Gagarine
- 2020
- Tous publics
- 1h 38min
NOTE IMDb
6,7/10
2,9 k
MA NOTE
Yuri se bat pour sauver sa ville natale de la démolition, ville qu'il partage avec son homonyme, Youri Gagarine.Yuri se bat pour sauver sa ville natale de la démolition, ville qu'il partage avec son homonyme, Youri Gagarine.Yuri se bat pour sauver sa ville natale de la démolition, ville qu'il partage avec son homonyme, Youri Gagarine.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 7 victoires et 15 nominations au total
Avis à la une
Gagarine is beautiful, and one of the most underrated films I've seen in a long time (I mean why is no one talking about this). Not to mention the hassle it was to get my hands on it (I'll save you the story). But anyways, beautiful. The cinematography was absolutely superb, though in a way it stylistically reminded me more of still photography, but a good way. The color grading was also amazing, making even the rundown apartments of Gagarine look rich and vibrant, this in tandem with its rather long and narrow aspect ratio leads to a unique visual style. Gagarine's storytelling prowess is also not to be underestimated, its tale of a young man fighting a desperate battle to save everything he loves is moving. The way it leaves off often overused themes of doom and gloom when it comes to poverty, for the oft overlooked ones of resilience and community is refreshing. And the acting and relational chemistry between the two leads is great as well.
A lively tale, a kind of "parabol", about how an old, half broken complex of buildings, Gagarine, named from the famous cosmonaut, can turn out to be a place full of life and emotions. In an uneasy environment, constructive social interactions seem to have been able to create a positive atmosphere in which people tend to respect and help each other .
Yuri, this teenager boy dedicated to maintaining Gagarine, dives deeply into space in his mind, and his living place is a symbolic doorway to travel far away from existential issues, the main one being the absence of his mother.
Saving Gagarine is his graal, and his quest could refer to the hability of any human being to escape his human condition, to look for wisdom and spirituality.
"Les choses de la vie", meaning crucial emotional experience like love, friendship, respect, tolerance, forgiveness are present all along the movie in a delicate, subtle way sometimes.
This movie is a bright and optimistic vision of us, creatures gifted with intelligence, but so eager to use it in the wrong way.
The end is an illusion, Yuri's one; his vision as he gets free, driven into space as his life faints and Gagarine buildings are collapsing.
Yuri, this teenager boy dedicated to maintaining Gagarine, dives deeply into space in his mind, and his living place is a symbolic doorway to travel far away from existential issues, the main one being the absence of his mother.
Saving Gagarine is his graal, and his quest could refer to the hability of any human being to escape his human condition, to look for wisdom and spirituality.
"Les choses de la vie", meaning crucial emotional experience like love, friendship, respect, tolerance, forgiveness are present all along the movie in a delicate, subtle way sometimes.
This movie is a bright and optimistic vision of us, creatures gifted with intelligence, but so eager to use it in the wrong way.
The end is an illusion, Yuri's one; his vision as he gets free, driven into space as his life faints and Gagarine buildings are collapsing.
Great cinematography and heartfelt characters. A dream-like quality throughout with complex characters relationships and an overall uplifting experience.
Debutant writer-directors Fanny Liatard and Jérémy Trouilh's 2020 film is something of a mixed bag, but has moments of great beauty (wonder, even). I don't recall (off the top of my head) seeing a film which focuses on the impending demolition of a set of the titular tower blocks (here in a Parisian 'banlieu'), but the filmmakers provide a warts and all account of the varying views of its, predominantly multi-cultural immigrant, residents. The film's most intriguing thread centres on the history of the Gagarine name, based on the Soviet cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin, who (as the film's documentary clip shows) visited the location to 'celebrate' its naming after him. This history has captured the imagination of Alséni Bathily's 'reluctant vacator', Youri, who has also (perhaps fancifully, but just go with it) tried to recreate (inspired by a TV documentary on the subject, which he continually watches) Gagarin's Vostok capsule in his own apartment!
Whilst the narrative of Gagarine is (being generous!) episodic, the film's 'magic realist' content (or sense of wonderment, if you prefer) slowly but surely, at least partly, got under this viewer's skin. As Youri's need for a 'sense of home' for Gagarine (exacerbated by his being estranged from his mother) is seemingly a near-unique concern, and despite Youri's attempts to 'renovate' elements of the building, it becomes clear (as the authorities decree) that he is fighting a lost cause. Youri finds some solace via a developing relationship with Lyna Khoudri's fellow resident and Roma, Diana, but even this appears to be temporary. Throughout, the film-makers give us some hypnotic sequences - including an eclipse of the sun and Diana's inventive use of morse code - which are enhanced by the film's visuals and its score by Evgueni and Sacha Galperine. As the film heads towards its denouement (with tension building as to whether Youri has evacuated the building), the film-makers up the magic realist content and give us a quite brilliant conclusion (which merits an additional star on its own).
In terms of 'genre', comparators might be taken to include films like La Haine and Girlhood or, from a UK perspective, Mike Leigh's Meantime. Closer to Gagarine, though, is something with a more magic realist feel, like Lynne Ramsay's brilliant Ratcatcher. Suffice to say, particularly in the scheme of most films you're likely to see at the local multiplex(!), Gagarine retains a welcome degree of distinction.
Whilst the narrative of Gagarine is (being generous!) episodic, the film's 'magic realist' content (or sense of wonderment, if you prefer) slowly but surely, at least partly, got under this viewer's skin. As Youri's need for a 'sense of home' for Gagarine (exacerbated by his being estranged from his mother) is seemingly a near-unique concern, and despite Youri's attempts to 'renovate' elements of the building, it becomes clear (as the authorities decree) that he is fighting a lost cause. Youri finds some solace via a developing relationship with Lyna Khoudri's fellow resident and Roma, Diana, but even this appears to be temporary. Throughout, the film-makers give us some hypnotic sequences - including an eclipse of the sun and Diana's inventive use of morse code - which are enhanced by the film's visuals and its score by Evgueni and Sacha Galperine. As the film heads towards its denouement (with tension building as to whether Youri has evacuated the building), the film-makers up the magic realist content and give us a quite brilliant conclusion (which merits an additional star on its own).
In terms of 'genre', comparators might be taken to include films like La Haine and Girlhood or, from a UK perspective, Mike Leigh's Meantime. Closer to Gagarine, though, is something with a more magic realist feel, like Lynne Ramsay's brilliant Ratcatcher. Suffice to say, particularly in the scheme of most films you're likely to see at the local multiplex(!), Gagarine retains a welcome degree of distinction.
Posed as a kind of magical realism, the adaptation of the short film "Gagarine" (2015) manages to broaden the vital horizon of the protagonist, although it does not reach a greater depth. The representation of poverty through the protagonist's dreams causes the visual aspect to opt in the last part for the fantasy embedded in a painful reality. In this sense, the directing work is remarkable, but it does not manage to solve the narrative dispersion.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe Gagarin building at risk of demolition after 60 years is ironically almost twice the age of the real life cosmonaut who died at just 34 years of age a few years after the building in the film was commissioned
- Bandes originalesYa Tara
performed by Amin Bouhafa
Meilleurs choix
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- How long is Gagarine?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- 仰望星空的少年
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 607 896 $US
- Durée1 heure 38 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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