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La Bête

Titre original : La bête
  • 2023
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 26min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
10 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
2 713
332
Léa Seydoux in La Bête (2023)
The year is 2044: artificial intelligence controls all facets of a stoic society as humans routinely “erase” their feelings. Hoping to eliminate pain caused by their past-life romances, Gabrielle (Léa Seydoux) continually falls in love with different incarnations of Louis (George MacKay). Set first in Belle Époque-era Paris Louis is a British man who woos her away from a cold husband, then in early 21st Century Los Angeles, he is a disturbed American bent on delivering violent “retribution.” Will the process allow Gabrielle to fully connect with Louis in the present, or are the two doomed to repeat their previous fates? Visually audacious director Bertrand Bonello (Saint Laurent, Nocturama) fashions his most accomplished film to date: a sci-fi epic, inspired by Henry James turn-of-the-century novella, suffused with mounting dread and a haunting sense of mystery. Punctuated by a career-defining, three-role performance by Seydoux, The Beast poignantly conveys humanity’s struggle against dissociative identity and emotionless existence.
Lire trailer1:39
1 Video
90 photos
Dystopian Sci-FiPsychological DramaDramaRomanceSci-FiThriller

Dans un futur où les émotions sont une menace, Gabrielle donne son ADN à une machine qui la plonge dans ses vies antérieures et purge ses émotions fortes. Elle rencontre Louis et ressent un ... Tout lireDans un futur où les émotions sont une menace, Gabrielle donne son ADN à une machine qui la plonge dans ses vies antérieures et purge ses émotions fortes. Elle rencontre Louis et ressent un lien fort, comme si elle l'avait toujours connu.Dans un futur où les émotions sont une menace, Gabrielle donne son ADN à une machine qui la plonge dans ses vies antérieures et purge ses émotions fortes. Elle rencontre Louis et ressent un lien fort, comme si elle l'avait toujours connu.

  • Réalisation
    • Bertrand Bonello
  • Scénario
    • Bertrand Bonello
    • Benjamin Charbit
    • Guillaume Bréaud
  • Casting principal
    • Léa Seydoux
    • George MacKay
    • Guslagie Malanda
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    10 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    2 713
    332
    • Réalisation
      • Bertrand Bonello
    • Scénario
      • Bertrand Bonello
      • Benjamin Charbit
      • Guillaume Bréaud
    • Casting principal
      • Léa Seydoux
      • George MacKay
      • Guslagie Malanda
    • 67avis d'utilisateurs
    • 130avis des critiques
    • 80Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 12 victoires et 41 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Official US Trailer
    Trailer 1:39
    Official US Trailer

    Photos90

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    + 83
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    Rôles principaux49

    Modifier
    Léa Seydoux
    Léa Seydoux
    • Gabrielle Monnier
    George MacKay
    George MacKay
    • Louis Lewanski
    Guslagie Malanda
    Guslagie Malanda
    • Poupée Kelly
    Dasha Nekrasova
    Dasha Nekrasova
    • Dakota
    Martin Scali
    • Georges
    Elina Löwensohn
    Elina Löwensohn
    • La voyante
    Marta Hoskins
    • Gina
    Julia Faure
    Julia Faure
    • Sophie
    Kester Lovelace
    Kester Lovelace
    • Tom
    Felicien Pinot
    • Augustin
    Laurent Lacotte
    Laurent Lacotte
    • L'architecte
    Pierre-François Garel
    • Paul Poiret
    Céline Carrère
    • Femme bal 1910
    Lukas Ionesco
    • Anton
    Hortense Gélinet
    • Femme bal 1910
    Pauline Jacquard
    Pauline Jacquard
    • Femme bal 1910
    Alice Barnole
    Alice Barnole
    • Femme bal 1910
    Theo Hakola
    • Le barman clubs
    • Réalisation
      • Bertrand Bonello
    • Scénario
      • Bertrand Bonello
      • Benjamin Charbit
      • Guillaume Bréaud
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs67

    6,510.4K
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    Avis à la une

    9TheVictoriousV

    I know IMDb users rarely take kindly to artistry, but do hear me out

    When David Ehrlich reviewed The Beast (org. French title La Bête), he made the case -- that the movie makes the case -- that we ought to demand every major arthouse director make "their own Cloud Atlas" before joining the choir invisible. That is a fair way to view Bertrand Bonello's recent opus - a languid sci-fi drama that, as far as I'm concerned, solidified the movie year of 2024 as worthy of '23. When seeking out strange and defiant new cinema, this is exactly the kind of mystifying journey on which I yearn to be taken.

    In the film, we follow Lea Seydoux through what appears to be different time periods. In several of them, the construction of dolls is involved. In the past and present storylines, she encounters a man played by George MacKay; in the future, she seems to dream of all these moments while submerged in a dark substance. Are they real events on any level? Hey, don't look at me.

    It is the sort of film that might easily turn some people off and seem inaccessible as I describe it. (Others have likened its atmosphere and dream logic to the works of Lynch and its unsettling view of love and sexuality to the works of Cronenberg.) But I assure you that the film as such is often quite funny, with MacKay portraying one of the most wince-inducingly accurate parodies of the Incel archetype we've ever seen on film -- his pathetic "I deserve girls" vlog is one of the highlights of the picture, although its similarities with the infamous Elliot Rodger rant will doubtless disturb some viewers.

    If that's not doing it for you (understandable), the film also offers beautiful shot compositions, masterly lighting, and wicked satire of modern movie-making itself, chiefly the digitalization of it.

    Also, I guess in one of the time periods or "realities" or whatever, Seydoux's character is an actress whose credits seem to include Harmony Korine's Trash Humpers. As it happens, we'll be talking more about Korine later -- along with a markedly less intelligent contemplation on modern/future cinema.
    7emmafevrier

    A movie with stunning visuals, that discusses contemporary matters

    Beautiful costumes and stunning sets, amazing performance of the two main characters. An original and engaging screenplay that resonates with contemporary matters. A movie that raises intriguing questions about the evolution of technology and its role in modern society. Bonello appropriately explores the importance of emotions and affects : are they desirable or to be avoided at all costs ? This movie offers a captivating and enjoyable travel through time and ages, deserving to be appreciated at its right value. The only criticism I would offer is that I found it a bit lengthy towards the end, and, at times, it was difficult to follow and understand.
    5justinwfirestone

    A Black Mirror short story stretched thinly into 145 minutes

    It would be slightly unfair to assert that The Beast is a 20-minute story concept pulled from the rejection pile of Black Mirror plots, but given that it was loosely based on a 1903 novella from Henry James, it could be merely unfair to make such an assertion. We see past lives lived throughout imperfect days, slavishly assembled in three interleaved timelines, sometimes experienced within an alternative reality, while at other times merely through fictional narrative.

    If one pays attention for all 145 minutes, and one would assuredly deserve a personalized baby poupée if one were to have the fortitude and stimulants required to achieve such a task, one would likely attain a sense of metaphorical imagery. There are metaphors for art, floods, beasts, pigeons, love songs, or maybe I have it backwards. There could be metaphors for humanity, disaster, and dolls. Either way, The Beast is probably filled with several metaphors for which I missed their significance, except for any references to flooding or fires. Flooding and fires are metaphors for disaster, whether real or impending.

    Léa Seydoux and George MacKay act with the necessary talent to put together movies like this, but movies like this remind me how I would appreciate it if restaurants were to offer Half the Food for Half the Price.

    I wouldn't mind directors offering Half a Movie for Half the Price.
    8mark-67214-52993

    Not for the Faint of Heart

    Director Bertrand Bonello's "The Beast" is not for the faint of heart. It's daring, divergent, disorienting, occasionally bombastic and frustrating - in short, very French. Voila, mes amis!

    The film is based, loosely, on Henry James' 1903 novella "The Beast in the Jungle." In this eighty-page short story, James suggests that the beast represents our own fear. James believed that personal fear causes an overwhelming sense of dread about the future accompanied by a sense of impending personal catastrophe, sensations that annihilate the possibility of fulfilling love with another.

    In the opening scene, Gabriella (Léa Seydoux) is standing in front of a green screen receiving instructions from Bonello. It's the first clue that this film will be unconventional and surprising. Fair warning.

    The film takes place at three different times. The story begins in Paris in 1910. Louis (a tremendous George MacKay - "1917") is in the process of wooing Gabrielle away from her attentive but uninteresting husband. There are also scenes in 2014 in Los Angeles. Gabrielle is a housesitting struggling actor/model. Lou is an incel psychopath who stalks her while spouting ominously about seeking "retribution." Finally, again in Paris, action takes place in 2044. In this dystopian future, AI has taken over the world, people must wear airtight masks to go outside and humans are strongly encouraged to engage in "purification," a process of purging DNA of past traumas and permanently deadening emotions. Bonello flashes forward and backward regularly. If you're feeling overwhelmed right now, it's probably because you're accurately processing how this story unfolds. To further complicate matters, Bonello shifts tone and content throughout the film - from period piece (1910) to thriller/horror film (2014) to dystopian sci-fi film (2044).

    Bonello uses these three palettes, each shot in a distinctive cinematic style, to throw out some really weighty issues: that our sense of dread may be an accurate foreshadowing of the collapse of civilization, that deadening ourselves emotionally may be the most adaptive way to cope with the atrocities that occur around us continuously. For good measure, he plays with the juxtaposition of loneliness and love and scrutinizes the role of fate. If you crave a straightforward narrative or have low tolerance for ambiguity, now is a good time to run away screaming.

    For you brave souls who accept the challenge, you'll be rewarded with a mesmerizing performance by Léa Seydoux, a close-up of hand-holding that's more sensual than most sex scenes plus images and ideas that will haunt you for days after the experience.
    6Falkner1976

    When the Inland Empire is contaminated by artificial intelligence, you may end up being little more than a replicant

    With RKO's horror films, Van Lewton, discovered a new cinematic terror, darkness, what you can't see. Now artificial intelligence, the metaverse, can create a reality that stalks you in an empty space, the invented reality, which can be an advertisement in which you end up hit by an invisible car or an acting test for a film in which you defend yourself with a knife from you really don't know what. Or it is a reality manufactured to satisfy our dreams, to erase misfortunes, to disguise that "other" reality in which our expectations are not met.

    A world in which the objective is not to suffer, not to desire, to achieve an emotionally stabilized, more productive life, without error in decisions; a world where emotions are better left for dreams and that creates past lives tailored to your dreams, lives in which what goes wrong can always be eliminated, reworked into a better dream. A world in which the proof that you do not exist is that you have no digital footprint on the internet (well, this is no longer science fiction).

    The protagonist is a pianist from the beginning of the 20th century who does not dare to abandon her husband and start a relationship with the man she has fallen in love with, because she has the feeling that a strange misfortune will destroy her or her lover if she does (again as in the RKO Cat People classic).

    She is an aspiring actress model at the beginning of the 21st century, strangely incapable of maintaining the romantic relationship she needs, who makes a living taking care of other people's homes, just now a very luxurious one), in a world in which, once again, she finds herself, surprisingly, with the same man she always falls in love with, now another young man unable to dare to maintain a relationship.

    Time and time again things seem to put love within reach, but for whatever reason, those realities end up being somewhat tricky, and readjust themselves until tragedy always arrives.

    The protagonist is also (especially?) the young woman of a future with empty streets, advised by artificial intelligence, whose friends are robot dolls, and who wears virtual reality glasses. This young woman is dissatisfied with her job, unable to promote to a better one for being too human, and does not know whether to opt for an erasure of her past lives and eliminate traumatic experiences, at the risk of... ceasing to be herself. She is a young woman for whom that ataraxia is not really atractive, who does not want to renounce to imperfectly authentic emotions, and in that world of the future...there is that nightclub that dresses up in a different decade style every night, and where she surprisingly finds again the young man with whom she is obsessed.

    La Bete is clearly indebted to the universe of David Lynch, especially Inland Empire and its matryoshka game (dolls within dolls, realities within realities), although now explained for all audiences and with a bath of conventionality, without the background, authenticity nor the infinite number of interpretations of Lynch (and certainly without his poetry), a safer and less authentically unsettling territory. We also get the awakening of Mulholland Drive, Roy Orbison's songs as in Blue Velvet, and even Laura Palmer's final scream.

    There is also something of the existential terror of Blade Runner (or Do Androids dream of electric sheep?) and we could continue with many other borrowings.

    But the truth is that these three hours fly by and keep you continually intrigued in a plot that never gets lost in ramblings and that likes to tie up all the ends. An intelligent science fiction film, with a very attractive and careful aesthetic, and which benefits from the magnificent performance of Léa Seydoux.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Director Bertrand Bonello started writing the screenplay in 2017 with Gaspard Ulliel and Léa Seydoux in mind for the lead roles, after having worked with both actors in Saint Laurent (2014). The project was officially announced in January 2021, but filming was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and was scheduled to start in April 2022. In the meantime, Bonello directed the film Coma (2022) instead, which featured Ulliel in the last movie he filmed and the last work he finished. Ulliel passed away on January 19, 2022 following a skiing accident, and the filming for 'The Beast' was delayed again. In February 2022, Bonello told Variety that he would likely recast Ulliel's role with a non-French actor. On May 16, 2022, it was announced that British actor George MacKay was cast as the male lead and that filming was scheduled to start in August 2022.
    • Crédits fous
      At the end of the movie, there are no final credits, only a QRcode with the text "Générique / Scan me" redirecting to a mp4 video file containing the credits. During these credits, there is an extra scene.
    • Connexions
      Features Trash Humpers (2009)
    • Bandes originales
      Seizure (feat. Jerz)
      performed by OG Maco

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Beast?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 7 février 2024 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
      • Canada
    • Site officiel
      • Ad Vitam Distribution (France)
    • Langues
      • Français
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Beast
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Paris, France(on location)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Les Films du Bélier
      • My New Picture
      • Arte France Cinéma
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 7 520 000 € (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 413 978 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 42 823 $US
      • 7 avr. 2024
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 754 861 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 26 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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