Back to Black
- 2024
- Tous publics
- 2h 2min
Il retrace la vie et la musique d'Amy Winehouse, de l'adolescence à l'âge adulte, et la création de l'un des albums les plus vendus de notre époque.Il retrace la vie et la musique d'Amy Winehouse, de l'adolescence à l'âge adulte, et la création de l'un des albums les plus vendus de notre époque.Il retrace la vie et la musique d'Amy Winehouse, de l'adolescence à l'âge adulte, et la création de l'un des albums les plus vendus de notre époque.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 10 nominations au total
Avis à la une
The film captures the self destructive and addictive demons that surrounded Amy Winehouse and I think doesn't truly depict the character portrayal of her husband and father as they are shown as better characters than they were.
Strong performances but I thought disappointing ending .
The singing of Marisa Abela is excellent and acting all around very strong . Just not enough depth and oomph in the overall result.
The addictive 'love' story if that's what it was is captured well and illustrates that period in London quite well for anyone who is a younger viewer.
I'm always amazed that showing drug use and alcohol addiction with the strong language is still rated at 15 but maybe I'm just getting old.
Make your own mind up Slight mistake in the film when she leaves prison and an electric LEVC TXE taxi is in the shot which wasn't actually made at that point.
Strong performances but I thought disappointing ending .
The singing of Marisa Abela is excellent and acting all around very strong . Just not enough depth and oomph in the overall result.
The addictive 'love' story if that's what it was is captured well and illustrates that period in London quite well for anyone who is a younger viewer.
I'm always amazed that showing drug use and alcohol addiction with the strong language is still rated at 15 but maybe I'm just getting old.
Make your own mind up Slight mistake in the film when she leaves prison and an electric LEVC TXE taxi is in the shot which wasn't actually made at that point.
The key credit to this film was Marisa Abela's portrayal of Amy.
Jack O'Connell is one of my firm faves and can bring charisma to any character he plays.
The film uses Amy's songs to fit in with the narrative, rather than the accurate timeline in which they were released.
It was an entertaining watch but offered a simplified view of Amy's life and turned it into nothing more than a toxic love story. The relationship with her parents wasn't really covered and the timeline of events didn't show how a mix of fame and drugs can take their toll over time.
I watched the 2015 documentary 'Amy' shortly after and would recommend this if you're wanting an insight into the life of Amy Winehouse.
This film would be good as a fictional film about made up people, but average as a biopic about a real person's life.
Jack O'Connell is one of my firm faves and can bring charisma to any character he plays.
The film uses Amy's songs to fit in with the narrative, rather than the accurate timeline in which they were released.
It was an entertaining watch but offered a simplified view of Amy's life and turned it into nothing more than a toxic love story. The relationship with her parents wasn't really covered and the timeline of events didn't show how a mix of fame and drugs can take their toll over time.
I watched the 2015 documentary 'Amy' shortly after and would recommend this if you're wanting an insight into the life of Amy Winehouse.
This film would be good as a fictional film about made up people, but average as a biopic about a real person's life.
Marisa Abela's portrayal of Amy Winehouse is a standout in an otherwise messy film. Her performance is a solid 10/10 and deserves a standing ovation.
But the film itself falls short, tangled in a disjointed script that leaves the audience emotionally adrift. There's a big disconnect between the characters and the viewers, making it hard to really connect with the story. In contrast, Asif Kapadia's documentary "Amy" broke our hearts by offering an intimate look into the life of a woman many of us never met but felt we knew by the end.
For those who don't know Winehouse's tumultuous journey, this film doesn't offer much clarity. It meanders through her life, failing to paint a clear picture of the real Amy. Despite the stellar cast, their great performances can't save the film's fragmented storytelling.
The movie glosses over crucial aspects of Amy's life, simplifying her complex struggles into a narrative that lacks the emotional depth and authenticity that her story deserves.
But the film itself falls short, tangled in a disjointed script that leaves the audience emotionally adrift. There's a big disconnect between the characters and the viewers, making it hard to really connect with the story. In contrast, Asif Kapadia's documentary "Amy" broke our hearts by offering an intimate look into the life of a woman many of us never met but felt we knew by the end.
For those who don't know Winehouse's tumultuous journey, this film doesn't offer much clarity. It meanders through her life, failing to paint a clear picture of the real Amy. Despite the stellar cast, their great performances can't save the film's fragmented storytelling.
The movie glosses over crucial aspects of Amy's life, simplifying her complex struggles into a narrative that lacks the emotional depth and authenticity that her story deserves.
Truth, if it were needed, that Lesley Manville can turn her hand to anything, but otherwise this is a rather unremarkable biopic of a woman whose character, I must confess, I didn't actually like very much. She is the nan of Amy (Marisa Abela) and the two have a special bond. Amy lives with her mum who is divorced from her dad Mitch (Eddie Marsan). He fancies himself as a bit of a crooner and she is steeped in jazz, determined to write her own songs and make a success of herself - on her own terms. Enter Nick (Sam Buchanan) who works for music mogul Simon Fuller and she is, after an initial bit of hostility, signed up and on her way. The remainder of the chronology is all pretty straightforward as Sam Taylor-Johnson decides to focus on an entirely speculative look at how her personal life developed. Amy's increasingly strained relationship with her friends and her father, her grandmother's terminal illness and her "toxic co-dependent" relationship with the charismatic Blake (Jack O'Connell). There's no doubting that many of her songs are great - even if the role of Mark Ronson in any of that is largely ignored, and hats off to Abela for putting her own slant on them. She does her own singing and though she does rather over-egg it, she does imbue a sense of the sheer force of personality this woman had. O'Connell, too, does well enough - especially with his Shangri-La dance in the pub when they meet, but somehow the whole narrative is just too bitty and episodic. The presentation of her character is way too shallow and frankly she is portrayed as a bit of an obnoxious brat. Her increasing exposure to the hounding paparazzi is well illustrated and that growing sense of exasperation obvious, but again we jump around too much as we seem to be rushing to a conclusion we know all about. At two hours it is too long in many ways and too short in others. The dialogue offers us little insight into just who she was and by the end, I felt sad for her but can't say I really cared about any of them. The aggression of the photographers seems to receive a disproportionate share of the blame for her predicament whilst rather discounting her own series of bad choices fuelled by her own immaturity and by the public's obsessions with watching what it builds up come crashing down. They couldn't sell their photos if we didn't want to buy them. A memorable musical legacy left behind by one who, along with so many other ground-breaking but flawed musical geniuses, might just have been better left for our ears.
The performance by Marisa Abela is brilliant, she is Amy Winehouse. However, if you know anything about Amy Winehouse you know that she had an incredibly unique voice, suffered with addictions & was hounded by the press. None of this is shown to its true potential in the film, which to be honest is disappointing. I expected to hear more of her singing and performing. The picture paints her Dad Mitch & husband as 'not bad blokes'. Neither of them were good blokes. Her Dad, should have & could have been far more supportive & intervened at her most desperate. Blake was an out & out addict, the film does not portray the impact that either of them had on Amy. Rocket Man, Bohemian Rhapsody & Elvis nailed their stories, sadly Back to Black doesn't.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMarisa Abela had done most of the singing in this film herself. She trained two-and-a-half hours of singing lessons every day for four months in order to mimic Amy Winehouse's vocals.
- GaffesWhen Amy leaves prison after visiting Blake, they drive past an electric taxi, which did not enter production until 2018.
- ConnexionsFeatured in The 7PM Project: Épisode datant du 12 avril 2024 (2024)
- Bandes originalesTzur Mishelo
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Емі Вайнгауз: Back to Black
- Lieux de tournage
- Good Mixer, 30 Inverness Street, London, NW1 7HJ, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Pub where Amy meets Blake)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 30 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 6 178 165 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 2 835 720 $US
- 19 mai 2024
- Montant brut mondial
- 51 026 731 $US
- Durée2 heures 2 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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