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Tsunami - Les jours d'après

Original title: Tsunami: The Aftermath
  • TV Mini Series
  • 2006
  • TV-MA
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Tsunami - Les jours d'après (2006)
Drama

Inspired by true accounts, this HBO miniseries focuses on a group of fictional characters caught up in the harrowing aftermath of the tsunami that devastated the coast of Thailand in 2004.Inspired by true accounts, this HBO miniseries focuses on a group of fictional characters caught up in the harrowing aftermath of the tsunami that devastated the coast of Thailand in 2004.Inspired by true accounts, this HBO miniseries focuses on a group of fictional characters caught up in the harrowing aftermath of the tsunami that devastated the coast of Thailand in 2004.

  • Stars
    • Hugh Bonneville
    • Gina McKee
    • Samrit Machielsen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Hugh Bonneville
      • Gina McKee
      • Samrit Machielsen
    • 11User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 3 Primetime Emmys
      • 3 wins & 26 nominations total

    Episodes2

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    TopTop-rated1 season2006

    Photos27

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    Top cast29

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    Hugh Bonneville
    Hugh Bonneville
    • Tony Whittaker
    • 2006
    Gina McKee
    Gina McKee
    • Kim Peabody
    • 2006
    Samrit Machielsen
    Samrit Machielsen
    • Than
    • 2006
    Grirggiat Punpiputt
    • Pravat Meeko
    • 2006
    Toni Collette
    Toni Collette
    • Kathy Graham
    • 2006
    Chiwetel Ejiofor
    Chiwetel Ejiofor
    • Ian Carter
    • 2006
    Tim Roth
    Tim Roth
    • Nick Fraser
    • 2006
    George MacKay
    George MacKay
    • Adam Peabody
    • 2006
    Sophie Okonedo
    Sophie Okonedo
    • Susie Carter
    • 2006
    Kate Ashfield
    Kate Ashfield
    • Ellen
    • 2006
    Will Yun Lee
    Will Yun Lee
    • Chai
    • 2006
    Owen Teale
    Owen Teale
    • James Peabody
    • 2006
    Jacek Koman
    Jacek Koman
    • Peer
    • 2006
    Aure Atika
    Aure Atika
    • Simone
    • 2006
    Leon Ford
    Leon Ford
    • Joe Meddler
    • 2006
    Morgan David Jones
    Morgan David Jones
    • John Peabody
    • 2006
    Tanapol Chuksrida
    • Boat Captain
    • 2006
    Gigi Velicitat
    • The French man
    • 2006
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.82.4K
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    Featured reviews

    10kevinalvarezp

    Best Documentary yet!

    I was pleasantly surprised at how well the tsunami tragedy was re-enacted. The acting and the writing stand above the other craft.The execution is compelling thoroughly. It boggles my mind to find so many negative reviews on this site. This film in my opinion presents an honest and comprehensive account of the tsunami tragedy and its aftermath, it explores the causes, it attaches blame without luridness, it visits the foundation of the family as a institution in the midst of a life altering crisis, it is emotionally compelling, it is educational, it is thought provoking. This film made my everyday problems feel like a picnic at the park.

    I didn't know Tim Roth was that good.
    6oneloveall

    Honorably concocted fictionalization looses some steam with extended dilemmas

    This acceptable dramatization to the horrific Tsunami tragedy of late 2004, under-examined still in the States with mind boggling statistics recalling something out of a biblical nightmare, does a fine job at capturing many different perspectives witnessing and withering to global catastrophe, however protracted and misaligned the dignified project can be. In reliable HBO fashion, the made for TV film barely feels like it, boasting arresting production, reliable performances, and a well rounded script. What does misfire though, is a prolonged detailing of these painful aftereffects, even worse when split up on two separate DVD's while only clocking in just over 3 hours. In keeping with the original miniseries, a bland DVD transfer only illustrates an awkwardly resolute second part over the first part's initial effectiveness.

    Starting with the brief but frighteningly executed Tsunami itself, the film proceeds to detail 4-5 different characters amidst the chaos for it's remaining 3 hours, utilizing plenty of research to intertwine a few fairly developed narratives of varied and conflicting natures to disturbing effect. The result at times feels necessary though in time merely competent. Although a wide array of perspective lends to a sensitive portrayal of so much horrific fallout for all those involved with this unprecedented event, any initial universal appeal the soulful disaster piece warrants became overshadowed by the disappointingly connected subplots insistence to overstay their welcome (and become more Babel then needed). The fact also remains that despite Thailand being represented in the film, the principal characters are a Western filter to understanding this tragedy that is assumed to be more engaging to your typical American television surfer. Anyone who would not feel insulted at it's slightly sensational leanings then should feel enlightened by a detailed, multifaceted chronicle that should remain the definitive movie on the event.

    It does feel stretched out (getting the first disc is satisfying enough, though would definitely leave a few cliffhangers), but for the haunting location set design alone, Tsunami: The Aftermath will help take comfortable, middle-class citizens into the heart of physical and emotional loss with a click of their remote.
    3indy-39

    Surprisingly insignificant....

    I'm sure the decision to do a mini-series(?) on the 2006 tsunami was not an easy one to make. In all fairness, I can't imagine any fictionalized account of a major disaster like this one not being inadequate in trying to examine what really happened. Although this wasn't as thoroughly offensive as Titanic (you can stop reading here if you're a big fan of that film), where the deaths of hundreds pale as compared to the lives of two fictional teenagers, this film falls far short of giving the dead their just do. Most bothersome of all, the film feels unfocused and uninspired...perhaps the project should have been given to someone with a real point of view...or better still shouldn't have been done at all. The actors give it their best, although truthfully most of it never rises above the level of soap opera. Every time a storyline pokes it's head out of the water it gets carried off in the undertow. Tasteful? Yes. Interesting? Sorry, Discovery Channel could do better in one third the time. Ultimately I found it surprisingly insignificant...this is not HBO, it's TV.
    5paul2001sw-1

    Too much dignified emoting

    The problem with making a film about a well-known disaster is that the obvious line of dramatic development is precluded precisely because everyone knows it before the film starts. In 'Titanic', James Cameron spun a tale about the spirit of the age, which he bound up with the famous event at the heart of the film; but 'Tsumami: the Aftermath' tries no such tricks, and sells us a straightforward catalogue of human misery and suffering. It's all very earnest, and unclear what the point is supposed to be. Countless survivors (with missing relatives) are shown responding with a mixture of dignity and disbelief in reality. This may be one response to tragedy, but it's not the only one, and in this film appears to be celebrated as the highest expression of the human condition: epitomised when one man stands up at a public meeting and is applauded for his heartfelt but impossible demand that his (dead) child is returned to him. Liekwise, the film stresses a view that those on the scene in a non-personal capacity needed to emotionally empathise with the feelings of the suffering, whereas one could argue that, when it comes to the rationing of limited resources, one actually needs officials who can be completely dispassionate, and who can turn down the heart-rending (and conventionally justified) demands of those who cry loudest to meet instead the needs of those with even greater need. Finally, there is a political sub-plot, but this is presented more as a means to the redemption of a cynical journalist (who, as you might have guessed, learns to care) than as an end in itself.

    The review may sound pretty cynical in itself, and I don't want to belittle the appalling human suffering of the real life tragedy in any way. But this film's obsession with dignified emoting puts a very strange spin on the human condition.
    3mafdenver

    Went on 90 minutes too long

    In their effort to provide one-of-each tragedy, they gave a caricature of each. I should know better than to try to watch fictionalized accounts of events "as seen through" the lens of a few supposedly representative individuals as microcosms. Considering almost a quarter million people died in that tsunami, it's almost an insult to pare it down to five people for entertainment's sake. Gina McKee - oh what an unlikable actress - as well as the woman who played Susan Carter. Grief and despair are communicated by hanging their mouths open in a dumb manner.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Hugh Bonnieville and Gina McKee previously worked together on the film Notting Hill (1999)
    • Quotes

      Title Card: Whilst the setting of this film is the aftermath of the real life events of 26 December 2004, it is a wholly fictional portrayal. The characters and businesses portrayed are entirely fictitious. Any resemblance between them and actual individuals or businesses is coincidental, not intended and should not be inferred.

    • Connections
      Featured in The 64th Annual Golden Globe Awards (2007)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 2006 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tsunami
    • Filming locations
      • Khao Lak, Thailand
    • Production companies
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • HBO Films
      • Kudos Film and Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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