IMDb रेटिंग
6.8/10
1.9 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
पेरिस के अभिनेता गिल्बर्ट वैलेंस की आरामदायक दैनिक दिनचर्या अचानक से बदल जाती है जब उसकी पत्नी, बेटी और दामाद एक कार दुर्घटना में मारे जाते हैं.पेरिस के अभिनेता गिल्बर्ट वैलेंस की आरामदायक दैनिक दिनचर्या अचानक से बदल जाती है जब उसकी पत्नी, बेटी और दामाद एक कार दुर्घटना में मारे जाते हैं.पेरिस के अभिनेता गिल्बर्ट वैलेंस की आरामदायक दैनिक दिनचर्या अचानक से बदल जाती है जब उसकी पत्नी, बेटी और दामाद एक कार दुर्घटना में मारे जाते हैं.
- पुरस्कार
- 5 जीत और कुल 5 नामांकन
Ricardo Trêpa
- Guard
- (as Ricardo Trepa)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Touching is the first word that comes to mind. de Oliveira goes to Cannes every year and delivers the best movie and doesn't get any prize. He's 93 and he still puts out more than a movie a year and what movies I must say. Stunning beauty and poetry come out of this work. This movie sees an amazing performance by Michel Piccoli; he goes right in deep into his character. Merci Beaucoup Mr De Oliveira!
This is a superbly played, superbly framed film about a very interesting idea. It is simply three times too long. The film follows an aging actor, Gilbert Valence (Michel Piccoli), from the moment he learns his wife, their only child and her husband died in a car accident, to the moment he suddenly turns old.
Valence, who is either shown or heard in every scene, has very few words to say except when playing, first in Ionesco's Le Roi se meurt, then in the Tempest (both in French) and last while shooting a film in English, Joyce's Ulysses. That last role ends with the title words, I'm going back home, when Valence simply walks out rather than deal with his failure to master Joyce's words while keeping the wanted character and pacing.
The remaining minutes show him walking in a Paris suburb, from the studio to his home, while mumbling his role in English. This gives us the time to realize that all the while, since his wife's death, he's been sticking close to home, going through the well-known daily habits of his life, and equally well-known roles. Only the short appearance in Ulysses would have taken him into new territory. Turning old is choosing not to go outside the life one knows. In Valence's case, it's rather not going outside of what is left of his life, once the most important people in it have been killed.
The only other major speaking role belongs to Valence's agent, Georges (Antoine Chappey). Unfortunately, it is marred by an absence of those concrete details that convince the viewer that this is not sketch for a character, but a living human being. One scene, for instance, has Valence refuse a TV role which Georges is pushing because of the money involved, but Georges only gets to call it "lots", without giving even an approximation.
That deficiency in realistic detail mars other aspects of the film too. However, John Malkovich, playing the American film director, breaks through, he is quite convincing. My suspicion is that he wrote his own lines.
Even if the deficiency were fixed, though, Oliveira would still only have material for thirty minutes. His own failure is in not facing up to that. But Piccoli's playing is sublime, and the wordless showing of Valence's implicit choices through well-framed moments, is also a lesson in filming.
Valence, who is either shown or heard in every scene, has very few words to say except when playing, first in Ionesco's Le Roi se meurt, then in the Tempest (both in French) and last while shooting a film in English, Joyce's Ulysses. That last role ends with the title words, I'm going back home, when Valence simply walks out rather than deal with his failure to master Joyce's words while keeping the wanted character and pacing.
The remaining minutes show him walking in a Paris suburb, from the studio to his home, while mumbling his role in English. This gives us the time to realize that all the while, since his wife's death, he's been sticking close to home, going through the well-known daily habits of his life, and equally well-known roles. Only the short appearance in Ulysses would have taken him into new territory. Turning old is choosing not to go outside the life one knows. In Valence's case, it's rather not going outside of what is left of his life, once the most important people in it have been killed.
The only other major speaking role belongs to Valence's agent, Georges (Antoine Chappey). Unfortunately, it is marred by an absence of those concrete details that convince the viewer that this is not sketch for a character, but a living human being. One scene, for instance, has Valence refuse a TV role which Georges is pushing because of the money involved, but Georges only gets to call it "lots", without giving even an approximation.
That deficiency in realistic detail mars other aspects of the film too. However, John Malkovich, playing the American film director, breaks through, he is quite convincing. My suspicion is that he wrote his own lines.
Even if the deficiency were fixed, though, Oliveira would still only have material for thirty minutes. His own failure is in not facing up to that. But Piccoli's playing is sublime, and the wordless showing of Valence's implicit choices through well-framed moments, is also a lesson in filming.
10Red-125
I'm Going Home [Je rentre à la maison (2001)] is a
masterpiece from Manoel de Oliveira. This film is quiet,
fascinating, and truly memorable. de Oliveira has chosen
the aging, brilliant French actor Michel Piccoli to portray an
aging, brilliant French actor. The combination of skilled
director and skilled actor results in an almost perfect film.
The plot is basic and could be summarized in a paragraph.
What makes this movie a masterpiece is the manner in which
de Oliveira sets up each scene so that it is an organic
entity--linked to the scenes before and after it, but nonetheless
able to stand on its own. Each scene is, in fact, a small
masterpiece.
As an example, Piccoli's character is seated in front of the
mirror, while a makeup artist carefully, skillfully, and
professionally adds makeup. The scene is shot as if
through the mirror, so Piccoli and the makeup person are
looking at us to check the results. A man stands quietly in
the background. At first we don't understand why he is there.
Then, the makeup artists pauses, and the man begins to
place a wig on Piccoli's head. All three of these people are
portrayed as experienced, capable, and clearly expert at what
they do. They work quietly and efficiently in a manner
expected of people who have done this before, and will do it
again. The man steps back, the makeup person begins to
add a moustache, and, by the end of the scene, Piccoli's
appearance is transformed. A gem!
Think of this movie as if you were at an exhibition of Vermeer
paintings. You move from painting to painting. Most of the
works are small, often just one or two persons are portrayed,
and the lighting and composition are perfect. Each painting
is a masterpiece, and together they create a brilliant exhibition.
This is "I'm Going Home."
If you want bright colors, action, large expanses of flesh,
multiple characters, and constant movement, find an
exhibition of paintings by Rubens. Perhaps equally enjoyable,
but not Vermeer, and not de Oliveira.
masterpiece from Manoel de Oliveira. This film is quiet,
fascinating, and truly memorable. de Oliveira has chosen
the aging, brilliant French actor Michel Piccoli to portray an
aging, brilliant French actor. The combination of skilled
director and skilled actor results in an almost perfect film.
The plot is basic and could be summarized in a paragraph.
What makes this movie a masterpiece is the manner in which
de Oliveira sets up each scene so that it is an organic
entity--linked to the scenes before and after it, but nonetheless
able to stand on its own. Each scene is, in fact, a small
masterpiece.
As an example, Piccoli's character is seated in front of the
mirror, while a makeup artist carefully, skillfully, and
professionally adds makeup. The scene is shot as if
through the mirror, so Piccoli and the makeup person are
looking at us to check the results. A man stands quietly in
the background. At first we don't understand why he is there.
Then, the makeup artists pauses, and the man begins to
place a wig on Piccoli's head. All three of these people are
portrayed as experienced, capable, and clearly expert at what
they do. They work quietly and efficiently in a manner
expected of people who have done this before, and will do it
again. The man steps back, the makeup person begins to
add a moustache, and, by the end of the scene, Piccoli's
appearance is transformed. A gem!
Think of this movie as if you were at an exhibition of Vermeer
paintings. You move from painting to painting. Most of the
works are small, often just one or two persons are portrayed,
and the lighting and composition are perfect. Each painting
is a masterpiece, and together they create a brilliant exhibition.
This is "I'm Going Home."
If you want bright colors, action, large expanses of flesh,
multiple characters, and constant movement, find an
exhibition of paintings by Rubens. Perhaps equally enjoyable,
but not Vermeer, and not de Oliveira.
Anyone who thinks this movie is boring is a horse's ass who should stick to car chase movies. This is a brilliant, moving, and subtle film that is all the more poignant because, it's director being a nonagenarian, it could well be his swan song, and that of its 76 year old principal as well. De Oliveira, like his lead character, will not compromise his principles by dumbing down his material. Much of the film is silent, i.e., with no dialogue precisely because it is a film, a visual medium, not a play. The done is set by De Oliveira's daring opening, which consists of its actor-character enacting the finale of an Ionesco play, which goes on for over 15 minutes. A daring move that pays off because, perhaps predictably, what happens in the play is a predictor of what is to come. The film is not unlike King Lear, in that it stresses the sadness of seeing one who once had greatness, and who still has flashes of it, in decline and perhaps at the end of his powers. It is a sublime meditation on the inevitability of death and the foolishness of fighting it. A minor masterpiece.
Rating: 9/10
Rating: 9/10
This film by 92-year-old Portuguese film director Manoel De Oliveira is an 86-minute close observation of an elderly actor who seems to be mainly a stage actor. The film opens with a 15-minute scene from Ionesco's "Le roi meurt," in which the actor (Michel Piccoli) goes through the never-say-die speech of the 280-year-old king. After the performance, he is greeted backstage with the news that his wife, daughter, and son-in-law have been killed in a car accident. The rest of the film follows him in his everyday routines, into another performance (this time in Shakespeare's "The Tempest"), and then on to a film of James Joyce's "Ulysses." In between we watch him buy shoes, quarrel with his agent, play with his orphaned grandson, and drink espresso at his favorite cafe.
De Oliveira has a habit of filming performances at odd levels. For example, in "Le roi meurt," Piccoli has his back to the camera the entire time. During a quarrel with his agent, only Piccoli's feet in his new shoes are shown. He bashes the heels against the pavement when he's mad, rocks them back and forth when he's pleased--it's all there. When he is playing Buck Mulligan in "Ulysses" we only hear his performance, and gauge it by the reactions on the face of the film director (John Malkovich). The lengths De Oliveira goes to to confound his actors' egos and the audience's expectations are inventive and a bit peculiar.
I sensed that this film was more about De Oliveira than about the characters in the story. There isn't much dialog and not much character development. The theme of the king who will not die, who is egomaniacal beyond reason, perhaps is De Oliveira talking to himself. He makes movies into his 90s because it is his habit. He should be dead by now, but he's not, and because of that he has watched everyone he loves die before him. The possibility of trying to start a new life with a young starlet that is offered to Piccoli must also have happened to De Oliveira. He won't make himself ridiculous that way. "I'm not Casals," the actor says when told of the musician's marriage at the age of 82 to a teenager. I can hear our director saying that, too.
What he wants to do is stop working, rest, and mourn his losses. This is, I feel, a personal film and all the more moving for it.
De Oliveira has a habit of filming performances at odd levels. For example, in "Le roi meurt," Piccoli has his back to the camera the entire time. During a quarrel with his agent, only Piccoli's feet in his new shoes are shown. He bashes the heels against the pavement when he's mad, rocks them back and forth when he's pleased--it's all there. When he is playing Buck Mulligan in "Ulysses" we only hear his performance, and gauge it by the reactions on the face of the film director (John Malkovich). The lengths De Oliveira goes to to confound his actors' egos and the audience's expectations are inventive and a bit peculiar.
I sensed that this film was more about De Oliveira than about the characters in the story. There isn't much dialog and not much character development. The theme of the king who will not die, who is egomaniacal beyond reason, perhaps is De Oliveira talking to himself. He makes movies into his 90s because it is his habit. He should be dead by now, but he's not, and because of that he has watched everyone he loves die before him. The possibility of trying to start a new life with a young starlet that is offered to Piccoli must also have happened to De Oliveira. He won't make himself ridiculous that way. "I'm not Casals," the actor says when told of the musician's marriage at the age of 82 to a teenager. I can hear our director saying that, too.
What he wants to do is stop working, rest, and mourn his losses. This is, I feel, a personal film and all the more moving for it.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाLe Figaro is considered a right-wing newspaper in France. Therefore, the Café scenes are a joke with the average conservative French man.
- कनेक्शनReferenced in Faust. Der Tragödie erster Teil (2009)
- साउंडट्रैकLOHENGRIN - Prélude (Vorspiel 1 Aufzug)
Music by Richard Wagner (as R. Wagner)
Performed by Slovenská Filharmónia (as Orchestre Philharmonique Slovaque)
Conducted by Michael Halász
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- आधिकारिक साइट
- भाषाएं
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- I'm Going Home
- उत्पादन कंपनियां
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- FRF 1,80,00,000(अनुमानित)
- US और कनाडा में सकल
- $1,40,872
- US और कनाडा में पहले सप्ताह में कुल कमाई
- $12,024
- 18 अग॰ 2002
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $8,53,526
इस पेज में योगदान दें
किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें