NOTE IMDb
7,2/10
857
MA NOTE
Ulzii, un adolescent pauvre mais orgueilleux, est déterminé à gagner un concours de physique pour obtenir une bourse d'études, mais sa mère analphabète trouve un emploi à la campagne et le l... Tout lireUlzii, un adolescent pauvre mais orgueilleux, est déterminé à gagner un concours de physique pour obtenir une bourse d'études, mais sa mère analphabète trouve un emploi à la campagne et le laisse avec ses frères.Ulzii, un adolescent pauvre mais orgueilleux, est déterminé à gagner un concours de physique pour obtenir une bourse d'études, mais sa mère analphabète trouve un emploi à la campagne et le laisse avec ses frères.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 7 victoires et 8 nominations au total
Avis à la une
Cinematography decent, phasing great, story not half bad. Use of Mise-en scene and Chekhov's gun are non existent. Things just tend to happen. Much of the dramatic aspects are just told or has no impact, obviously because it was never built upon. Some concepts are hard for foreign audience to understand. To the director and writer of this film:
SHOW NOT TELL!
Since it's director's first feature film it's decent better than what's coming out today in Mongolian film industry. But it's not great achievement or whatever most people say it is. Honestly it would be shameful if this film was ever to be applied to Academic awards.
Since it's director's first feature film it's decent better than what's coming out today in Mongolian film industry. But it's not great achievement or whatever most people say it is. Honestly it would be shameful if this film was ever to be applied to Academic awards.
I saw this film today at the Braunschweig International Film Festival and I was deeply moved.
The story is about the self chosen responsibility of a boy for his two younger siblings because their widowed mother could not feed them. When he realized that her mother wants to move them back to the countryside, he spoke up for himself and the two younger siblings because he saw the importance of going to school.
Left alone by the mother, he is torn between earning money, going to school and caring for his younger siblings. The film shows the daily difficulties surviving in a yurt even when there is little heat and little to eat. A wonderful film with excellent characters.
The story is about the self chosen responsibility of a boy for his two younger siblings because their widowed mother could not feed them. When he realized that her mother wants to move them back to the countryside, he spoke up for himself and the two younger siblings because he saw the importance of going to school.
Left alone by the mother, he is torn between earning money, going to school and caring for his younger siblings. The film shows the daily difficulties surviving in a yurt even when there is little heat and little to eat. A wonderful film with excellent characters.
Really very good. Poignant socio-economic portrait of city life in modern Mongolia, more particularly of poor people who wish to get by by acquiring a good education, among other things. The harsh and cruel side often associated with extreme poverty, hard to receive, is relevant, effective and striking. We also see all the resilience, mutual aid and generosity that human beings can demonstrate. The point presented can be transposed almost anywhere in the world, even in so-called rich countries. Excellent soundtrack to support the story. The recurring musical theme is very beautiful and moving. However, at the beginning of the film, there is an error in the translation of a mathematical term, in the subtitles, surely coming from the fact that the translation was done from Mongolian to English, then to French (confusion between ''integrals'' and ''integers'' which gives ''integers'' in the translation rather than the correct term ''integrals''). A relatively open ending, as is customary in films from the Orient. This work presents us with beautiful life lessons. Good duration.
In a city well lit and dotted with numerous hilltop communication masts, we meet the young "Ulzii" (Battsooj Uurtsaikh) who is living quite a contrasting existence with his mother and three siblings in a yurt than has an one-ring electric cooker and a coal burning stove. He is a gifted physics student whose teacher (Batzorig Sukhbaatar) is trying to coax him to enter a competition and focus more on his studies, but it's increasingly clear that this young man is very much the breadwinner. His recently widowed mother reverts to the bottle when things get tough and yearns to return to the rural, herding, life she had lived before marriage. Their's is a tempestuous relationship, and when things come to an head she takes their youngest away, whilst he and the elder children remain to keep up with their schooling. What follows now sees young "Ulzii" forced to make tough choices as he must reconcile the needs of his family with the time and effort he needs to put into his studies. A lack of coal, wood and a infection in his brother that he can't afford to medicate force him to take a path that addresses the immediacy of their needs but what of his future? I thought Uurtsaikh did well here, juggling the aspirations of a young boy who wanted to be just that, with his responsibilities as a de facto father. The actors portraying the siblings work well too, creating a sense of a family unit - they all share the same small bed - that does care for each other and all want to help. The conditions are bleak. Somehow the harsh cold always looks worse amidst an urban landscape where we are offered enough of a pretty stark comparison between even the most modest of city dwellings and his family's semi-rural existence on the outskirts. It is intense at times, but it is also quite funny too. Who knew the cure for a mouth ulcer involved a saddle-bit and a big toe? It is his younger brother who comes up with the idea of hibernating, and if I'd been there I think I would have agreed.
In a one-room ger in the Mongolian capital, Ulaanbaatar, lives lanky teenager Ulzii; his widowed, alcoholic mother; and his three siblings. His mother is unable to earn enough to feed all her children and it falls to Ulzii to supplement the family income by doing odd-jobs - unloading a van or delivering meat, for example. But he has a special, intuitive talent for physics, and an inspirational schoolteacher suggests he enter the national physics competition (yes, such things exist - introducing the film at the 2023 London Film Festival, editor Alexandra Strauss explained that although this film is a work of fiction, it is based on a documentary). If Ulzii wins, he will get a scholarship. But with all of his family responsibilities, can he put in the time required for study?
For Western audiences, a film from Mongolia is a rare treat. As well as the central plotline, the film also provides a look at modern Mongolia, where ancient traditions meld with today's way of life: in one scene Ulzii is sent to visit his aunt in her modern, high-rise flat in order to place his big toe in his infant nephew's mouth - this, apparently, is a sure-fire way to cure a facial rash. As the film progresses (writer/director Zoljargal Purevdash cleverly marking the passage of time by every so often changing Ulzii's hairstyle) we see Mongolian teenagers acting like teenagers anywhere: play-fighting, playing sports, lusting after a pair of stylish trainers.
The adventures of a physics student does not sound like a promising subject for a film and it is interesting to speculate whether this film would have worked if it were set in the UK or US; I suspect not. But set in a country that rarely features in Western entertainment, it works a treat.
For Western audiences, a film from Mongolia is a rare treat. As well as the central plotline, the film also provides a look at modern Mongolia, where ancient traditions meld with today's way of life: in one scene Ulzii is sent to visit his aunt in her modern, high-rise flat in order to place his big toe in his infant nephew's mouth - this, apparently, is a sure-fire way to cure a facial rash. As the film progresses (writer/director Zoljargal Purevdash cleverly marking the passage of time by every so often changing Ulzii's hairstyle) we see Mongolian teenagers acting like teenagers anywhere: play-fighting, playing sports, lusting after a pair of stylish trainers.
The adventures of a physics student does not sound like a promising subject for a film and it is interesting to speculate whether this film would have worked if it were set in the UK or US; I suspect not. But set in a country that rarely features in Western entertainment, it works a treat.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOfficial submission of Mongolia for the 'Best International Feature Film' category of the 97th Academy Awards in 2025.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Radio Dolin: Oscars 2024: The Best Films from around the World (2023)
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- How long is If Only I Could Hibernate?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- If Only I Could Hibernate
- Lieux de tournage
- Ulan Bator, Mongolie(setting of the action)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 358 502 $US
- Durée1 heure 39 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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What is the Spanish language plot outline for Si seulement je pouvais hiberner (2023)?
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