Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA black comedy about an old rogue named Wally, who breaks all the rules to fulfill an old friends dying wish to be buried at sea.A black comedy about an old rogue named Wally, who breaks all the rules to fulfill an old friends dying wish to be buried at sea.A black comedy about an old rogue named Wally, who breaks all the rules to fulfill an old friends dying wish to be buried at sea.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
Erik Madsen
- Dr. Gram
- (as Jan Erik Madsen)
Robert Skjærstad
- Marcus Solston
- (as Robert Skjaerstad)
Avaliações em destaque
Brian Cox plays a happy go lucky salty sea dog who is determined to bury his recently departed best friend at sea, against the wishes of just about everyone.
Whimsical, gently comedy with some funny lines and scenes occasionally punctuated with just about palatable sentiment. It lacks an element of panache that it badly needs, but the cast are fine, it's nice to see Lauren Bacall and all in all makes for a pleasant but hardly groundbreaking 90 minutes.
Whimsical, gently comedy with some funny lines and scenes occasionally punctuated with just about palatable sentiment. It lacks an element of panache that it badly needs, but the cast are fine, it's nice to see Lauren Bacall and all in all makes for a pleasant but hardly groundbreaking 90 minutes.
For reasons that are not immediately clear, this has only just (in 2019) had a release at cinemas in the UK and to be honest, it isn't really a cinema film. The comedic performances by Brian Cox are all the more appreciable because they are so unlike anything he has done elsewhere; his dancing around in his underwear (and we are not talking Calvin Klein, here!) cannot help but make you smile. Otherwise it is a gentle old-age rebellion film with occasional appearances by Lauren Bacall with James Fox making for a decent, if rather typecast, foil to Cox. Ideal for telly between Christmas and New Year to make you feel good.
I almost turned off Wild Blue Yonder (aka All at Sea) which atm is available to watch free with an Amazon Prime membership. It started out unneccessarily slapstick dark humor with very implausible scenes such as illegally appropriating a coffin complete with its deceased occupant and then placing the coffin in the back of a pickup truck and "stealing it" from a already-in-progress cemetery service. There is a need for suspension of disbelief in most movies, and the early scenes were over the top. And yet I stuck with this film mostly because of the unexpected appearance of James Fox early in the film, who happens to be an actor I like, and then also because of Lauren Bacall, and I'm SO GLAD i did stick with this movie.
Alot of the movie continues in this slapstick over the top fashion, but as I am 60 y/o myself, I was able to forgive the slapstick and categorize it as overstated metaphors whether intended or unintended, for the teriible dilemmas of getting old and losing self-determination by degrees, and the way younger people usurp the rights of the "walking-elderly" even when they are still quite lucid and capable, solely because they disapprove of a viewpoint or a conduct. I don't want to overstate that element of the film - it's pretty lighthearted fun really - but there are relevant aging themes of course that are handled quite well through this slapstick yet dramatic mechanism.
Where the movie really shines unexpectedly and very movingly, is in the intermittent and very expressive scenes between Ingrid Bolsø Berdal as "Nina" and her soulmate. Kåre Conradi as Ben. These scenes have a very "Mamma Mia" vignette-type quality to them, and these are actually little "mini-movies" of their own, as they totally independent scenes, not rich in storyline, but bursting with richness in visual imagery, the counterpoint of youth to aged, and the narrative of how some of the young come to the aid of the elderly on the terms of the elderly. This dynamic in the movie does a great job of contrasting those who would suppress the elderly with those who seem to be aware that they too will one day be elderly, and are paying it forward even as they celebrate their youth. I don't want to say too much about the exact details of this other thread about Nina and Ben except to say that it salvage and empower this movie to reclaim a measure of greatness.
The movie imho is metaphorical and allegorical, and if you watch the whole movie, you find that it achieves all of it's goals. The performances of James Fox did not disappoint he was excellent. Lauren Bacall is so talented and charming and she delivered a solid performance as well.
Alot of the movie continues in this slapstick over the top fashion, but as I am 60 y/o myself, I was able to forgive the slapstick and categorize it as overstated metaphors whether intended or unintended, for the teriible dilemmas of getting old and losing self-determination by degrees, and the way younger people usurp the rights of the "walking-elderly" even when they are still quite lucid and capable, solely because they disapprove of a viewpoint or a conduct. I don't want to overstate that element of the film - it's pretty lighthearted fun really - but there are relevant aging themes of course that are handled quite well through this slapstick yet dramatic mechanism.
Where the movie really shines unexpectedly and very movingly, is in the intermittent and very expressive scenes between Ingrid Bolsø Berdal as "Nina" and her soulmate. Kåre Conradi as Ben. These scenes have a very "Mamma Mia" vignette-type quality to them, and these are actually little "mini-movies" of their own, as they totally independent scenes, not rich in storyline, but bursting with richness in visual imagery, the counterpoint of youth to aged, and the narrative of how some of the young come to the aid of the elderly on the terms of the elderly. This dynamic in the movie does a great job of contrasting those who would suppress the elderly with those who seem to be aware that they too will one day be elderly, and are paying it forward even as they celebrate their youth. I don't want to say too much about the exact details of this other thread about Nina and Ben except to say that it salvage and empower this movie to reclaim a measure of greatness.
The movie imho is metaphorical and allegorical, and if you watch the whole movie, you find that it achieves all of it's goals. The performances of James Fox did not disappoint he was excellent. Lauren Bacall is so talented and charming and she delivered a solid performance as well.
Brian Cox presented a spectacular show as a sailor and Lauren Baca was spectacular as always. It was a fun movie.
All at Sea, sometimes called Wide Blue Yonder. From norway ! Brian cox, lauren bacall. When an old friend dies, wally does his best to fulfill his dying wish. To be buried at sea. But wally doesn't have a boat. And the regulations are very complicated. Lots of one liners from the mean director of the nursing home. In imdb, the character list is mostly all first names, so we're not really sure who is who. Co-stars british actor james fox as george, who seems to be here to antagonize everyone he meets. Lots of little side plots, and it's done way over the top, but it's all in good fun. Can wally raise the money needed, and overcome the endless obstacles to finally bury his good friend, in spite of everything against him? Directed by robert young. He had also done splitting heirs in 1993, with eric idle and john cleese. Story by hugh janes. It's okay. Not great, not bad.
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- How long is All at Sea?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- All at Sea
- Locações de filme
- Kopervik, Noruega(The location where Nina is in the trapeze)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 7.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 87.591
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 28 min(88 min)
- Cor
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