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6,6/10
3281
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaSeveral scary black-and-white animated segments in different styles appeal to our fear(s) of the dark.Several scary black-and-white animated segments in different styles appeal to our fear(s) of the dark.Several scary black-and-white animated segments in different styles appeal to our fear(s) of the dark.
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 5 candidature totali
Aure Atika
- Laura
- (voce)
Guillaume Depardieu
- Eric
- (voce)
Nicole Garcia
- Narrator
- (voce)
François Créton
- The teacher
- (voce)
- (as François Creton)
Christian Hecq
- The doctor
- (voce)
- …
Louisa Pili
- Sumako
- (voce)
Brigitte Sy
- Eric's mother
- (voce)
Recensioni in evidenza
It is very uneven in terms of quality with the second half being quite weak, not particularly engaging and forgettable, but the first half with the first two segments is terrific with original and authentic stories and very creepy and memorable imagery. However, Fear(s) of the Dark, although very flawed, is mostly memorable for the impressive and beautiful animation with many directors each giving his contribution with his own style ranging from hand-drawn to anime to computer animation. Its second half is weak, but it largely benefits from deft editing, great directing and wonderful animation styles making it a very interesting experience.
The story begins with what appears to be an old, sadistic British general walking a pack of angry dogs. A dog gets away and chases a small boy... thus beings one of a few stories of people's fears. The fears displayed in these animated segments usually involve an insect or animal beast. I think that the director either had a fascination or fear of bugs/animals.
In between each segment, a soothing french voice tells us her "fears" but what I interpret as her observations and cristicms of society and social behaviors.
One segment, a man is haunted by a praying mantis; in another, a girl is possessed by the ghost of a samuarai, in another.. a man has an encounter with the ghosts of an abandoned house.
Each segment has a unique art style where people's bizarre fears become their lives. A great artistic representation of how people's fears can so easily become part of their reality - whether those fears are overcome or succombed to.
In between each segment, a soothing french voice tells us her "fears" but what I interpret as her observations and cristicms of society and social behaviors.
One segment, a man is haunted by a praying mantis; in another, a girl is possessed by the ghost of a samuarai, in another.. a man has an encounter with the ghosts of an abandoned house.
Each segment has a unique art style where people's bizarre fears become their lives. A great artistic representation of how people's fears can so easily become part of their reality - whether those fears are overcome or succombed to.
Peur(s) Du Noir (Fear(s) Of The Dark) is an anthology of short animated horror films, from a series of directors, in a variety of different styles.
Some are broken up, and act as transitions, while others are more episodic in nature.
But most are in black and white...and revolve around the themes of dreams vs reality and the torture of nightmares.
In the first main story, a curious introvert finds an oddly humanoid looking insect, that he takes home to study.
However, it escapes...and disappears.
He eventually goes off to college, and it seems to have tagged along with him.
Because, when he gets a girlfriend...she wakes up with an odd gash on her arm.
As her personality starts to change...it becomes evident the creature has infiltrated her body.
She becomes more and more masculine...and much more dominant.
And soon enough...he's become the experiment...
The second film, takes place in Japan.
A young girl immigrates to a new town, and a new school, where she is systematically bullied by a group of her cruel classmates.
They subject her to all manner of tortures, both mental and physical...until she goes mad.
Or, is the truth, really, that she is being tortured in an asylum, by a cruel doctor, who manipulates her dreams into nightmares?
Either way...these experiences become her reality.
And it all ends in suicide...or, is it murder...?
In the third film, we watch as a boy from the great plains witnesses a series of attacks and disappearances from the sidelines.
His best friend provides the narration, until he too disappears.
But was he the next victim, or the culprit all along?
Some dark actor in the guise of a human child?
In the end, a witch hunt leads to the death of an alligator...and it becomes venerated, like a saint...to keep the evil away...
The fourth, and final, episode has us following a man (who looks Russian) as he comes home to a dark house, only to get drunk and pass out, while reading a book.
His recent experiences are reiterated in his onsetting dreamstate, where he watches a lost love slice his neck from behind...as if he were an apparition, witnessing his own death.
When he awakens, he burns the book and photograph that haunt his dreams.
But he can't escape his own thoughts.
So he investigates the house further, to check if there is an ominous ne'er-do-well lying in wait to kill him as he sleeps.
Now, his paranoia is getting the best of him in the form of pareidolia.
And it becomes obvious that he is the greatest danger to himself.
The transitionary shorts include a film about an evil old miser who is walking a pack of vicious dogs, which he let's loose to torture unsuspecting townsfolk; and an abstract film about what happens when you let your fears and anxieties take hold of your identity.
I quite enjoyed this, as the animation styles are diverse and all around excellent.
With some great storytelling to boot.
7 out of 10.
Some are broken up, and act as transitions, while others are more episodic in nature.
But most are in black and white...and revolve around the themes of dreams vs reality and the torture of nightmares.
In the first main story, a curious introvert finds an oddly humanoid looking insect, that he takes home to study.
However, it escapes...and disappears.
He eventually goes off to college, and it seems to have tagged along with him.
Because, when he gets a girlfriend...she wakes up with an odd gash on her arm.
As her personality starts to change...it becomes evident the creature has infiltrated her body.
She becomes more and more masculine...and much more dominant.
And soon enough...he's become the experiment...
The second film, takes place in Japan.
A young girl immigrates to a new town, and a new school, where she is systematically bullied by a group of her cruel classmates.
They subject her to all manner of tortures, both mental and physical...until she goes mad.
Or, is the truth, really, that she is being tortured in an asylum, by a cruel doctor, who manipulates her dreams into nightmares?
Either way...these experiences become her reality.
And it all ends in suicide...or, is it murder...?
In the third film, we watch as a boy from the great plains witnesses a series of attacks and disappearances from the sidelines.
His best friend provides the narration, until he too disappears.
But was he the next victim, or the culprit all along?
Some dark actor in the guise of a human child?
In the end, a witch hunt leads to the death of an alligator...and it becomes venerated, like a saint...to keep the evil away...
The fourth, and final, episode has us following a man (who looks Russian) as he comes home to a dark house, only to get drunk and pass out, while reading a book.
His recent experiences are reiterated in his onsetting dreamstate, where he watches a lost love slice his neck from behind...as if he were an apparition, witnessing his own death.
When he awakens, he burns the book and photograph that haunt his dreams.
But he can't escape his own thoughts.
So he investigates the house further, to check if there is an ominous ne'er-do-well lying in wait to kill him as he sleeps.
Now, his paranoia is getting the best of him in the form of pareidolia.
And it becomes obvious that he is the greatest danger to himself.
The transitionary shorts include a film about an evil old miser who is walking a pack of vicious dogs, which he let's loose to torture unsuspecting townsfolk; and an abstract film about what happens when you let your fears and anxieties take hold of your identity.
I quite enjoyed this, as the animation styles are diverse and all around excellent.
With some great storytelling to boot.
7 out of 10.
Peur(s) du Noir is essentially 5 short black and white animations interspersed by segments of a woman droning on about her fears, illustrated with interesting animated black and white shapes (I should note, I watched the film in French, and as my French is not perfect, I did not catch everything she said, but got the general impression that she was your typical anxious overachieving yuppie).
The five shorts all used different animation techniques, but were overall pleasingly creepy. There was a cruel aristocrat and his dogs, an Italian village ravaged by a mysterious beast, a budding scientist and his insect specimens, a Japanese girl bullied by classmates/ghosts, and a refugee from a snowstorm shacked up in a Victorian house. This final short was, I thought, the most effective. It was done in pure black and white, and the only light shed in the house (with wonderfully Goreyesque wallpaper) came from a candle the traveller carried with him in his explorations. This allowed for some great reveal moments, and additionally built up the tension extremely well.
Overall, a must see for fans of art-house animation. If it comes to a cinema near you, take the opportunity to see it, because I suspect it will be difficult to find on DVD.
The five shorts all used different animation techniques, but were overall pleasingly creepy. There was a cruel aristocrat and his dogs, an Italian village ravaged by a mysterious beast, a budding scientist and his insect specimens, a Japanese girl bullied by classmates/ghosts, and a refugee from a snowstorm shacked up in a Victorian house. This final short was, I thought, the most effective. It was done in pure black and white, and the only light shed in the house (with wonderfully Goreyesque wallpaper) came from a candle the traveller carried with him in his explorations. This allowed for some great reveal moments, and additionally built up the tension extremely well.
Overall, a must see for fans of art-house animation. If it comes to a cinema near you, take the opportunity to see it, because I suspect it will be difficult to find on DVD.
A short preface: the device of chopping up and interspersing the segments was not completely successful, in my opinion. The individual episodes would have been more cohesive and effective if each had been told uninterrupted, and this would have benefited the film as a whole.
Richard Mcguire's final segment was far and away the most inventive in the use of shadow/light, and i think was easily the most elaborate and accomplished of all the segments (hence my decision to begin with it). His short alone would have warranted a recommendation for PEUR(S) DU NOIR. (thankfully the producers chose to leave this one intact, and it serves as a glorious ending to this collection. Splendid! 9/10
Lorenzo Mattotti's young-boy-reminiscing/mysterious-beast tale comes in a close second for me.. i especially liked its superb gunshots-in-the-dark climax. 8/10
The impressionistic, primal style of Blutch's opening segment (wild dogs being led around London by a sadistic handler) was more disturbing than frightening (that said, it was hardly unenjoyable), and offered some of the more haunting images of the movie (i daresay this short suffered the most from being split up). A seamless telling would have netted an 8/10, but as it stands, i give this a 7/10
I wasn't so impressed with Charles Burns' segment (creepy tale about a young lad being dominated by a mysterious love interest), although it had its own perverse charm. Reminded me instantly of the Black Hole comics in its artistic style as well as its psycho-sexual overtones (no surprise, then, when i discovered they share the same author!). This one squeaks past 6 to 7/10
Marie Caillou's tale was the least memorable primarily because of its flash-animated visual style. Still, it was surreal and interesting. Once again, this suffered from being told episodically. 6/10
If i had to pick an overall weakness in particular, it would be Pierre Di Scullo's freestyle monologue linking the segments. Occasionally amusing as it was, its accompanying abstract visuals were disappointingly uninspired. Not only was it thematically somewhat incongruent with the rest of the film, the absence of this light-hearted intermission would have made the film more powerful in its entirety (no doubt the intention of the film-makers WAS to afford audiences a brief respite every few minutes from the terror , i felt this decision unnecessary) 5/10
Overall score: an impressive 8/10 (bumped up from 7 thanks to Mcguire)
Richard Mcguire's final segment was far and away the most inventive in the use of shadow/light, and i think was easily the most elaborate and accomplished of all the segments (hence my decision to begin with it). His short alone would have warranted a recommendation for PEUR(S) DU NOIR. (thankfully the producers chose to leave this one intact, and it serves as a glorious ending to this collection. Splendid! 9/10
Lorenzo Mattotti's young-boy-reminiscing/mysterious-beast tale comes in a close second for me.. i especially liked its superb gunshots-in-the-dark climax. 8/10
The impressionistic, primal style of Blutch's opening segment (wild dogs being led around London by a sadistic handler) was more disturbing than frightening (that said, it was hardly unenjoyable), and offered some of the more haunting images of the movie (i daresay this short suffered the most from being split up). A seamless telling would have netted an 8/10, but as it stands, i give this a 7/10
I wasn't so impressed with Charles Burns' segment (creepy tale about a young lad being dominated by a mysterious love interest), although it had its own perverse charm. Reminded me instantly of the Black Hole comics in its artistic style as well as its psycho-sexual overtones (no surprise, then, when i discovered they share the same author!). This one squeaks past 6 to 7/10
Marie Caillou's tale was the least memorable primarily because of its flash-animated visual style. Still, it was surreal and interesting. Once again, this suffered from being told episodically. 6/10
If i had to pick an overall weakness in particular, it would be Pierre Di Scullo's freestyle monologue linking the segments. Occasionally amusing as it was, its accompanying abstract visuals were disappointingly uninspired. Not only was it thematically somewhat incongruent with the rest of the film, the absence of this light-hearted intermission would have made the film more powerful in its entirety (no doubt the intention of the film-makers WAS to afford audiences a brief respite every few minutes from the terror , i felt this decision unnecessary) 5/10
Overall score: an impressive 8/10 (bumped up from 7 thanks to Mcguire)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Peur(s) du noir - Paure del buio
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 77.876 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 6103 USD
- 26 ott 2008
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 450.813 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 23 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Peur(s) du noir (2007) officially released in Canada in English?
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