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Mudbound

  • 2017
  • 16
  • 2h 14min
NOTE IMDb
7,4/10
56 k
MA NOTE
Jonathan Banks and Carey Mulligan in Mudbound (2017)
Two men return home from World War II to work on a farm in rural Mississippi, where they struggle to deal with racism and adjusting to life after war.
Lire trailer2:13
16 Videos
99+ photos
DrameGuerre

Deux hommes retournent chez eux après la Seconde Guerre mondiale pour travailler dans une ferme du Mississippi rural, où ils luttent contre le racisme et s'adaptent à la vie après la guerre.Deux hommes retournent chez eux après la Seconde Guerre mondiale pour travailler dans une ferme du Mississippi rural, où ils luttent contre le racisme et s'adaptent à la vie après la guerre.Deux hommes retournent chez eux après la Seconde Guerre mondiale pour travailler dans une ferme du Mississippi rural, où ils luttent contre le racisme et s'adaptent à la vie après la guerre.

  • Réalisation
    • Dee Rees
  • Scénario
    • Virgil Williams
    • Dee Rees
    • Hillary Jordan
  • Casting principal
    • Jason Mitchell
    • Carey Mulligan
    • Jason Clarke
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,4/10
    56 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Dee Rees
    • Scénario
      • Virgil Williams
      • Dee Rees
      • Hillary Jordan
    • Casting principal
      • Jason Mitchell
      • Carey Mulligan
      • Jason Clarke
    • 178avis d'utilisateurs
    • 184avis des critiques
    • 85Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 4 Oscars
      • 36 victoires et 117 nominations au total

    Vidéos16

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:13
    Official Trailer
    Official Teaser
    Trailer 2:04
    Official Teaser
    Official Teaser
    Trailer 2:04
    Official Teaser
    Come Back
    Clip 1:06
    Come Back
    Country And Violence
    Clip 1:14
    Country And Violence
    Ronsel And Jamie
    Clip 0:56
    Ronsel And Jamie
    Unload
    Clip 0:35
    Unload

    Photos193

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 187
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux48

    Modifier
    Jason Mitchell
    Jason Mitchell
    • Ronsel Jackson
    Carey Mulligan
    Carey Mulligan
    • Laura McAllan
    Jason Clarke
    Jason Clarke
    • Henry McAllan
    Mary J. Blige
    Mary J. Blige
    • Florence Jackson
    Rob Morgan
    Rob Morgan
    • Hap Jackson
    Garrett Hedlund
    Garrett Hedlund
    • Jamie McAllan
    Jonathan Banks
    Jonathan Banks
    • Pappy McAllan
    Frankie Smith
    Frankie Smith
    • Marlon Jackson
    Kennedy Derosin
    Kennedy Derosin
    • Lilly May Jackson
    Joshua J. Williams
    Joshua J. Williams
    • Ruel Jackson
    Elizabeth Windley
    Elizabeth Windley
    • Amanda Leigh McAllan
    Piper Blair
    Piper Blair
    • Isabelle McAllan
    • (as Piper Blaire)
    Jason Kirkpatrick
    Jason Kirkpatrick
    • Oris Stokes
    Kerry Cahill
    Kerry Cahill
    • Rose Tricklebank
    David Jensen
    David Jensen
    • Conductor
    Oyeleke Oluwafolakanmi
    • Cleve
    Kelvin Harrison Jr.
    Kelvin Harrison Jr.
    • Weeks
    Roderick Hill
    Roderick Hill
    • Sergeant
    • Réalisation
      • Dee Rees
    • Scénario
      • Virgil Williams
      • Dee Rees
      • Hillary Jordan
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs178

    7,456.3K
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    Avis à la une

    10riorita-63879

    One of the Best of This Year

    Wasn't going to go to this, but so very glad I did. Netflix has made a film worthy of the highest praise. If the book is better than this movie, this is a book for your library. The entire screening audience became engrossed in this movie, so quiet you could hear a pin drop on the carpet. The story unfolds necessarily slow and snares you. The narrations by different characters at different times, helps to pull the viewer in lightly forcing a personal touch to each story. The different perspectives of the storytellers is blatantly obvious while the movie spares little in realistic actions that make the viewer cringe at times, laugh at times and cry at times. it doesn't hold back The acting is top notch, even though I had only heard of a hand full of these players, one not even being an actor. The cinematography is up there, crisp and a great player in the mood of this movie. It had educational moments too, while not being preachy, it just shows and tells where we have been. It is also a movie for our times. People from the screening audience are still taking about this move 4 days later. An Oscar contender this should be.
    7ablack90

    An Important Film Even if Executed a little too slowly for me

    I felt the film dragged in the first hour, but once the two boys came back from WWII, one from a white family and the other from a black family, the story was rolling. Very sick how young men who served in the war had to return to disgusting racism. A whole new fresh horror awaited them. After the ending, I felt I needed to watch Mississippi Burning just to get a feeling of justice. What a lawless hole the south was. After seeing all the black children murdered in recent years, Roy Moore's base comments in Alabama, and juvenile actions of Trump, I ask myself where is the leadership in America to finally address the over incarceration of black men, lax gun laws, police brutality, white privilege in the justice system, etc??

    This film did not leave me with a sense of hope. After WWII, many black men moved to Europe where they were treated as equals. I realize the Mudbound story takes place in 1940s but do people actually think America is the land of the free today? I don't think so. And seeing Americans vote someone like Trump into power only makes those of us on the outside wonder ... what is the fate of this country? .
    7deloudelouvain

    Racism, such an ugly disease.

    There are alot of positive things to write about Mudbound. First of all the acting, that was by far the best part of this movie. It's what made this movie entertaining to watch, because in my eyes the duration of the movie was too long, but the good acting made up for that. The story itself is easy to follow, easy in the way it's not complicated, not in the way of hearing and seeing racist abuse. Because that's what's the movie about, awful racist southern people against a normal family that tries to survive in their own way. It's a message that depending on where you live, on how you were raised, you treat people differently. A movie with not a new story, but worth watching.
    7themadmovieman

    At times astonishingly powerful, but incredibly boring at others

    If there were ever a film that sums up the phrase 'mixed bag', then Mudbound is surely it. Ranging from emotionally devastating and harrowing drama to downright tedious periods of nothingness, this is one of the most inconsistent films you'll ever see, and although its highest points prove utterly enthralling and truly memorable, its lowest offer next to nothing in terms of riveting drama. Its performances are strong and its directing confident, but that doesn't escape the fact that this film is just a real mixed bag.

    Let's start with the film's opening act, which is one of the most boring and frustrating hours I've spent watching a film. Starting off with a confusing and poorly executed opening scene, the film really fails to pick itself up over the course of its whole first hour, doing little more than to establish some of the main characters and the hardships of the muddy, isolated rural community, things that could have surely been done just as effectively in a good ten minutes.

    For the duration of the whole first act, it's pretty difficult to tell what the end game of the movie actually is. For one, you've got the story of a young woman whose marriage allowed her to escape her dull family, and who also is deeply frustrated with the muddiness and poverty-stricken nature of her current life. Then there's some detailing of the horrific levels of racism in 1940s Mississippi, with the family's grandfather being the main example for some nasty remarks throughout. There's also a young black man who goes off to war, who we occasionally check in with during his battles in Europe, while we also see the brother of the central white family flying in the Air Force during the war.

    As you can tell by that very bungled description, the film's first act is an absolute mess. There's very little way to tell what the main story is, and what you should really be focusing on for the biggest emotional intrigue, and that, coupled with the fact that it moves at a deathly slow pace, makes it a very frustrating and extremely tedious first hour.

    However, things really do pick up come the second act. Upon seeing the two men return to Mississippi from the war, the film's central focus finally comes to the forefront, and we immediately get a very tense exchange between the racist grandfather and the African-American war veteran. That's undoubtedly one of the film's highest points, and sets up the atmosphere of deep racial tensions well, finally giving the film at least a continuing and consistent tension under the surface, something that was completely absent from its first act.

    The second act then goes into looking at how different generations respond to the institutionalised racism, while also shedding light on how horrifically unjust some of the hardships suffered by so many hard-working African-Americans were at the time, which proves for an interesting, albeit never quite powerful watch. The film's middle portion is a great insight into the time period, and holds your attention throughout, but it never quite manages to hit you hard enough as a film telling such a story should do.

    And then comes the film's final act, which is exceptional. For the final thirty minutes or so, the devastating reality of racism in the past is brought brutally into focus, and it makes for a deeply disturbing and uncomfortable but powerfully moving watch. With the film's tension at its height, it doesn't hold back in displaying some truly horrifying scenes, some of which are easily the most intense and powerful I have ever seen in a film dealing with the topic.

    The final act is directed brilliantly, being frank and brutally realistic in its depiction of injustice, and moving along at a slow but tense pace to emphasise some truly horrible acts, all the while maintaining a strong dignity that allows the deeper, emotional side of the sequences to shine through too, all of which makes it simply astonishing to see.

    It's fair to say then, given the huge range of comments I have for this film, ranging from total boredom to transfixing and hard-hitting emotion, that Mudbound is a very inconsistent mixed bag, however there is one element to it that works well from start to finish: the performances.

    The wide range of characters in the first act does make its story somewhat muddled, but each of the actors really shines in bringing their own character to life. Carey Mulligan is very strong and convincing as a young mother frustrated with her life in poverty, Garrett Hedlund and Jason Mitchell are both charismatic young men, meaning that their relationship really shines when it's on display, while Jonathan Banks is excellent as the terrifyingly racist old man, bringing a powerful tension into the film every time he walks into a room.

    Overall, then, it's pretty clear that Mudbound isn't a resoundingly successful movie. At times an interesting insight into racism and injustice in the Deep South in the 40s, at others a tedious slog of randomly muddled drama and characters, and at others an astonishingly powerful, hard-hitting and truly memorable (dare I say it, even Oscar- worthy) drama, it's a very inconsistent and overall frustrating film. However, with its strong performances all the way through and exceptional drama at points, it is a memorable watch.
    7ferguson-6

    hatred is not new

    Greetings again from the darkness. The Jim Crow South and WWII have each spawned many movies, and both play a crucial role in director Dee Rees' (BESSIE) adaptation (co-written with Virgil Williams) of Hillary Jordan's 2008 novel. It's the story of two families, the Jacksons and the McAllans, striving for daily survival in rural Mississippi during the 1940's.

    The Jacksons are a black family tenant-farming on land owned by the white McAllans who transplanted from Memphis. This land is so remote and life so hard, that tractors are almost non-existent and mules are rare enough. There is such a bleakness to this existence that all seem oblivious to the always present mudhole leading to the front door of their shack. Elation comes in the form of a privacy wall constructed around the outdoor family shower, or the sweetness of a bar of chocolate. Soon after D-Day, Florence and Hap Jackson send their son Ronsel off to war. The same thing is happening across the 200 acre farm to Jamie McAllan, brother of Henry and son of Pappy.

    A shifting of multiple narrators throughout allows us access to the perspectives of multiple characters. We get both black and white views on war and farming. Days in war bring injury, death and dirt … not so dissimilar to life on a Mississippi farm. When Ronsel and Jamie return from war, they are both suffering. Ronsel can't come to grips with how he was treated as a redeemer in Europe, but just another 'black man' being targeted by the KKK at home, while Jamie is shell-shocked into alcoholism and an inability to function in society. The parallels between the war experience of Ronsel and Jamie lead them to a friendship that ultimately can't be good for either.

    Jason Clarke plays Henry and Carey Mulligan, his wife Laura. Jonathan Banks ("Breaking Bad", "Better Call Saul") is the ultimate nasty racist Pappy, while Garrett Hedlund is Jamie. Rob Morgan and Mary J Blige are Hap and Florence Jackson, and Jason Mitchell (STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON) is Ronsel. While all perform well, it's Mitchell and Hedlund who are particular standouts, as is a radio reference of the great Lou Boudreau. Rachel Morrison's cinematography is terrific and captures both the hardscrabble life of Mississippi, but also the frantic and tragic abruptness of war (in just a couple of scenes).

    Racism is always difficult to watch, and in that era, everyone had their place/plight in life. It was a structure built to ensure misery for most, and one guaranteed to collapse. The acting here is very strong and the film is well made. The story-telling is consistently disquieting and periodically unbearable. Still, we are all tired (or should be) of hatred. The somewhat hopeful ending caused an audible sigh of relief from an audience of viewers who had been angry and clinched for more than two hours. And though there is no joy in Mudville, we remain hopeful, even today.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Mary J. Blige had an aunt who was very much like her character Florence, who had worked for (and raised a bunch of kids in) a white family who loved her. The experiences of her grandmother helped her in playing the role.
    • Gaffes
      Jamie picks up Ronsel during a pouring rainstorm, but when Ronsel enters the truck, he's completely dry.
    • Citations

      Hap Jackson: [narrating] What good is a deed? My grandfathers and great uncles, grandmothers and great aunts, father and mother, broke, tilled, thawed, planted, plucked, raised, burned, broke again. Worked this land all they life, this land that never would be theirs. They worked until they sweated. They sweated until they bled. They bled until they died. Died with the dirt of this same 200 acres under their fingernails. Died clawing at the hard, brown back that would never be theirs. All their deeds undone. Yet this man, this place, this law... say you need a deed. Not deeds.

    • Connexions
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Jeff Daniels/Mary J. Blige/Taylor Swift (2017)
    • Bandes originales
      One Morning Soon
      Written and Performed by Dr. C.J. Johnson

      Courtesy of Savoy Records

      a division of Malaco Records, Inc.

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    FAQ

    • How long is Mudbound?
      Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 17 novembre 2017 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Mudbound: El color de la guerra
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Vacherie, Louisiane, États-Unis(exterior scenes)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Armory Films
      • ArtImage Entertainment
      • Black Bear
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Montant brut mondial
      • 85 955 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      2 heures 14 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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