquesÉpopée de guerreÉpopée historiqueRomance tragiqueTragédieDrameGuerreL'histoireRomance

Les vies d'un ancien combattant troublé, de sa petite amie infirmière et d'un garçon naïf se croisent d'abord en Alberta puis en Belgique pendant la sanglante bataille de Passchendaele penda... Tout lireLes vies d'un ancien combattant troublé, de sa petite amie infirmière et d'un garçon naïf se croisent d'abord en Alberta puis en Belgique pendant la sanglante bataille de Passchendaele pendant la Première Guerre mondiale.Les vies d'un ancien combattant troublé, de sa petite amie infirmière et d'un garçon naïf se croisent d'abord en Alberta puis en Belgique pendant la sanglante bataille de Passchendaele pendant la Première Guerre mondiale.

  • Réalisation
    • Paul Gross
  • Scénario
    • Paul Gross
  • Casting principal
    • Paul Gross
    • Michael Greyeyes
    • James Kot
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,4/10
    9,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Paul Gross
    • Scénario
      • Paul Gross
    • Casting principal
      • Paul Gross
      • Michael Greyeyes
      • James Kot
    • 127avis d'utilisateurs
    • 30avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 11 victoires et 5 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:11
    Trailer

    Photos8

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    Rôles principaux60

    Modifier
    Paul Gross
    Paul Gross
    • Michael Dunne
    Michael Greyeyes
    Michael Greyeyes
    • Highway
    James Kot
    James Kot
    • Skinner
    Jesse Frechette
    Jesse Frechette
    • Peters
    Rainer Kahl
    • German Gunner
    Landon Liboiron
    Landon Liboiron
    • German Soldier
    Caroline Dhavernas
    Caroline Dhavernas
    • Sarah Mann
    Patricia Benedict
    • Nursing Matron
    Hugh Probyn
    • Carmichael
    Jim Mezon
    • Dobson-Hughes
    Brian Dooley
    Brian Dooley
    • McKinnon
    Joe Dinicol
    Joe Dinicol
    • David Mann
    Meredith Bailey
    • Cassie Walker
    Robert Nogier
    • Harper
    Francis Damberger
    • Mayor Costello
    David Ley
    • Dr. Walker
    Judith Buchan
    Judith Buchan
    • Mrs. Costello
    David Lawrence Brown
    David Lawrence Brown
    • Dr. Bernard
    • (as Dave Brown)
    • Réalisation
      • Paul Gross
    • Scénario
      • Paul Gross
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs127

    6,49K
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    Avis à la une

    8rps-2

    At last...

    At last a genuine Canadian movie... Calgary is Calgary... The Americans didn't win the battle, didn't even turn up anywhere... There were no Stars and Stripes in every office. Okay, the plot --- a sort of WW1 Saving Private Ryan effort set against the bloody Belgian battle --- is a little far fetched. But the scenes --- both in 1916 Calgary and in the mud and horror of the battlefield --- are as good as those in any WW1 movie I've seen. There are believable characters well portrayed both in the script and by the actors. The effects are superb. The lighting and cinematography are sensitive and creative. And how very impressive that Paul Gross was a triple threat man. He wrote it, he directed it and he starred in it. That totals 300% This is as good as they come.
    Wizard-8

    Made with passion, but falls quite short

    There was great hoopla around "Passchendaele" in 2008, with the hope that it would bring in great audiences when released. However, the box office take in its native Canada was only average, and it faired worse in the international market - the only foreign market it played in theaters was with a (brief) British release, and in the United States the DVD label that picked it up was a small DVD company that specialized in releasing public domain movies.

    Seeing the movie, it's easy to see why not that many people were attracted to it. The first half of the movie is pretty awful. I know the intent of this first half was to illustrate war on the home front - which you don't often see in war movies - but it fails in its intentions. The dialogue is downright awful at times, the characters are very familiar, and it's REAL slow going. Even worse is that despite the expense put into the movie, the look and feel of the movie here is like one found with a cheapo drama broadcast on the CBC television network.

    The second half of the movie - moving to the Passchendaele battlefields - is a bit more successful than the first half. The battlefield and the battlefield fighting come across as gritty and authentic, and the movie finally has a theatrical feeling to it. However, the movie still suffers from bad dialogue, throwing in ridiculous symbolism as well. Worse of all, the struggle for Passchendaele doesn't last that long - all of a sudden, we're told Passchendaele has been taken. Huh?

    Had writer/director/actor Paul Gross had set the movie entirely on the battlefield AND had someone smart working with him to correct the shortcomings of his screenplay, we might have had something here. But as it is, the movie ends up being a big disappointment. What's worse is that this movie's mostly bad reception means that it will probably be a long, long time before some other Canadian tries to make a "big" movie that will attract a large domestic audience - if ever.
    6SnoopyStyle

    too much in the story

    Sergeant Michael Dunne (Paul Gross) survives a brutal vicious assault and finds himself in a Calgary hospital being treated by nurse Sarah Mann (Caroline Dhavernas). She and her brother David (Joe Dinicol) face problems arising from their German father who died for the German army. David's asthma keeps him out of the war which is looked down upon by his girlfriend Cassie Walker's father. Michael is facing desertion charges and possible execution back at the front despite winning a medal from the fight. The three of them eventually find themselves back in the war.

    There are compelling bits of scenes here and there. It's kinda daring to have the protagonist bayonet a helpless German boy in the forehead. The shaming of the men who haven't enlisted is interesting. The story back home is way too messy encompassing too many elements. It's trying to do too much. Paul Gross is not gritty enough for this role. The first half becomes a sincere melodrama. The second half is more or less a big muddy WWI trench war movie. The production is not as high as Hollywood. The sincerity does keep it from being truly bad.
    9doug-697

    Beneath the surface

    Passchendaele is part unabashed romance and part horrific and quite graphic war story.

    In film World War One has been a neglected war compared to the more morally unambiguous Second World War and the more recent Vietnam War. And films that aren't about American participation are just as neglected. Passchendaele fills that void.

    The movie moves quickly and switches between home life and battlefield with surprising ease and effect. I was not bored for a moment of this movie. The movie will make you care about these people when they are at home living their lives and then fear for them at war. While the battle scenes are quite brutal, they are not sensational or exploitive, since to have made them sensational or exploitive would defeat the great effort this movie takes in showing how men had to cope with life after the war and the memories of what they lived through.

    Undoubtedly there will be cynics who will decry some moments as contrived or melodramatic, but these are the small-minded who have missed the real emotion of this film. The movie is great entertainment, but there is something going on beneath the surface. This is the first time I can recall a film where the main character is someone who has been both emotionally damaged by the war, but does not succumb to it. I suspect there must be many men coming out of the war who were damaged, but quietly lived with that damage their entire lives. For that depiction alone, this is a great movie.

    The movie is not without humour and it has one of the funniest seduction lines I've ever heard uttered by a woman in a movie.

    The movie is entertaining, but there's a lot going on and much I haven't mentioned as I don't want to click the spoiler warning. There are scenes I'm still thinking about, which doesn't happen with every movie I see.
    ametaphysicalshark

    "Passchendaele" is a wonderful tribute to our heroes who fought for us and to Canada

    "Passchendaele" gives us twenty plus minutes of brutal, miserable, genuinely horrific trench warfare towards the end of the film. During that time it is the sort of gritty, relentlessly (but not gratuitously) violent war film many will and have gone into the theater thinking it would be. Apart from the short five to ten minutes which opens the film there are no other scenes of battle, and the movie is better for it.

    What Paul Gross has attempted here is to give Canadians their own war epic (and on a minuscule budget when compared to most Hollywood war films). The film is not interested in philosophizing and 'making a point'. It's something like a far, far better version of what Michael Bay was doing with "Pearl Harbor"; the film is an unabashed romance and period drama, with Passchendaele being not the focus, but the event at the end of the road which the audience knows is coming.

    Paul Gross has achieved something with "Passchendaele". We see so many Canadian films every year, but very few if any of them are ever about Canada, about being Canadian (and the film doesn't shy away from depicting some of the darker sides of that, we see the hatred and pain many German Canadians experienced simply due to their origin reflected in Dunn's love interest). More than just that, "Passchendaele" is a love letter to Canada, and although I might be biased as a Calgarian and Albertan (where the film is set), I think that every Canadian will find a reason to be proud in this film, in spite of the fact that it's depicting a war where nobody really knew what they were fighting for. "Passchendaele" has its flaws. There's some really, really heavy-handed symbolism (which thankfully doesn't ruin the film) and cloying sentimentality. While I normally abhor cloying sentimentality, "Passchendaele" must be doing something right because I was with it every step of the way. There isn't a moment in this film where the characters don't feel real, where the story doesn't affect you, where the romance doesn't feel genuine (including a love scene which could have been laughable but ended up being one of the year's most beautiful scenes).

    "Passchendaele" is Paul Gross' heart poured onto the screen. The man is perhaps best known for his light-hearted role on "Due South", but he is a phenomenal dramatic actor and his performance here is probably the best I've seen this year from a male lead. You can feel his character's pain, his joy, his suffering, his love. Gross spent 12 years on the screenplay, and while I'd love to say the final result is perfect it is not. It is still, however, a screenplay so filled with genuine emotion and such passion that it ends up being something rare and special. It's a wonderful, wonderful film, one which attempts no grand statement on what war is or should be, it simply shows us the emotions of those involved in it.

    I could go on at length complimenting the wonderful cast, explaining the story, discussing the film in detail, but that would be pointless. It's a film every Canadian should see. I honestly don't know if there's anything here for non-Canadians, although I imagine the film is populist enough to entertain most people (there's even a healthy dose of well-written humor, and the movie has one line so hilarious and yet oddly seductive that I'll probably never forget it). I've said it already, but I'll say it again: writer, director, and star Paul Gross has achieved something special with "Passchendaele". It's a tribute to many things. Less importantly perhaps it is a tribute to Calgary and Alberta (only a Calgarian could have made this film), and more importantly it's a tribute to the pure, certain feeling of true love, to our war veterans, to the troops currently fighting in Afghanistan, to all Canadians, and ultimately and most importantly to Canada.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Paul Gross wrote and directed this film, and its closing song "After the War." His grandfather, Michael Joseph Dunne, a WWI vet, once confessed to a young Gross about bayoneting a young lad in the forehead. Gross later said on Dunne's deathbed he was muttering for forgiveness and he was the only one who knew what was being talked about.
    • Gaffes
      In the climactic battle sequence (1:33'51'' mark) as a German soldier stabs a fallen body, the bayonet bends as if made of rubber.
    • Citations

      Michael Dunne: Do you think maybe I could accompany you to a dance, or...?

      Sarah Mann: I don't dance with soldiers.

      Michael Dunne: I could lose the uniform.

      Sarah Mann: I don't dance with naked soldiers.

    • Crédits fous
      During the end credits, Black and White footage of the real battle of Passchendaele are shown.
    • Bandes originales
      After the War
      Performed by Sarah Slean

      Written by Paul Gross and David Keeley

      Courtesy of Debmeister Music Publishing

      Produced by Asher Lenz and Jack Lenz

      [Played during the end credits]

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Passchendaele?Alimenté par Alexa
    • What is Passchendaele?
    • Did Passchendaele really fall to the Germans again shortly afterwards?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 17 octobre 2008 (Canada)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Canada
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Allemand
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • La bataille de Passchendaele
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Fort Macleod, Alberta, Canada
    • Sociétés de production
      • Bell Broadcast and New Media Fund
      • Damberger Film & Cattle Co.
      • Rhombus Media
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 20 000 000 $CA (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 54min(114 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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