The Double
- 2013
- Tous publics
- 1h 33min
Un employé d'une agence gouvernementale constate que sa vie peu enviable prend une tournure horrible avec l'arrivée d'un nouveau collègue qui est à la fois son double physique et son opposé ... Tout lireUn employé d'une agence gouvernementale constate que sa vie peu enviable prend une tournure horrible avec l'arrivée d'un nouveau collègue qui est à la fois son double physique et son opposé exacts.Un employé d'une agence gouvernementale constate que sa vie peu enviable prend une tournure horrible avec l'arrivée d'un nouveau collègue qui est à la fois son double physique et son opposé exacts.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 11 nominations au total
Avis à la une
The lighting, the sounds, the camera shots are all wonderfully done, setting a disturbing and unsettling atmosphere that gently but with increasing urgency begins to throw a blanket of latent claustrophobia across characters and happenings. We witness curious incidents and are left to guess their significance, our hero reaches out to the girl but is beaten to the jump by....who exactly?
How much of what we see actually takes place is questionable. How much some of the latter scenes make sense even more so. Yet, as it twists and turns towards the denouement, I found myself gripped and engaged to an uncommon degree. It is a difficult movie as it winds up, no question, but I find the notion that anyone feeling suicidal needs warning before viewing as slightly hysterical.
On the one hand, this is an easy film to describe, whether you reference the source material, or your talk about the doppleganger and what it might be like to find one has a double. Yet on the other hand, it's almost impossible to sum this up after one viewing, as there felt like there are so many little bits and pieces that suddenly reveal themselves to your eyes and ears. that you're forced to think about going back to sit back through it again. The question is, which one of you will go...?
"Submarine" was cute, but this is the film that definitely makes Ayoade one of the most promising directors nowadays. Can't wait to see what he's gonna do next.
As if this was not discouraging enough, a new colleague joins who is identical to you in appearance but has the completely opposite personality.
A smart telling of the Dostoevsky novel about a person who has the capacity to tolerate everything but his own double whose existence causes him a dilemma: continue to silently tolerate everything or change and adapt.
Perhaps not the easiest of movies to watch but its quirky wit and creative cinematography will win you over.
What I didn't like.
- I understand that the movie doesn't aim to be the most accurate adaptation, hence it's modern setting, but the truth is, the movie is just loosely based on the novel. I say that because it only makes use of some plot devices that are to be found in the book, but mostly fails in capturing the inner emotional turmoil, dilemmas, paranoia and mental dizziness of Simon, elements that make Dostoevsky's Golyadkin an interesting case for me. Here the character of Simon is simplified a bit. For example when Simon meets his double, instead of the sheer dread that makes me feel the horror of this unspeakable resemblance, one can see a sudden cut to a Simon that has just faint - an easy gateway for the screenwriters and the director. Or the very first encounter with the double, when James takes the photos of the Colonel and other employees, that seemed a bit too abrupt and in a certain sense - rushed.
- an unnecessary comedic tone, with tasteless jokes for a rather profound story.
- The mild Chinese racism - did the screenwriter try to copy Dostoyevsky's sense of mocking towards the ethnic Germans?
Things I did like
- the color grading, the tones, the hues, the sick greenish of the office; Better that I'd have imagined.
- Jesse Eisenberg's (The Social Network) and Mia Wasikowska's performances.
- ''a person can get really sick by just floating by''
- also the speech about Pinocchio and feeling like you're not real. And the subway scenes especially.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe piano motif throughout the film comes from the song 'Der Doppelgänger' by Franz Schubert; the words to this piece tell the tale of a man and his evil twin.
- Citations
Simon: I don't know how to be myself. It's like I'm permanently outside myself. Like, like you could push your hands straight through me if you wanted to. And I can see the type of man I want to be versus the type of man I actually am and I know that I'm doing it but I'm incapable of what needs to be done. I'm like Pinocchio, a wooden boy. Not a real boy. And it kills me.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Film '72: Épisode datant du 5 mars 2014 (2014)
- Bandes originalesAkasaka Rain
aka "Ameno Akasaka"
Written by Jun Hashimoto, Tsunaki Mihara
Published by Watanabe Music Publishing Co. Ltd (c) 1968
Administered by Fairwood Music (UK) Ltd for the UK & Eire
Performed by The Blue Comets
Licensed courtesy Watanabe Music Publishing Co. Ltd
Administered by Fairwood Music (UK) Ltd for the UK & Eire
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Double?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 200 406 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 14 646 $US
- 11 mai 2014
- Montant brut mondial
- 1 662 515 $US
- Durée1 heure 33 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1