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Ritorno a casa

Titolo originale: Je rentre à la maison
  • 2001
  • T
  • 1h 30min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,8/10
1975
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Ritorno a casa (2001)
CommediaDramma

La comoda routine quotidiana dell'attore parigino Gilbert Valence viene capovolta quando viene a sapere che sua moglie, sua figlia e suo genero sono stati uccisi in un incidente d'auto.La comoda routine quotidiana dell'attore parigino Gilbert Valence viene capovolta quando viene a sapere che sua moglie, sua figlia e suo genero sono stati uccisi in un incidente d'auto.La comoda routine quotidiana dell'attore parigino Gilbert Valence viene capovolta quando viene a sapere che sua moglie, sua figlia e suo genero sono stati uccisi in un incidente d'auto.

  • Regia
    • Manoel de Oliveira
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Manoel de Oliveira
    • Eugène Ionesco
    • Jacques Parsi
  • Star
    • Michel Piccoli
    • Catherine Deneuve
    • John Malkovich
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,8/10
    1975
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Manoel de Oliveira
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Manoel de Oliveira
      • Eugène Ionesco
      • Jacques Parsi
    • Star
      • Michel Piccoli
      • Catherine Deneuve
      • John Malkovich
    • 25Recensioni degli utenti
    • 38Recensioni della critica
    • 88Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 5 vittorie e 5 candidature totali

    Foto6

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    Interpreti principali35

    Modifica
    Michel Piccoli
    Michel Piccoli
    • Gilbert Valence
    Catherine Deneuve
    Catherine Deneuve
    • Marguerite
    John Malkovich
    John Malkovich
    • John Crawford, Film Director
    Antoine Chappey
    • George
    Leonor Baldaque
    • Sylvia
    Leonor Silveira
    Leonor Silveira
    • Marie
    Ricardo Trêpa
    Ricardo Trêpa
    • Guard
    • (as Ricardo Trepa)
    Jean-Michel Arnold
    • Doctor
    Adrien de Van
    • Ferdinand
    Sylvie Testud
    Sylvie Testud
    • Ariel
    Isabel Ruth
    Isabel Ruth
    • Milkmaid
    Andrew Wale
    • Stephen
    Robert Dauney
    Robert Dauney
    • Haines
    Jean Koeltgen
    • Serge
    Mauricette Gourdon
    • Guilhermine, the Housekeeper
    Vania
    • Organ Grinder
    Jacques Parsi
    • Friend of the Agent
    Armel Monod
    • Second Friend of the Agent
    • Regia
      • Manoel de Oliveira
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Manoel de Oliveira
      • Eugène Ionesco
      • Jacques Parsi
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti25

    6,81.9K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7=G=

    Let's get real, people.

    "I'm Going Home" - a heady subtitled French character study and contemplation which focuses on a bereaved and aging thespian, Valence (Piccoli) - consumes huge chunks of time as we watch the protag perform on stage, buy shoes, get mugged, get made up for a movie, flub his lines, etc. Deneuve and Malkovich are on screen for a heartbeat and the whole messy death of his family thing is skipped over in deference to the lengthy scenes. I was surprised when the film abruptly ended with no climax, no denouement, and no warning...just poof, credits rolling. The bottom line here is this is not much of a movie by the standards of ordinary filmgoers. However, it is fodder for cinematic devotees, critics and industry people, pedants and dilettantes, etc. If you care about such trivia as the director was 90+ years of age, then you may want to give this film a look. If you just want entertainment, think twice. (B)

    Note: Being surprised when the film ended is a good thing. That meant I was sufficiently engrossed as to not be watching the clock. For what it's worth and it's not much, I enjoyed this film a lot.
    10Red-125

    Vermeer, not Rubens

    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.
    10Creep Thunder

    a funny, warm gem of a film.

    I like to think of myself as a movie buff, but I'm not. I am a novice, in training. I had never heard of Portuguese director Manoel de Oliveira but it turns out he is 93 years old, still active and has therefore been making films for most of the era of "talkie" cinema. So, "I'm Going Home". This is a film I would never have dreamed of going to see. I ended up at the cinema by default without realising that it would change my view on a lot of things and make me feel better without realising that I felt down.

    I had no idea or preconceptions of what this would be like. The only person I was familiar with was John Malkovich (sp?) I'll get back to him later.

    The film starts off with a play, and it's a play I would love to see. The audience (in the film) watching the play are enjoying it immensely and it is obvious that Gilbert Valence (the wonderful wonderful Michel Piccoli)is a well known stage actor, much loved by his French audience. Valence comes off stage to huge applause but then receives the worst kind of life-changing news.

    Cuts to "some time later" We hear no dialogue from him until we see him in his next play. This is clever- unless he is on the stage, we only see him from an outsider's point of view. He is in a bar and we can see him talking and ordering but all we can hear is the white noise of Parisian traffic. And then vice-versa so for a while, he is always on the other side of the window to us.

    He meets his agent who is a partonising, unsympathetic character. Valence doesn't understand why he keeps offering him roles he would never take. Valence feels out of sorts with society. His world has been reduced and he is surrounded by people he doesn't understand and whom in turn, don't understand him.

    Enter John Malkovich. He is John Crawford a director of a Franco/American production company who desperately needs Valence to be in his new version of Ulysses (James Joyce you idiot!) (no, I've never read it either). His opening speech to Valence is a text book example of tactlessness and I wonder if M. de Oliveria has often found himself on the receivng end of the same, ageist treatment

    My favourite scene is when Valence is trying his absolute hardest to get the part right. Malkovich is trying to keep his cool but is obviously getting infuriated with this poor frenchman who is trying to read an English-speaking part in an Irish accent (which he has three days to prepare for). The scene consists of a close-up of Malkovich's face as he winces and squirms, looks hopeful then despairs again, whilst we listen to the sound of Valence doing his best in a part that he wasn't born to play.

    The film is full of so much apart from the story line and gives much food for thought on leaving the cinema. Is he really so out of sorts with the world? How can he be, when his grandson adores him completely and young girls find him very attractive (a fact that he finds hard to deal with)? Surely it is the bad side of modern society that he can't cope with in the same way the rest of us can barely cope either?

    There are also shots in this picture that would make Martin Scorsese drool. I won't bother describing any because that never works, but if I noticed them, they must be good!

    I probably make it sound like a melancholy old-duffer movie but it isn't. The dialogue is sharp and often very-funny, there are nice little sub-plots and elegant touches such as people drinking in sync with each other except for Valence. Subtle stuff that you have to watch out for.

    I won't give the (abrupt, but for a reason) ending away but the way the title is used- it's something we can all relate to and wish we done ourselves!
    9wjfickling

    A moving and subtle masterpiece

    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
    Marnielover

    Autobiography of an Ancient Director

    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.

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    Dramma

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    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Le Figaro is considered a right-wing newspaper in France. Therefore, the Café scenes are a joke with the average conservative French man.
    • Connessioni
      Referenced in Faust. Der Tragödie erster Teil (2009)
    • Colonne sonore
      LOHENGRIN - Prélude (Vorspiel 1 Aufzug)
      Music by Richard Wagner (as R. Wagner)

      Performed by Slovenská Filharmónia (as Orchestre Philharmonique Slovaque)

      Conducted by Michael Halász

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 8 giugno 2001 (Italia)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Francia
      • Portogallo
    • Sito ufficiale
      • Madragoa Films
    • Lingue
      • Francese
      • Inglese
      • Latino
    • Celebre anche come
      • I'm Going Home
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Madragoa Filmes
      • Gemini Films
      • France 2 Cinéma
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 18.000.000 FRF (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 140.872 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 12.024 USD
      • 18 ago 2002
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 853.526 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 30min(90 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Stereo
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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