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MA NOTE
En 1958, pendant la guerre froide, deux scientifiques, deux mondes et deux idéologies s'affrontent dans une course à la survie à l'Institut scientifique Vinca, près de Belgrade.En 1958, pendant la guerre froide, deux scientifiques, deux mondes et deux idéologies s'affrontent dans une course à la survie à l'Institut scientifique Vinca, près de Belgrade.En 1958, pendant la guerre froide, deux scientifiques, deux mondes et deux idéologies s'affrontent dans une course à la survie à l'Institut scientifique Vinca, près de Belgrade.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 33 victoires et 26 nominations au total
Avis à la une
"Guardians of the Formula," directed by Dragan Bjelogrlic, is a compelling cinematic feat that skillfully brings to life the gripping tale of the 1958 Vincha Institute nuclear accident. Bjelogrlic, alongside a stellar cast including Alexis Manenti and Radivoje Bukvic, delves into this poignant historical moment with finesse and depth. The actors deliver powerful performances, embodying their characters' struggles and triumphs with authenticity. The production quality of the film is commendable, seamlessly blending historical accuracy with narrative emotion, making it a passionate tribute to a critical scientific milestone and the indomitable human spirit.
Fantastic movie. Excellent production, amazing actors. A story that deserves to be told, for the whole world to know. An event that changed the course of medicine. A depiction of a situation that begins as catastrophic and ends as revolutionary. All praise for this film, the warmest recommendation. I would not share too many details, but I believe that many will be surprised by the information from the film, even those who know the history of Yugoslavia. The film carries several wonderful messages, and as the most important I would single out the one from the title itself - "everything is a chain reaction". A very interesting presentation of how one event, perhaps seemingly not so important, can affect so many people on so many levels, and, even more importantly, completely unexpectedly, shape the entire world into the way we know it today.
I saw this film at the Palm Springs Film Festival this past January. For this showing, I felt a palpable tension in the audience during the entire two-hour length of the film.
The movie focused on historical events of which I was completely unaware. A nuclear disaster in Yugoslavia leads to infected lab workers being transported to France to undergo experimental treatments - the first transplant of non-related bone marrow .
The acting, direction, and writing in this film are top-notch. In fact, it was, in my view, far better than any of this year's Oscar-nominated films and the most intriguing movie I've seen in years. It is befuddling that this site's user reviews of this film are either exceptionally good or exceptionally bad. Were we watching the same film?
I would really like to have the opportunity to see Guardians of the Formula again to confirm my first impression of this film, but I've been looking for it since January to no avail. Why isn't this film available in the U. S. on Netflix or some other streaming service?
The movie focused on historical events of which I was completely unaware. A nuclear disaster in Yugoslavia leads to infected lab workers being transported to France to undergo experimental treatments - the first transplant of non-related bone marrow .
The acting, direction, and writing in this film are top-notch. In fact, it was, in my view, far better than any of this year's Oscar-nominated films and the most intriguing movie I've seen in years. It is befuddling that this site's user reviews of this film are either exceptionally good or exceptionally bad. Were we watching the same film?
I would really like to have the opportunity to see Guardians of the Formula again to confirm my first impression of this film, but I've been looking for it since January to no avail. Why isn't this film available in the U. S. on Netflix or some other streaming service?
Guardians of the Formula is a Serbian produced film with cooperation from French production studios. The film revolves about a group of Yugoslavian scientist who have been irradiated during an experiment in the nuclear research center Vinca in Belgrade. After being processed their only chance is to be transported to France where their only hope lies in the ambitions doctor Mateo who could help them by using a revolutionary method not yet tested on human beings. The film perfectly captures the Cold War atmosphere with the personal angst of the irradiated scientist as well as the staff that are treating them and giving them emotional support, the acting is good, really close to Western style movies, with production being nearly identical to say the least. As the films moves to it's conclusion it loses some steam, both the ending of movie fixes that steam and it gives it a nice conclusion. If you are from the states of former Yugoslavia (or are a movie buff) then you should at least give this movie a chance!
This movie based in true story, accident on secret Yugoslav nuclear reactor, will take you on emotional rollercoaster following a drama of young Yugoslav/Serbian nuclear scientists, French doctors and group of just ordinary local French people.
Even dough story pivots around an accident during a Yugoslav top secret A-bomb/nuclear weapons project it's an actually a drama about humans, their friendship, sacrifice, compassion, greed, pride and power.
Supporting role actors - they win this show for me. Local French people like Odet and car mechanic, deliver direct emotions in small amount of screen time.
Two young actors in rolls of Yugoslav scientists/students, Zivota and Radojko, put up an amazing act as they manage to convince you in real life chemistry of the two best friends. Their banter and quarrelling, depict a true image of Serbian culture of friendship and humor. Guys did a hell of the job.
Other supporting acts of Rosa, Vera are very good and convincing.
Main actors, French and Yugoslav professors, put up a needed level of act. I have a feeling there was much more to give from their side. Especially from the Yugoslav professor Dragoslav. But this is where we come to screenplay and its limitations hindering main character development.
Screenplay introduces some unnecessary stereotypes common in western cinematography, regarding communist countries in general.
This fails in case of Yugoslavia, as it renders the characters of Professor Dragoslav Popovic, Professor Savic and politician Rankovic as Soviet style communists/clerks. That's far from the truth, and takes important traits of main Yugoslav character.
Bit of history:
In real life professor Savic and politician Rankovic took a heroic and important part in WWII as one of the leaders of Yugoslav partisan resistance - the greatest and the most effective anti Nazi resistance in whole of Europe!
At the start of WWII prof. Savic as a one of the Nobel prize candidates for discovering nuclear fission (foundation principle of A bomb) will return from Paris to Yugoslavia to fight Nazis along with his sister in ranks of partisan resistance. Imagine the heroism. Nazis will murder his sister.
Politican Rankovic will lead anti nazi resistance forces, getting his wife murdered by nazis, himself tortured by Gestapo.
These guys know each other. Coming out victorious from the hell of WWII, with the goal to create Yugoslavia as strong and independent from East and West.
Keeping independence in Cold War easily leads to idea of developing A-bomb.
Prof. Savic will advocate a local Yugoslav nuclear program independent from the east and the west. Prof. Savic will be the one helping Rankovic to send injured scientists to Paris, using his French connections.
There comes professor Dragoslav Popovic, as a wonderkid promoted by Prof. Savic, a genius with ground breaking ideas how to produce plutonium from local Yugoslav ores, needed for A-bomb. Dragoslav, works in romantic era, Yugoslavia is driven by its own epic anti nazi WWII victories securing it unique place in Europe, separate to West and East. Translates to endangered by East and West. People dream of securing Yugoslavia's peace.
Have in mind this is the time when the France - todays only nuclear power in EU, was struggling to come up with technology to create A-bomb. France was secretly working on their A bomb in cooperation with Israel and Jewish scientists from the Manhattan project.
Yugoslavia was war wracked, small, poor nation, destroyed by Nazi genocide of Serbs, Jews and Roma, but still had know-how to enter the race with US, Soviets, France... Quite amazing, right! But it took tolls.
Most of scientists working on the first Yugoslav nuclear reactor were just the kids, students and graduate's. Some of them were passing their undergraduate English exams on control panels of reactor before the accident. New technology, scarce funding, it ended up with accident. Followed by pressure from both West and East to kill Yugoslav a-bomb research, research was stopped.
Even dough story pivots around an accident during a Yugoslav top secret A-bomb/nuclear weapons project it's an actually a drama about humans, their friendship, sacrifice, compassion, greed, pride and power.
Supporting role actors - they win this show for me. Local French people like Odet and car mechanic, deliver direct emotions in small amount of screen time.
Two young actors in rolls of Yugoslav scientists/students, Zivota and Radojko, put up an amazing act as they manage to convince you in real life chemistry of the two best friends. Their banter and quarrelling, depict a true image of Serbian culture of friendship and humor. Guys did a hell of the job.
Other supporting acts of Rosa, Vera are very good and convincing.
Main actors, French and Yugoslav professors, put up a needed level of act. I have a feeling there was much more to give from their side. Especially from the Yugoslav professor Dragoslav. But this is where we come to screenplay and its limitations hindering main character development.
Screenplay introduces some unnecessary stereotypes common in western cinematography, regarding communist countries in general.
This fails in case of Yugoslavia, as it renders the characters of Professor Dragoslav Popovic, Professor Savic and politician Rankovic as Soviet style communists/clerks. That's far from the truth, and takes important traits of main Yugoslav character.
Bit of history:
In real life professor Savic and politician Rankovic took a heroic and important part in WWII as one of the leaders of Yugoslav partisan resistance - the greatest and the most effective anti Nazi resistance in whole of Europe!
At the start of WWII prof. Savic as a one of the Nobel prize candidates for discovering nuclear fission (foundation principle of A bomb) will return from Paris to Yugoslavia to fight Nazis along with his sister in ranks of partisan resistance. Imagine the heroism. Nazis will murder his sister.
Politican Rankovic will lead anti nazi resistance forces, getting his wife murdered by nazis, himself tortured by Gestapo.
These guys know each other. Coming out victorious from the hell of WWII, with the goal to create Yugoslavia as strong and independent from East and West.
Keeping independence in Cold War easily leads to idea of developing A-bomb.
Prof. Savic will advocate a local Yugoslav nuclear program independent from the east and the west. Prof. Savic will be the one helping Rankovic to send injured scientists to Paris, using his French connections.
There comes professor Dragoslav Popovic, as a wonderkid promoted by Prof. Savic, a genius with ground breaking ideas how to produce plutonium from local Yugoslav ores, needed for A-bomb. Dragoslav, works in romantic era, Yugoslavia is driven by its own epic anti nazi WWII victories securing it unique place in Europe, separate to West and East. Translates to endangered by East and West. People dream of securing Yugoslavia's peace.
Have in mind this is the time when the France - todays only nuclear power in EU, was struggling to come up with technology to create A-bomb. France was secretly working on their A bomb in cooperation with Israel and Jewish scientists from the Manhattan project.
Yugoslavia was war wracked, small, poor nation, destroyed by Nazi genocide of Serbs, Jews and Roma, but still had know-how to enter the race with US, Soviets, France... Quite amazing, right! But it took tolls.
Most of scientists working on the first Yugoslav nuclear reactor were just the kids, students and graduate's. Some of them were passing their undergraduate English exams on control panels of reactor before the accident. New technology, scarce funding, it ended up with accident. Followed by pressure from both West and East to kill Yugoslav a-bomb research, research was stopped.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBased on a true story.
- GaffesScientist Dragoslav Popovic wasn't actually irradiated during the Vinca accident. In the film he is the main character among the irradiated scientists.
- Versions alternativesThe final film has an international version with French titles and a regional version with Serbian titles.
- ConnexionsReferences Ozraceni (1976)
- Bandes originalesCamac na Tisi
written by Darko Kraljic, Dusan Jaksic
performed by Dusan Jaksic, Olivera Markovic
published by Jugoton
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- How long is Guardians of the Formula?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- L'Affaire Vinča Curie
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 1 496 065 $US
- Durée2 heures
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 16:9 HD
- 2.4 : 1
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What is the Brazilian Portuguese language plot outline for L'Affaire Vinca Curie (2023)?
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