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IMDbPro

Rei Lear

Título original: King Lear
  • 1987
  • PG
  • 1 h 30 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,5/10
1,7 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Jean-Luc Godard and William Shakespeare in Rei Lear (1987)
ComédiaDramaFicção científica

Um descendente de Shakespeare tenta restaurar suas peças em um mundo que está se reconstruindo após a catástrofe de Chernobyl destruir a maior parte da civilização humana.Um descendente de Shakespeare tenta restaurar suas peças em um mundo que está se reconstruindo após a catástrofe de Chernobyl destruir a maior parte da civilização humana.Um descendente de Shakespeare tenta restaurar suas peças em um mundo que está se reconstruindo após a catástrofe de Chernobyl destruir a maior parte da civilização humana.

  • Direção
    • Jean-Luc Godard
  • Roteiristas
    • Richard Debuisne
    • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Norman Mailer
  • Artistas
    • Woody Allen
    • Freddy Buache
    • Leos Carax
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,5/10
    1,7 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Roteiristas
      • Richard Debuisne
      • Jean-Luc Godard
      • Norman Mailer
    • Artistas
      • Woody Allen
      • Freddy Buache
      • Leos Carax
    • 23Avaliações de usuários
    • 22Avaliações da crítica
    • 50Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 indicação no total

    Fotos18

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    Elenco principal12

    Editar
    Woody Allen
    Woody Allen
    • Mr. Alien
    • (não creditado)
    Freddy Buache
    Freddy Buache
    • Professor Quentin Kozintsev
    • (não creditado)
    Leos Carax
    Leos Carax
    • Edgar
    • (não creditado)
    Julie Delpy
    Julie Delpy
    • Virginia
    • (não creditado)
    Jean-Luc Godard
    Jean-Luc Godard
    • Professor Pluggy
    • (não creditado)
    Suzanne Lanza
    Suzanne Lanza
      Kate Mailer
      • Self
      • (não creditado)
      Norman Mailer
      Norman Mailer
      • Self
      • (não creditado)
      Burgess Meredith
      Burgess Meredith
      • Don Learo
      • (não creditado)
      Michèle Pétin
      • Journalist
      • (não creditado)
      Molly Ringwald
      Molly Ringwald
      • Cordelia
      • (não creditado)
      Peter Sellars
      Peter Sellars
      • William Shaksper Junior the Fifth
      • (não creditado)
      • Direção
        • Jean-Luc Godard
      • Roteiristas
        • Richard Debuisne
        • Jean-Luc Godard
        • Norman Mailer
      • Elenco e equipe completos
      • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

      Avaliações de usuários23

      5,51.6K
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      Avaliações em destaque

      federovsky

      the artistic struggle to create meaning

      This must be a candidate for the most difficult film ever made. Great reviewers can't make head nor tail of it. It's Godard's own Finnegan's Wake-like dreamscape of the making of a film on the theme of King Lear, beginning with the contract, ending with the editing - a project that apparently turned into a nightmare. Hence the disjointed narrative, Alice in Wonderland elements, weird juxtapositions, elaborate pseudo-philosophies - all familiar components of delirious semi-consciousness. It's an anti-film, a film made deliberately to be disliked as much as it dislikes itself. Just as Godard's film about Lausanne, Lettre a Freddie Buache, consists of his refusal to make a film about Lausanne, so King Lear is his refusal to make the Lear required of him, while contract bound to make something.

      It opens with an actual phonecall from the producer giving Godard a roasting for failing to deliver the film. The film that follows is Godard's response and is basically a middle finger to the Cannon Group and everyone else, focussing as it does, on the key word in the play: Nothing.

      In the opening scenes, Norman Mailer and his daughter discuss the King Lear script he has just finished. It's unclear whether Mailer's actual script was ever going to be used, assuming he wrote one, or why Mailer himself would want to act the part, or why Godard would ever have agreed to make a film written and acted by Norman Mailer. Obscurities matched only by the resulting film itself. In any case it wasn't going to work. Perhaps to deliberately abort the project, Godard quickly succeeded in pissing off the Mailers who left in a huff. Godard blames the petulance of 'the great writer' and his daughter's inability to handle the pressure from various sides, including her father. That's one hell of an opening for a film, leaving us blinking and wondering what is going to happen, or not happen, next.

      A kind of story pops up. A descendant of Shakespeare (Peter Sellars) is trying to recreate the Bard's works after all art has been lost in a nuclear catastrophe. In a Swiss hotel he finds Burgess Meredith and Molly Ringwald, vaguely recognised as Lear and Cordelia (power and virtue in contest), and from whom he gradually reconstructs the play. Mailer's idea of making Lear a mafia don resurfaces here. Meanwhile, Sellars is in pursuit of the mad Professor Pluggy (Godard, in a truly bizarre performance) who has crucial knowledge of how images should complement the words.

      Pluggy's long and solemn thesis on words, images and reality is at the centre of the film. Life and images of life.Telling and showing. There is more than recreating a universe of words (says Pluggy). Images are purer. Images serve to connect two realities and meaning is created by reconciling these two realities. Their coming together in image form releases the emotive power. Contrary realities (Lear and Cordelia) don't come together. The strength of an image lies in the association of ideas it contains. Bringing them together is the function of the artist. This presumably also applies to sound - the use of sound in the film is astonishing - layered, atmospheric, and apparently insane - and presumably explains the seagulls that are heard at random intervals, even during interior scenes. This is all dream-theory. Barely understandable on a single viewing - perhaps complete gibberish - yet key to what the film is about: the struggle of the artist to create.

      At the end, Woody Allen is splicing the film with safety pins while reciting an irrelevant Sonnet - a final swipe at the Americans who clearly should never have messed with Godard in the first place. His response was to deliver something that is probably Nothing with an artistic fiendishness ungraspable by mere mortals. According to your fondness for the director, it's either highly entertaining or unendurable punishment.
      cd011b7032

      Damn Those Infernal SEAGULLS!!!!

      I don't know where to begin.

      I cannot contain my contempt for this film (if I dare call it a film). In my opinion this is the worst Shakespeare adaptation committed to any art form anywhere in history. And one of the most egotistical pieces of rubbish in the annals of film.

      It has NO USE. You couldn't even use this if you were doing a thesis of King Lear at college because this is faeces. Not to mention that it has hardly anything to do with the play King Lear. It has no plot, no interesting characters or character study and hardly anything in the way of decent direction.

      And it is not just the fact that it lacks so much, it is the fact that what it does have is so goddamn terrible. Quotes and sayings repeated endlessly, terrible seagull sound effects that 1) happen in scenes where there are no seagulls and even scenes when we are indoors 2) happen in scenes when there is other dialogue going on and 3) are so loud that your ears begin to bleed (well, nearly).

      I went to see this film because 1) I had only seen one other Godard movie Bande à Part (1964) and 2) I am a great Woody Allen fan. Now I mentioned earlier that this was egotistical and I will go further and say that this is sheer celluloid masturbation! Godard (in my opinion the most over rated director in cinema history) has almost become drunk with power, power gained from years of critics kissing his ass, and now believes he can do no wrong as long as he entertain and excites himself (i.e. masturbation). Another celluloid masturbator (for want of a better word) is Woody Allen, this shared hobby probably bringing the two together. But the one difference between these two is this, Woody Allen still has the gift to entertain and excited others as well as himself, whereas Godard lost this gift along long time before King Lear.

      Now I have wasted enough time talking about this catastrophe.

      I give it 0 out of 10.

      P.S. If you want a really good Shakespeare adaptation try Throne of Blood (1957).
      Laundry

      interesting and innovative

      Cahiers du Cinema rated this as one of the top ten films of 1987. On the other hand, Leonard Maltin said of it, "Bizarre, garish, contemporary punk-apocalyptic updating of Shakespeare classic. Little to be said about this pretentious mess except... avoid it." I don't think it is a great film, but I certainly don't think it can be dismissed in such an offhand manner. There was a lot of thought put into it, and it can be very thought provoking, and also quite funny. I liked this film quite a lot and I thought it was interesting. I think it is very innovative and ahead of it's time; it almost seems like a multimedia project more than a film. I can see how people might find it very boring, but I didn't at all. It deals with many issues that have since become prominent themes in academic discourse.
      3lemmy caution

      No Thing

      Godard's listless crapfest is a big waste of time. I mean- it's fine if you want to pick one scene from a play and analyse it for an hour and a half; it's fine if you want to do this in an obscure semi-story way that only become the tiniest bit clear after having watched the whole thing.

      But when it's constructed as an endurance test, with the director holding the audience in contempt- I mean, why waste your time? (To the end of making your experience as unpleasant as possible, Godard shows up as a "professor", mumbling unintelligible profundities. And then throws piles of squealing seagulls and vari-speeded music onto the soundtrack. Thanks for reminding us that film is a constructed medium, professor!)

      There were a couple effective scenes, but they were immediately undermined by what followed. I did think a little about Lear, but more to keep myself occupied than from any theses the film presented.

      And a caveat to anyone considering seeing this because the IMDB credits list Woody Allen: don't bother; he's only in the flick for a few minutes at the end and barely says anything.

      To review: avoid.

      Rating: 3 out of 10 (very poor)
      10polysicsarebest

      Masterpiece

      This is by far one of the weirdest films ever made, as I've said before. Godard is probably my second favorite director (right behind Kitano), and this isn't his first really weird film or anything (I'd go so far as to say all of his films in his unfairly-neglected-but-superior "late period" are quite strange in some way, either in their fractured narrative, or in their hardcore deconstruction of typical movie-making -- "Where's the story?" indeed...). But this is kind of a mix of everything he'd done with his newer stuff, when it came out; all the themes and elements and ideas he had been exploring, and it even predicts a bit of his stuff after this. People usually get interested in this film for its genesis and some of the bizarre happenings in this film (Godard signs a contract on a napkin; Godard recorded telephone conversations with producer and put it in the film, which peeved the producer off; Godard never actually reads past page 3 of King Lear itself; this film was made from like 4 or 5 different aborted scripts cobbled together; a father and daughter sign on to do this movie, do 5 takes or so, and then walk off the set in disgust, all of which is captured in the movie, with a voice-over explaining this; Woody Allen was hired to be in this film and he had no idea what he was doing so he drinks some coffee, puts some safety pins in some film, recites a few verses from the play King Lear and that's about it).

      Well, it goes far beyond that, as far as strangeness is concerned... seeing Molly Ringwald in a Godard film is just bizarre, first of all (keep in mind she was HUGE at the time; Pretty In Pink and all that stuff). Second of all, Godard's narration is absurd. I mean, you can barely even tell what he's saying, in English (this is also his only English film from beginning to end!). He might as well have been recorded through a voice box. Godard plays a guy with a headdress made of hi-fidelity wires, so he can jack himself into the unknown at any time. He is looking for "The image". Since Godard never actually read King Lear, the film instead asks if King Lear is even an important work of art, if it's even valid a radioactive, post-Chernobyl landscape. So, the main actor (who actually says the line, "Oh yeah, by the way, my name is William Shakespeare Junior the Fifth." in a comical tone) is "searching" for, uh, something, and he encounters a bunch of crazy characters, in an extremely, EXTREMELY fractured narrative, with scenes ending abruptly, double (sometimes triple) voices of characters constantly on the soundtrack, and pretty much everything crashing, colliding, and being completely out of sequence, out of time, out of tune. Oh, let's not forget the soundtrack, which is made of slowed-down and electronically-manipulated versions of Beethoven symphonies; also, there is a loud, annoying, seagull sound about every 3 minutes in the movie.

      Sounds like a disaster, doesn't it? Well, I gotta say, it's one of the best films -- not just by Godard -- but EVER. Even beyond the "strangeness" that attracts me, there is a strange, otherworldly beauty to the proceedings. Godard designed the film to fail, but he did so in a way that's really, really interesting, and is actually extremely experimental, especially when you consider that this was designed to be a mainstream film! Godard himself said he never got page 3 of King Lear, it didn't interest him at all... he said the film was the first 3 pages of King Lear and the rest of it is him trying to "Get past" the rest of the play. Which is hilarious, absurd, and reason enough to check it out...

      A powerful film, misunderstood to be certain, groundbreaking and unconventional in every way, I'd say anyone into Jodorowsky and stuff like that should probably want to seek this out and have their mind blown.

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      Ficção científica

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      Você sabia?

      Editar
      • Curiosidades
        When he was starting out, Quentin Tarantino claimed on his CV that he had appeared in this film, as he guessed nobody would have seen it and know that he was lying.
      • Citações

        The Great Writer: For words are one thing, and reality, sweet reality, is another thing, and between them is no thing.

      • Conexões
        Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Seul le cinéma (1994)

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      Perguntas frequentes19

      • How long is King Lear?Fornecido pela Alexa

      Detalhes

      Editar
      • Data de lançamento
        • 3 de abril de 2002 (França)
      • Países de origem
        • Estados Unidos da América
        • Bahamas
        • França
        • Suíça
      • Central de atendimento oficial
        • arabuloku.com
      • Idiomas
        • Francês
        • Inglês
        • Russo
        • Japonês
      • Também conhecido como
        • King Lear
      • Locações de filme
        • Rolle, Canton de Vaud, Suíça
      • Empresas de produção
        • The Cannon Group
        • Golan-Globus Productions
      • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

      Bilheteria

      Editar
      • Orçamento
        • US$ 2.000.000 (estimativa)
      • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
        • US$ 61.821
      • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
        • US$ 8.756
        • 24 de jan. de 1988
      • Faturamento bruto mundial
        • US$ 85.018
      Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

      Especificações técnicas

      Editar
      • Tempo de duração
        • 1 h 30 min(90 min)
      • Cor
        • Color

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