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IMDbPro

Harrison's Flowers

  • 2000
  • R
  • 2h 10min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,0/10
6972
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Elias Koteas, Andie MacDowell, and Adrien Brody in Harrison's Flowers (2000)
When a Newsweek photojournalist disappears in war-torn Yugoslavia, his wife travels to Europe to find him.
Riproduci trailer0: 32
1 video
37 foto
DramaRomanceWar

Un fotoreporter di Newsweek scompare nella Jugoslavia devastata dalla guerra.Un fotoreporter di Newsweek scompare nella Jugoslavia devastata dalla guerra.Un fotoreporter di Newsweek scompare nella Jugoslavia devastata dalla guerra.

  • Regia
    • Élie Chouraqui
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Isabel Ellsen
    • Élie Chouraqui
    • Didier Le Pêcheur
  • Star
    • Andie MacDowell
    • Scott Anton
    • Elias Koteas
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,0/10
    6972
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Élie Chouraqui
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Isabel Ellsen
      • Élie Chouraqui
      • Didier Le Pêcheur
    • Star
      • Andie MacDowell
      • Scott Anton
      • Elias Koteas
    • 85Recensioni degli utenti
    • 46Recensioni della critica
    • 49Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 3 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Trailer
    Trailer 0:32
    Trailer

    Foto37

    Visualizza poster
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    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    + 31
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    Interpreti principali44

    Modifica
    Andie MacDowell
    Andie MacDowell
    • Sarah Lloyd
    Scott Anton
    • Cesar Lloyd
    • (as Scott Michael Anton)
    Elias Koteas
    Elias Koteas
    • Yeager Pollack
    Brendan Gleeson
    Brendan Gleeson
    • Marc Stevenson
    Adrien Brody
    Adrien Brody
    • Kyle Morris
    David Strathairn
    David Strathairn
    • Harrison Lloyd
    Alun Armstrong
    Alun Armstrong
    • Samuel Brubeck
    Caroline Goodall
    Caroline Goodall
    • Johanna Pollack
    Diane Baker
    Diane Baker
    • Mary Francis
    Quinn Shephard
    Quinn Shephard
    • Margaux Lloyd
    Marie Trintignant
    Marie Trintignant
    • Cathy
    Christian Charmetant
    Christian Charmetant
    • Jeff
    Gerard Butler
    Gerard Butler
    • Chris Kumac, Photojournalist
    Christopher Clarke
    • David
    Dragan Antonic
    • Chetnik
    Marie-Béatrice Bernert
    • Austrian Woman
    Antony Boehm
    • Freddy
    Predrag Bjelac
    Predrag Bjelac
    • Doctor in Vukovar
    • Regia
      • Élie Chouraqui
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Isabel Ellsen
      • Élie Chouraqui
      • Didier Le Pêcheur
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti85

    7,06.9K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    stojcic

    Realistic and by most part very accurate display of urban warfare

    As someone who had lived through this war [I live in Osijek, town frequently mentioned in the movie, only 30 kilometers from Vukovar] and have seen the atrocities first hand, I'll start by commenting the realistic value. To my surprise, the Harrison flowers turned out to be very accurate in portraying what it was like. The details, such as locations, army uniforms and equipment, names, places, scenes and the geographic and historic facts, are pretty much all spot-on true. There are few barely noticeable mistakes, but it'd be nitpicking on my behalf even mentioning them. So, to anyone interested in seeing what the end 20th centuries warfare really looks like, I highly recommend it. It's miles ahead of Holywoods cheezy Rambo-style war movies and by it's ruthless realism it really is a visual kick in the gut.

    As for the plot - the love story that serves as a guideline seems pretty much unnecessary and hard to believe. It has occurred to me that it'd be far more believable if Andie MacDowel was the photojournalist lost in the war-zone and her husband goes to get her out, not the other way around. So, those looking for a warm love tale, this will hardly be the best choice. Those interested in seeing the insanity of the easter-Europe 1991. war conflict, the cruelty and danger of modern photojournalism - I can hardly think of anything better than this.
    8DrMMGilchrist

    Brody blossoms in a gritty war drama, once you get past the contrived set-up

    'Harrison's Flowers' is a harrowing drama set during the 1990s Balkan wars, seen through the eyes of war photographers and correspondents. I don't recall it getting a cinema release here in the UK - but caught up with it on DVD.

    The 'hook' of the story is that Sarah Lloyd (Andie MacDowell) travels to Croatia in 1991 to try to find and rescue her husband Harrison, a prize-winning journalist who is missing, presumed killed. (The flowers of the title are those in his greenhouse - tended in his absence by their young son). It's a contrivance - indeed, because we don't see the characters together for long, it's difficult to invest much in their relationship - but functions as the plot mechanism (however creaky) to get the heroine away from her safe life in the US into the war zone, where her adventures really start. So it's essentially a classic quest-and-rescue narrative - unusually, with a woman doing the seeking. (Hence, I suspect, some of the criticisms about Sarah's search risking orphaning her children; I'm not sure this would be raised if the sexes of missing person and seeker were reversed.)

    The film does not glamourise the realities of late 20C Balkan warfare, graphically depicting the atrocities perpetrated by all sides in the wars which engulfed the former Yugoslavia. The story reaches its dramatic climax with the siege of Vukovar.

    Adrien Brody gives an outstanding performance as the bitter, troubled but brave young front-line photojournalist Kyle Morris. Like many in his profession, Kyle takes drugs and swears like a trooper - but he also has courage, integrity, and the face of an El Greco saint. He is the real hero of the story, and Brody, a truly remarkable actor, comes to dominate the film. Brendan Gleeson is also excellent as his older colleague, Stevenson. It is refreshing, too, to see Andie MacDowell in a role in which she is not simply eye-candy/cute chick-flick heroine. The fact that Sarah is not always likable is one of the strengths of the film, and surely a sign that it is a European production: Hollywood films seem too hamstrung at times by worrying about making their protagonists 'likable' - flawed, difficult characters are more human and more interesting. Gerard Butler and Alun Armstrong, among others, provide good support.

    As to whether Sarah finds Harrison, or if she and her friends make it home in one piece - I'm not saying: see the film! All I will say is, it did not turn out how I had expected, and my h/c complex kicked in significantly at one point.

    On DVD, get the French 2-disc Special Edition if you can. There are deleted scenes (mainly Sarah and Harrison, family and friends in the US), cast interviews, a digital effects feature, theme song video, & c.. Sadly, the only UK release was a single disc with just a trailer. One of the deleted scenes addresses an issue which concerned some reviewers - Sarah's guilt-feelings about leaving her children. The interview with Adrien Brody (looking very handsome) is interesting: he discusses how he sees Kyle's relationship with Sarah, and also how he drew on his photographer mother's colleagues in portraying the character.
    me_marco

    Andie MacDowell in a warmovie ? Yes and one of the better warmovies you'll find !

    I doubt very many will ever get to see Harrison's flowers. This is really the most misleadingly titled movie i can recall. The title and the fact that it stars Andie MacDowell reaks cuddly romantic girl movie. Nothing could be farther from the truth !

    Instead this movie turns out to be one of the better warmovies i've seen in recent years.

    The story is actually similar to that of "saving private ryan" and it's portrayal of war as griping and realistic. Only this time we're not put into the shoes of soldiers storming up a bulletsprayed beach but in the shoes of the civilians that cover the wars: the photojournalists. And the heroics is not killing the enemy but simply to bring the world a glimpse of what goes on inside a the chaotic inferno that is a warzone.

    Andie MacDowell plays Sarah Lloyd a suberban mother of two and voted "most unlikely to be found inside a warzone" in her highschool yearbook. When her husband "Harrison" (a roughneck newsweek warphotographer) goes missing in wartorn Croatia 1991. She basicly picks up a camera herself and goes over there to find him. Rather unbelievable but it works well to set up the real story.
    8surreyhill

    A mixed bag, but worth your while

    This movie is simply made for watching on video or DVD. Here's the plan--the first time through, watch all of it. But on subsequent viewings, just watch the stuff that happens in Yugoslavia.

    Except for the men's room scene after the Awards Banquet.

    This movie is really, really frustrating to watch because you can't help but feel that the directors and other creative parties associated with the actual film were very dedicated to telling the story of the journalists and photographers who were trying to bring the truth of what was happening in the early days of the ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia to the screen. They were fascinated by the people who would willingly risk their lives to obtain images of the horrors and atrocities being carried out to the rest of the world, and what motivated them--made them tick. And they were enamoured of the character of Kyle Morris, as portrayed by Adrien Brody, and wished to showcase him in some way in order to drive the point home--that people like him were brave and admirable, no matter what their personal demons and failings.

    Unfortunately for those of us who were hooked on this POV, they were also hamstrung, utterly, by the source material, which was a love story about a woman who would not believe her husband was dead, and whose dedication to finding him and whose devotion to him was convincing enough to cause persons such as are described in the preceding paragraph to risk life and limb to try to reunite this couple.

    I don't want to use this space to snark. It's unseemly, given the seriousness of the subject matter. What I want to highlight is the way in which one of the performances affected me. The central figure of this movie from a standpoint of character arc is not Harrison, or his wife, Sarah, but Kyle Morris. We first see Kyle at a Pulitzer Awards dinner, where a grief-stricken, coke-addled Kyle Morris goes off on the Harrison Lloyd character. It's a show-stopper, and drenches everything else that happens in Yugoslavia with layers and layers of bitter irony.

    The great stuff in this is movie is all about Adrien Brody's character Kyle Morris. This is probably the sort of character that a young actor just dreams of getting his teeth into. Kyle is one of those bundles of contradictions and contrasts that fascinates endlessly. He is an angry, foul-mouthed swaggerer with the gentle hands and soul of a poet, and a kind heart too easily touched. He is a drug user, which is usually portrayed as a character defect which goes along with being weak or afraid to face reality, but in his case, it is probably more a result of his trying to cope with having too MUCH courage and desire to walk into the bowels of real-life hells, like war-torn Yugoslavia. He is both cocksure and certain, and insecure, terrified he will never get recognized for what he is doing in trying to record the truth. He takes rebellious pride in being an outsider, but he churns with jealous resentment against those who seem to have "made it". This character is BRAVE, quick, resourceful, clever, with a crackling energy that suffuses every line, every expression, every move he makes. Brody brings a wild animal's instinctive quickness and 360 degree awareness of the environment to the role; you can almost see his large but sensitive nostrils quiver as he tests the wind for the scent of danger, and the way to safety. If I were going deep into the heart of the battle zone with nothing more than a camera bag and a sense of purpose, I would want no one else to take me there. When he wraps his arm around Sarah, and tells her to move, she obeys. I would, too. He seems to be tapped in to the undercurrents that flow beneath the reality that they see and hear around them, and sense shifts in the flow and direction that the others cannot, and acts on a combination of instinct and intelligence to get Sarah into a city which has become a charnel house where no badge or profession is respected or spared from the snipers and the bayonets.

    I was fascinated by this character. It was the sort of portrayal that made one want to know more--what drives someone like that? What was his childhood like? Why did he risk all for someone like Sarah?

    Unfortunately, this portrayal and character threw the whole film off-balance, and made the putative heroine seem self-absorbed and unlikable in the end.

    I recommend this movie for the brilliant footage of the journalists and Sarah working their way through war-torn Yugoslavia, for the harrowing urban combat scenes, and for Brody's performance.

    I can't, however, give it more than 8 stars, since it committed the primary infraction of rendering its heroine unlikable in certain ways, without redemption or the change brought about by a true character arc.

    Also, Harrison and Sarah's son was sort of creepy. Sorry, but there it is.
    creepers-2

    annoying movie

    Thank goodness for Brendan Gleeson and Adrien Brody. Without their performances, this movie would have been a waste of time. I couldn't stand Andie MacDowell's character. She plays a totally stupid woman. Anyone with any sense would have contacted the Red Cross and other international agencies and asked them to look for her husband, but she foolishly marches into the middle of a civil war and risks the lives of her husband's colleagues because she is so deeply in love. Of course, it would have been a different movie if her character acted with any brains and maturity. At a time when her children needed her the most, she leaves them and almost gets killed herself. The audience is supposed to think this is wonderful because it is so romantic. Give me a break.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Croatian city of Vukovar was defended by around 1,800 lightly armed soldiers of the Croatian National Guard (ZNG) and civilian volunteers, against as many as 36,000 JNA (Yugoslav People's Army) soldiers and Serb paramilitaries equipped with heavy artillery.
    • Blooper
      During the battle, when they are hiding in the dead woman's house, the Serbian/Yugoslav tanks carry the Croatian national flag with a red star.
    • Citazioni

      Yeager Pollack: There are only two different types of people in this world. Those who have seen the war, and those who haven't.

    • Versioni alternative
      For the United States version, the film's length was reduced by about 5 minutes; it also features a new score by Cliff Eidelman. All interview footage was cut. As well as a few short shots. The biggest cut is the one which announces the death of Cathy, the French journalist. The ending has a different voice-over. The only addition for the American version is when Sarah first says in the cafe "He's not dead".
    • Connessioni
      Referenced in Film Geek (2005)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 12 ottobre 2001 (Italia)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Francia
      • Stati Uniti
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Cinédia Films Thierry Lacaze (France)
      • Universal (United States)
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Francese
      • Serbo
      • Croato
    • Celebre anche come
      • Врятувати Харрісона
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Repubblica Ceca
    • Aziende produttrici
      • 7 Films Cinéma
      • Canal+
      • France 2 Cinéma
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 8.000.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 1.871.025 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 867.635 USD
      • 17 mar 2002
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 3.033.646 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      2 ore 10 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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