Une adaptation de la comédie musicale primée aux Tony et Olivier. Elle raconte l'histoire d'une fille extraordinaire qui ose prendre position pour changer son histoire avec des résultats mir... Tout lireUne adaptation de la comédie musicale primée aux Tony et Olivier. Elle raconte l'histoire d'une fille extraordinaire qui ose prendre position pour changer son histoire avec des résultats miraculeux.Une adaptation de la comédie musicale primée aux Tony et Olivier. Elle raconte l'histoire d'une fille extraordinaire qui ose prendre position pour changer son histoire avec des résultats miraculeux.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nomination aux 2 BAFTA Awards
- 5 victoires et 10 nominations au total
Winter Jarrett-Glasspool
- Amanda Thripp
- (as Winter Jarrett Glasspool)
Ann Firbank
- Elderly Teacher
- (as Annie Firbank)
Résumé
Reviewers say 'Matilda the Musical' is a vibrant adaptation with strong performances, especially from Alisha Weir and Emma Thompson. The film is lauded for its high-energy production, catchy songs, and intricate choreography. However, some critics argue it lacks depth in character development and relationships, particularly between Matilda and Miss Honey. This adaptation diverges from the 1996 film, emphasizing spectacle over emotional connection. Despite mixed views on musical elements and portrayals, many appreciate the effort to translate the stage musical to screen.
Avis à la une
I have mixed emotions about this. Firstly, I am a BIG fan of the west end musical so I was comparing throughout the whole film. There are many good points of the film. The musical numbers have been greatly throughout , and you can tell it's been greatly considered in how to transfer a stage production into a movie and to present the same emotive experience for the audience. I think the choreography was executed perfectly and the casting was phenomenal. HOWEVER (a big however)
The film personally didn't grab me in the way the stage production has. It felt rushed in parts (which is understandable as they are trying to fit a 2. 5 hour production in 2) so the intimate moments between the musical numbers were lost, leaving you feeling slightly detached from the characters. I also couldn't help but reminisce about the 1996 adaption and it's authenticity. This movie was clearly a 'Netflix movie'. A bit uneedingly cgi/green screen happy which irritates me and contributes to the detachment I was feeling throughout. Overall, it was a good try, however the wow factor was lost. I want to think that perhaps I am an adult not understanding the current trends and seeking nostalgia rather than a film that is suited to what the kids want these days. After all this is a kids film and perhaps this was perfect for what they needed.
The kids were great! The acting, singing, and dancing was all on point. Emma Thompson was also amazing and did a wonderful job.
The other adults on the other hand were sadly forgettable. Even miss honey didn't feel like a main character. I grew up with the old 90's movie Matilda and miss honey was very important and you could feel that she loved Matilda with their acting. This miss honey had a beautiful voice, but it felt like there should have been more scenes with her teaching and talking to Matilda.
I was entertained almost the entire two hours of film which is what i consider good. It's not perfect but it was still fun.
The other adults on the other hand were sadly forgettable. Even miss honey didn't feel like a main character. I grew up with the old 90's movie Matilda and miss honey was very important and you could feel that she loved Matilda with their acting. This miss honey had a beautiful voice, but it felt like there should have been more scenes with her teaching and talking to Matilda.
I was entertained almost the entire two hours of film which is what i consider good. It's not perfect but it was still fun.
THANK YOU Netflix for not letting this go straight to streaming. You just cannot beat the cinema experience and with a score and orchestrations like this you need that Dolby surround sound to appreciate the fullness.
I saw the film as a kid, and as I love musicals, I listened to the soundtrack on Spotify last week and can totally understand why this won so many awards. I would suggest that The Greatest Showman actually copied some of their score as there are so many parities.
The casting is first class, there is not a bad link anywhere in the production and what can I say about Emma Thompson, she is one gifted actress and always commands the screen, never more so than here. She would say that actors don't saves lives and it's just a job, but she does it SO well, in the world of awards she totally deserves one for this and ALL her work. Miss Honey had a beautiful voice and amazing actor too, the child lead was equally as outstanding.
I found the story very moving and tears were rolling down my face when 'Quiet' started. Yes, I'm a bloke, and unashamedly get emotional at things like this.
A part of my job as a community nurse is Safeguarding children and, although I found the film funny when I was young, not so now, however it was done very responsibly and sent out the right number of messages about 'telling someone'. I found parts very dark, that originally, I would have been able to view as humorous.
Kids don't ask to be born do they.
Most people were crying at times, especially at the end so take your tissues!
The filming was done in bright colours which makes a change from the drab brown screen.
The musical numbers were superbly choregraphed and the orchestrations made the hair on the back of my neck stand up.
I will see it again with my family next week, it is THAT good.
Netflix did an amazing job with The Prom too, but sadly they let that go straight to streaming, I really hope they learn from this and stop just streaming all the really good stuff, which is few and far between anyway, obviously.
I saw the film as a kid, and as I love musicals, I listened to the soundtrack on Spotify last week and can totally understand why this won so many awards. I would suggest that The Greatest Showman actually copied some of their score as there are so many parities.
The casting is first class, there is not a bad link anywhere in the production and what can I say about Emma Thompson, she is one gifted actress and always commands the screen, never more so than here. She would say that actors don't saves lives and it's just a job, but she does it SO well, in the world of awards she totally deserves one for this and ALL her work. Miss Honey had a beautiful voice and amazing actor too, the child lead was equally as outstanding.
I found the story very moving and tears were rolling down my face when 'Quiet' started. Yes, I'm a bloke, and unashamedly get emotional at things like this.
A part of my job as a community nurse is Safeguarding children and, although I found the film funny when I was young, not so now, however it was done very responsibly and sent out the right number of messages about 'telling someone'. I found parts very dark, that originally, I would have been able to view as humorous.
Kids don't ask to be born do they.
Most people were crying at times, especially at the end so take your tissues!
The filming was done in bright colours which makes a change from the drab brown screen.
The musical numbers were superbly choregraphed and the orchestrations made the hair on the back of my neck stand up.
I will see it again with my family next week, it is THAT good.
Netflix did an amazing job with The Prom too, but sadly they let that go straight to streaming, I really hope they learn from this and stop just streaming all the really good stuff, which is few and far between anyway, obviously.
It's been 26 years since the premiere of Matilda, the iconic film of the nineties and cleverly directed by the great Danny DeVito. Today it is the turn of Matthew Warchus to take over and deliver us a perfect successor to the 1996 film with a sublime musical of the popular Roald Dahl novel.
It is charming, dark and portentous.
The script that Dennis Kelly writes simply shines with mastery to deliver us a movie that completely fills our emotions and sensations. It is a film that enchants from the beginning, but that does not hesitate to take us into darkness, authentically capturing that purest essence of the novel and for that the visual spectacle is totally marvelous that makes us be glued to the screen and simply enter in the musical and lyrical harmony of Tim Minchin that puts the most recent Netflix premiere at our feet.
The cunning with which the director takes Kelly's splendid script to images, allows us to have a first-cut cinematographic experience when watching it. With perfect musical segments in choreography and dance and the darkness in moments of feeling that you are in a subtle world of Stephen King. That combination elevates to a point of maximum enjoyment of everything we are seeing on the screen and to a large extent hypnotized by the photography provided by Tat Radcliffe that intensifies all that greatness that this new version of Matilda supposes that at no time forgets that theatrical blood of which is fed.
That good performance of all of the above mentioned makes us forget about the weak points that the film may have. The perfect compensation so that we end up more than satisfied with what we are seeing.
From the greatness of Emma Thompson to the promise of Alisha Weir.
Undoubtedly the greatest charm that we find is seeing Alisha Weir be the skin of Matilda; The acting charisma with which the little actress dazzles on the screen makes us excited about a promising one and that is that she comes face to face with all the poise of an Emma Thompson and both only make the screen shine with magic when we have them sharing the scene.
I cannot leave aside the correct work that the rest of the children's cast does and seeing Lashana Lynch sing is priceless, in the same way I cannot leave aside the entertaining step of Andrea Riseborough and Stephen Graham as Matilda's parents.
A cast that further highlights the good work that the film had already had.
Conclution.
It is a pleasant surprise, what it means to be the new version of Matilda for Netflix from Sony.
A film full of emotions that transports you through all those sensitive fibers with which we count as a spectator. Joy, darkness, sorrow and hope cover the 117-minute journey to the pleasure of enjoying a perfect adaptation of a novel and a play, capturing the best of both scenarios to provide an enriching experience on the screen.
A film that is worth watching and enjoyed by both adults and children, it is the journey through what it is to be a child and also what it means to be parents, it is a tale of the purest feeling called love.
It is charming, dark and portentous.
The script that Dennis Kelly writes simply shines with mastery to deliver us a movie that completely fills our emotions and sensations. It is a film that enchants from the beginning, but that does not hesitate to take us into darkness, authentically capturing that purest essence of the novel and for that the visual spectacle is totally marvelous that makes us be glued to the screen and simply enter in the musical and lyrical harmony of Tim Minchin that puts the most recent Netflix premiere at our feet.
The cunning with which the director takes Kelly's splendid script to images, allows us to have a first-cut cinematographic experience when watching it. With perfect musical segments in choreography and dance and the darkness in moments of feeling that you are in a subtle world of Stephen King. That combination elevates to a point of maximum enjoyment of everything we are seeing on the screen and to a large extent hypnotized by the photography provided by Tat Radcliffe that intensifies all that greatness that this new version of Matilda supposes that at no time forgets that theatrical blood of which is fed.
That good performance of all of the above mentioned makes us forget about the weak points that the film may have. The perfect compensation so that we end up more than satisfied with what we are seeing.
From the greatness of Emma Thompson to the promise of Alisha Weir.
Undoubtedly the greatest charm that we find is seeing Alisha Weir be the skin of Matilda; The acting charisma with which the little actress dazzles on the screen makes us excited about a promising one and that is that she comes face to face with all the poise of an Emma Thompson and both only make the screen shine with magic when we have them sharing the scene.
I cannot leave aside the correct work that the rest of the children's cast does and seeing Lashana Lynch sing is priceless, in the same way I cannot leave aside the entertaining step of Andrea Riseborough and Stephen Graham as Matilda's parents.
A cast that further highlights the good work that the film had already had.
Conclution.
It is a pleasant surprise, what it means to be the new version of Matilda for Netflix from Sony.
A film full of emotions that transports you through all those sensitive fibers with which we count as a spectator. Joy, darkness, sorrow and hope cover the 117-minute journey to the pleasure of enjoying a perfect adaptation of a novel and a play, capturing the best of both scenarios to provide an enriching experience on the screen.
A film that is worth watching and enjoyed by both adults and children, it is the journey through what it is to be a child and also what it means to be parents, it is a tale of the purest feeling called love.
I took my 8 year old girl and she was mesmerised. She loves the Matilda older movie though and I don't so I was a bit sceptical.
It was really enjoyable, the whole cast were fab especially the kids and Emma Thompson.
The girl playing Matilda was really good in the role, super cute. I must admit I had a few tears at the end of it.
The cinema was full of mums and daughters, with the odd boy and dad. But the whole reactions seemed to be good and especially the Emma Thompson parts, she nailed it. Even scared me lol.
If I had to say a negative thing it was a tad on the long side for me almost bang on 2 hours.
It was really enjoyable, the whole cast were fab especially the kids and Emma Thompson.
The girl playing Matilda was really good in the role, super cute. I must admit I had a few tears at the end of it.
The cinema was full of mums and daughters, with the odd boy and dad. But the whole reactions seemed to be good and especially the Emma Thompson parts, she nailed it. Even scared me lol.
If I had to say a negative thing it was a tad on the long side for me almost bang on 2 hours.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMara Wilson, who played the title character in Matilda (1996), turned down a cameo role, saying she didn't want to fly to England just for one day of filming. Similarly, Pam Ferris (Miss Trunchbull in the original) was also offered a cameo but supposedly turned it down as it clashed with rehearsals for a stage play.
- GaffesEarly in the movie, Miss Trunchbull is referenced as having competed at the Olympics after having also been the 1959 English champion in Women's hammer throw. This was not an Olympic event until 2000, making it unlikely Agatha Trunchbull competed at that level. Given the character, however, it might be presumed that it was all fabricated.
- Citations
Mrs. Phelps: Is it a bully? Because you know, the best way to deal with bullies, is tell someone. Straight away. They thrive on... silence.
- Crédits fousThe Roald Dahl Story Company logo appears in the form of a golden ticket inside a Wonka candy bar (from Dahl's novel "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory").
- Versions alternativesIn the French and Thai dubs, the reprise for "When I Grow Up" is left in instrumental. Likewise, the Turkish dub leaves it in English.
- ConnexionsFeatured in 2023 EE BAFTA Film Awards (2023)
- Bandes originalesMiracle
Written by Tim Minchin
Performed by Matt Henry, Alisha Weir, Stephen Graham, and Andrea Riseborough
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- How long is Matilda: The Musical?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Matilda, de Roald Dahl: El musical
- Lieux de tournage
- Bramshill House, Bramshill, Hampshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Crunchem Hall School exterior scenes)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 25 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut mondial
- 37 289 659 $US
- Durée
- 1h 57min(117 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.00 : 1
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