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IMDbPro

L'ora più bella

Titolo originale: Their Finest
  • 2016
  • T
  • 1h 57min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,8/10
21.925
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Bill Nighy, Gemma Arterton, and Sam Claflin in L'ora più bella (2016)
With London emptied of its men now fighting at the Front, Catrin Cole is hired by the British Ministry of Information as a scriptwriter charged with bringing "a woman's touch" to morale-boosting propaganda films. Her natural flair quickly gets her noticed by movie producer Buckley whose path would never have crossed hers in peacetime.
Riproduci trailer2:18
43 video
99+ foto
Dramma del mondo dello spettacoloCommediaDrammaGuerraRomanticismo

Un ex segretario, recentemente nominato sceneggiatore per film di propaganda, si unisce al cast e alla troupe di una grande produzione durante i bombardamenti di Londra.Un ex segretario, recentemente nominato sceneggiatore per film di propaganda, si unisce al cast e alla troupe di una grande produzione durante i bombardamenti di Londra.Un ex segretario, recentemente nominato sceneggiatore per film di propaganda, si unisce al cast e alla troupe di una grande produzione durante i bombardamenti di Londra.

  • Regia
    • Lone Scherfig
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Lissa Evans
    • Gaby Chiappe
  • Star
    • Gemma Arterton
    • Sam Claflin
    • Bill Nighy
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,8/10
    21.925
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Lone Scherfig
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Lissa Evans
      • Gaby Chiappe
    • Star
      • Gemma Arterton
      • Sam Claflin
      • Bill Nighy
    • 121Recensioni degli utenti
    • 172Recensioni della critica
    • 76Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 vittoria e 7 candidature totali

    Video43

    Trailer #2
    Trailer 2:18
    Trailer #2
    Trailer
    Trailer 2:23
    Trailer
    Trailer
    Trailer 2:23
    Trailer
    Their Finest - Official UK Trailer
    Trailer 2:23
    Their Finest - Official UK Trailer
    Clip
    Clip 0:41
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 1:03
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 0:30
    Clip

    Foto109

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    + 103
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali59

    Modifica
    Gemma Arterton
    Gemma Arterton
    • Catrin Cole
    Sam Claflin
    Sam Claflin
    • Tom Buckley
    Bill Nighy
    Bill Nighy
    • Ambrose Hilliard…
    Richard E. Grant
    Richard E. Grant
    • Roger Swain
    Nicholas Murchie
    • Bus Conductor
    Henry Goodman
    Henry Goodman
    • Gabriel Baker
    Rachael Stirling
    Rachael Stirling
    • Phyl Moore
    Jack Huston
    Jack Huston
    • Ellis Cole
    Amanda Root
    Amanda Root
    • Cecy…
    Patrick Gibson
    Patrick Gibson
    • Rex, the Clapper Loader
    Darren Clarke
    • The Gaffer
    Ed Birch
    Ed Birch
    • Walter, the Director (Careless Talk Film)
    Lissa Evans
    • Make-Up Woman (Careless Talk Film)
    Richard Bevan
    • Mr. Richards (Dubbing Editor)
    Gaby Chiappe
    • Dolly (Carrot Film)
    Amanda Fairbank-Hynes
    Amanda Fairbank-Hynes
    • Mabel (Carrot Film)
    • (as Amanda Fairbank Hynes)
    Lily Knight
    Lily Knight
    • Rose Starling
    Francesca Knight
    Francesca Knight
    • Lily Starling
    • Regia
      • Lone Scherfig
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Lissa Evans
      • Gaby Chiappe
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti121

    6,821.9K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8subxerogravity

    Good movie about people who make good movies.

    It's a movie within a movie. I feel in general, a movie about movies is a good topic for a movie. People love to hear stories about how the movies works. I know personally I'm a sucker for this type of drama.

    Based on a book called Their Finest Hour and a Half, which I think is a better title, Their Finest stars Gemma Arterton in a movie that takes place during World War 2 in England, when women join the workforce in order keep the world going that was coming to a halt do to the Blitzkrieg. In this case Arterton's character Catrin Cole, a woman working for a newspaper that leads to an opportunity to write a screenplay for a movie.

    What I like about the movie is that it's a funny story about how a screenplay is created. They basically hired Catrin Cole to tell the story of the war from a women's perspective, namely the true story of a pair of twins who attempted to use their boat to help rescue soldiers in France, but the true story is not good enough propaganda to get the citizens of Britain into the cause, so she has to embellish what happen.

    As the writing progressed, they keep getting stopped by someone, weather it was the producer or The Secretary of War to add new things so that they can appeal to the masses, a very interesting process made hilarious by the movie.

    The whole film is a satire on the film industry of 1940s Great Britain that's still true today. Their Finest also has some romance in it, as Cartin becomes attracted to her fellow writer on the screenplay, Tom Buckley. The film is also a good example about how female roles in society started to shift during World War II.

    Bill Nighy was as fun to watch as I was told. He plays an aging actor finding his popularity is stuck on something he did years ago, and like Catin finds an opportunity within the war.

    Overall, I really enjoined the movie. Gemma Arterton made a really good lead actress and the movie altogether was a great story.

    http://cinemagardens.com
    7steerpike_2002

    Charming wartime movie-within-movie

    "Their Finest" is a clever, charming and funny movie from Danish director Lone Scherfig. Adding to her most well-known films to date, "An Education" and "The Riot Club", it is clear that Scherfig is a true Anglophile at heart, as this is as British as it comes. The film tells the story of Catrin Cole (Gemma Arterton), a Welsh secretary in London at the height of the Blitz who finds herself on the writing staff of a propaganda film about the Dunkirk evacuation. Though married to a struggling artist (Jack Huston), feelings grow between Catrin and fellow writer Buckley (Sam Claflin) as they struggle to make "The Nancy Starling" a film worthy of raising the nation's spirits.

    One of the strengths of "Their Finest" is its glorious sense of place and time. The locations and production design provide a real asset. The daily threat of the Blitz is rightly given sufficient screen time to feel like an ever-present menace, while wartime London and an idyllic Cornish coast are well realised.

    "Their Finest" is at its best when the the lines between the movie we are watching and the movie being produced on screen are blurred. We see the characters and plot of "The Nancy Starling" evolve within Catrin's mind in a series of comic scenes which give Bill Nighy's character, ageing actor Ambrose Hilliard, some of his best moments. In one particularly inspired moment, the continuation of a real conversation between the romantic pair is imagined in the same visual style of the on-screen movie. The writers and director clearly had a lot of fun with these ideas and their execution is spot on. The creators' love of cinema is realised in a way only possible in a film about film-making and film-watching. The emotions of an audience watching "The Nancy Starling" in the film clearly capture the joy the writers and director take from cinema in general, and it's very infectious!

    Arterton plays the lead role very capably, creating a likable protagonist. Among the most memorable performances, Bill Nighy plays himself very well (it's difficult to imagine who could have played him better), and Rachael Stirling shines but is sadly underused. Jake Lacy is also entertaining as the square-jawed American who turns out to be a terrible actor. The film possibly suffers from the distracting addition of star cameos (Jeremy Irons popping up here for a single scene), a fault I find particularly noticeable in British films of this style.

    The key fault for me was that the film seemed unsure which of its two main plot-lines, the making of "The Nancy Starling" and the romance between Catrin and Buckley, should take centre-stage. Developing both meant that the beginning and the end of the film suffered. Initially the film needed to introduce lots of only partially related themes and concepts, which made the opening scenes feel artificially and dissatisfyingly forced together. The need to conclude both threads produced more than a few false endings which certainly made the film feel its length. The competition between story-lines also meant that some of the supporting characters, particularly Jack Huston's suffering artist, did not receive the attention they needed to give enough weight to their plot contributions. Even Buckley, one of the key players, didn't seem quite fleshed out enough, though this is not helped by the poor chemistry between Sam Claflin and Gemma Arterton.

    At its best though, "Their Finest" is a wonderful send-up of propaganda movie-making of the 1940s and a worthy war film in its own right.
    7kristinebahrentz

    I didn't like it, but I can't get it out of my head

    I didn't like it, but I can't get it out of my head. So now I'm thinking it was actually pretty great movie - as it still resonates with me. Initially, I didn't like that it was about something as upbeat as movies in the middle of a war - the contrast of the two made the plot seem a bit silly and unnecessary. However, I now understand that this movie is about the frailty of life, living in the moment and maybe even about opportunity/second chances.
    JohnDeSando

    A stirring, sentimental, satisfying peek into WWII propaganda filmmaking and romance.

    "They're afraid they won't be able to put us back in the box when this is over, and it makes them belligerent." Phyl Moore (Rachael Stirling)

    Phyl is spot on about the focus of Their Finest, a period piece (1940) about the British film industry's part in supporting WWII. The heart of this sometimes comic romance is Catrin's (Gemma Arterton) emergence from secretary to writer in a time when women were expected to be no more than secretaries. Of course, they would no more be "in the box" after the war.

    Comic moments are plentiful, especially when aging actor Ambrose Hilliard (Bill Nighy at his best) is on screen. He is in a company producing a propaganda film to support the war and perhaps induce the USA to enter the war. Although seeing the inventive ways the industry created special effects and worked through themes would be a reason for a cinephile to see this film, the higher takeaway is the growing empowerment of Catrin, and all women, not just in Britain but everywhere.

    She has a growing affection for fellow writer Ellis (Jack Huston—Yes, that Huston grandson), slow and so British reserved that it is one of the best romances of the year. Although I have reservations about a woman needing a man to be successful, this romance is authentic because it grows like ripening fruit, no passion or flowery bombast to speed it along.

    Beyond the romance and the mechanics of early filmmaking, the art of writing is satisfactorily treated, in fact one of the first times I have seen it depicted as a communal effort. Besides, I love seeing ideas and dialogue worked out among the team without overly-dramatic flourishes but rather with the kind of quiet discovery that may have occurred with any successful team effort.

    Their Finest is part old-fashioned filmmaking with sentiment and sense overlaid by a progressive theme showing the ascendancy of women in WWII beyond "Rosie the Riveter." You'll cry a little, you'll laugh a little, and you'll nod your head a little in admiration of the contributions made in big wars by this marvelous art form, film.
    8bob-the-movie-man

    Keep calm and keep writing

    In a well-mined category, "Their Finest" is a World War 2 comedy/drama telling a tale I haven't seen told before: the story behind the British Ministry of Information and their drive to produce propaganda films that support morale and promote positive messages in a time of national crisis. For it is 1940 and London is under nightly attack by the Luftwaffe during the time known as "The Blitz". Unfortunately the Ministry is run by a bunch of toffs, and their output is laughably misaligned with the working class population, and especially the female population:  with their husbands fighting overseas, these two groups are fast becoming one and the same. For women are finding and enjoying new empowerment and freedom in being socially unshackled from the kitchen sink. 

    Enter Catrin Cole (Gemma Arterton, "The Girl with all the Gifts") who is one such woman arriving to a dangerous London from South Wales to live with struggling disabled artist Ellis (Jack Huston, grandson of John Huston). Catrin, stretching the truth a little, brings a stirring 'true' tale of derring-do about the Dunkirk evacuation to the Ministry's attention. She is then employed to "write the slop" (the woman's dialogue) in the writing team headed by spiky Tom Buckley (Sam Claflin, "Me Before You").

    One of the stars of the film within the film is 'Uncle Frank' played by the aging but charismatic actor Ambrose Hilliard (Bill Nighy, "Dad's Army", "Love Actually"). Catrin proves her worth by pouring oil on troubled waters as the army insist on the introduction of an American airman (Jake Lacy, "Carol") to the stressful mix. An attraction builds between Catrin and Tom, but how will the love triangle resolve itself?

    As you might expect if you've seen the trailer the film is, in the main, warm and funny with Gemma Arterton just gorgeously huggable as the determined young lady trying to make it in a misogynistic 40's world of work. Arterton is just the perfect "girl next door". But mixed in with the humour and the romantic storyline is a harsh sprinkling of the trials of war and not a little heartbreak occurs.  This is at least a 5 tissue movie. 

    Claflin, who is having a strong year with appearances in a wide range of films, is also eminently watchable. One of his best scenes is a speech with Arterton about "why people love the movies", a theory that the film merrily and memorably drives a stake through the heart of!  

    Elsewhere Lacy is hilarious as the hapless airman with zero acting ability; Helen McCrory ("Harry Potter") as Sophie Smith vamps it up wonderfully as the potential Polish love interest for Hilliard; Richard E Grant ("Logan") and Jeremy Irons ("The Lion King", "Die Hard: with a Vengeance") pop up in useful cameos and Eddie Marsan ("Sherlock Holmes") is also touching as Hilliard's long-suffering agent. 

    But it is Bill Nighy's Hilliard who carries most of the wit and humour of the film with his pompous thespian persona, basking in the dwindling glory of a much loved series of "Inspector Lynley" films. With his pomposity progressively warming under the thawing effect of Sophie and Catrin, you have to love him!  Bill Nighy is, well, Bill Nighy. Hugh Grant gets it (unfairly) in the neck for "being Hugh Grant" in every film, but this pales in comparison with Nighy's performances!  But who cares: his kooky delivery is just delightful and he is a national treasure!

    Slightly less convincing for me was Rachael Stirling's role as a butch ministry busybody with more than a hint of the lesbian about her.  Stirling's performance in the role is fine, but would this really have been so blatant in 1940's Britain?  This didn't really ring true for me. 

    While the film gamely tries to pull off London in the Blitz the film's limited budget (around £25m) makes everything feel a little underpowered and 'empty':  a few hundred more extras in the Underground/Blitz scenes for example would have helped no end.

    However, the special effects crew do their best and the cinematography by Sebastian Blenkov ("The Riot Club") suitably conveys the mood:  a scene where Catrin gets caught in a bomb blast outside a clothes shop is particularly moving.

    As with all comedy dramas, sometimes the bedfellows lie uncomfortably with each other, and a couple of plot twists: one highly predictable; one shockingly unpredictable make this a non-linear watch. This roller-coaster of a script by Gaby Chiappe, in an excellent feature film debut (she actually also has a cameo in the propaganda "carrot film"!), undeniably adds interest and makes the film more memorable. However (I know from personal experience) that the twist did not please everyone in the audience! 

    Despite its occasionally uneven tone, this is a really enjoyable watch (particularly for more mature audiences) and Danish director Lone Scherfig finally has a vehicle that matches the quality of her much praised Carey Mulligan vehicle "An Education".

    (For the graphical version of this review, please visit bob-the-movie- man.com. Thanks.)

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      When asked what his reactions were to being cast as Ambrose Hilliard, Bill Nighy said: "They were looking for someone to play a chronically self-absorbed actor in his declining years, and they thought of me, which is something that's easier to process on some mornings rather than others."
    • Blooper
      When Catrin Cole exits an Underground Station an Air Raid is starting and Air Raid Sirens are sounding; however they are not broadcasting the rising and falling note of the "Air Attack Warning", but the constant high pitched note of the "All Clear" which was / would be sounded after danger had passed.
    • Citazioni

      Phyl Moore: They're afraid they won't be able to put us back in the box when this is over, and it makes them belligerent.

    • Connessioni
      Referenced in OWV Updates: Multimedia Update + XVD Launch (14/01/2017) (2017)
    • Colonne sonore
      Brighton Promenade
      Written by Anthony Mawer

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 14 aprile 2017 (Svezia)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Regno Unito
      • Svezia
      • Francia
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site (Germany)
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Ungherese
      • Polacco
      • Francese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Their Finest
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Porthgain Harbour, Pembrokeshire, Galles, Regno Unito
    • Aziende produttrici
      • BBC Film
      • Welsh Government
      • Pinewood Pictures
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 10.000.000 € (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 3.603.484 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 76.197 USD
      • 9 apr 2017
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 12.597.262 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 57min(117 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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