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Knight of Cups

  • 2015
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
31K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,963
656
Christian Bale in Knight of Cups (2015)
Once there was a young prince whose father, the king of the East, sent him down into Egypt to find a pearl. But when the prince arrived, the people poured him a cup. Drinking it, he forgot he was the son of a king, forgot about the pearl and fell into a deep sleep.
Play trailer2:17
38 Videos
99+ Photos
Psychological DramaDramaFantasyRomance

A writer indulging in all that Los Angeles and Las Vegas have to offer, undertakes a search for love and self via a series of adventures with six different women.A writer indulging in all that Los Angeles and Las Vegas have to offer, undertakes a search for love and self via a series of adventures with six different women.A writer indulging in all that Los Angeles and Las Vegas have to offer, undertakes a search for love and self via a series of adventures with six different women.

  • Director
    • Terrence Malick
  • Writer
    • Terrence Malick
  • Stars
    • Christian Bale
    • Cate Blanchett
    • Natalie Portman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    31K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,963
    656
    • Director
      • Terrence Malick
    • Writer
      • Terrence Malick
    • Stars
      • Christian Bale
      • Cate Blanchett
      • Natalie Portman
    • 211User reviews
    • 232Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 9 nominations total

    Videos38

    Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:17
    Trailer #1
    Official US Trailer
    Trailer 2:22
    Official US Trailer
    Official US Trailer
    Trailer 2:22
    Official US Trailer
    A Guide to the Films of Terrence Malick
    Clip 2:31
    A Guide to the Films of Terrence Malick
    Clip
    Clip 1:07
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 0:33
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 0:44
    Clip

    Photos142

    View Poster
    View Poster
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    + 138
    View Poster

    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Christian Bale
    Christian Bale
    • Rick
    Cate Blanchett
    Cate Blanchett
    • Nancy
    Natalie Portman
    Natalie Portman
    • Elizabeth
    Brian Dennehy
    Brian Dennehy
    • Joseph
    Antonio Banderas
    Antonio Banderas
    • Tonio
    Freida Pinto
    Freida Pinto
    • Helen
    Wes Bentley
    Wes Bentley
    • Barry
    Isabel Lucas
    Isabel Lucas
    • Isabel
    Teresa Palmer
    Teresa Palmer
    • Karen
    Imogen Poots
    Imogen Poots
    • Della
    Peter Matthiessen
    • Christopher
    Armin Mueller-Stahl
    Armin Mueller-Stahl
    • Fr. Zeitlinger
    Cherry Jones
    Cherry Jones
    • Ruth
    Patrick Whitesell
    Patrick Whitesell
    • Agent #1
    Rick Hess
    • Agent #2
    Michael Wincott
    Michael Wincott
    • Herb
    Kevin Corrigan
    Kevin Corrigan
    • Gus
    Jason Clarke
    Jason Clarke
    • Johnny
    • Director
      • Terrence Malick
    • Writer
      • Terrence Malick
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews211

    5.631K
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    Featured reviews

    flimflamfilms

    Not worth seeing even for Malick fans

    I'd seen some negative reviews of this film before I watched it but it's always hard to know whether they're written by people who just didn't get the film or whether they were written by people who are open to something very different who just didn't think the director succeeded in producing something of value.

    Terrence Malick is indeed trying to take his audience in a different direction. He has turned away from the idea of telling a story to focus on the intangible emotional states of his characters, but I don't think many viewers will be able to relate very well to a character who is searching for meaning within an extremely privileged Hollywood social sphere, nor do I think we have much of an opportunity to connect to the film emotionally when it's edited like a music video. The film shifts wildly from one subject to another, the camera continuously in motion, as we tune in and out of incomplete conversations. Laid on top of the soundtrack throughout is slow, ponderous narration from multiple characters, often on subjects that have no immediate relationship to what is on screen at the time.

    It is hard to sit through to the end. I did, though I caught myself daydreaming about other things on several occasions. It's hard to pay attention to something that seems to be making so little effort to hold it, but I was hoping it would go somewhere interesting. Surely the directer of a masterpiece like The Thin Red Line would pull something out of his sleeve to weave the chaos together, but then it ended.

    Unfortunately, I can't tell you which group of reviewers I'm in. I might be the kind who just didn't get it or who aren't open to what Malick was trying to do, but I was thoroughly bored by it. I appreciate that he is trying something different, and this film is that, but I don't feel like I got anything out of it.

    One group who might appreciate this film though is modern architects who put a lot of glass in their buildings. There is a lot of that.
    lor_

    A is for Alienation; A is for Antonioni

    Some random thoughts while watching this pretentious stinker: Film students correctly screen and study the works of Fellini and Antonioni and so did Malick, but ripping them off is inadvisable.

    I saw "Badlands" at its NYFF world preem in 1973 and was a big fan of TM through his next one "Days of Heaven", but....he ended up a hack as witness here.

    Compare careers to Conrad Rooks -as fiercely independent minded if not more so with 2 interesting features to his credit "Chappaqua", plus Herman Hesse's "Siddhartha". No idiot Malick Kool Aid drinking producers to back further follies for him, however.

    Key ripoff: the great Scandi filmmaker Peter Watkins who invented the "You are There" first-person camera filmmaking technique for fictional, historical subject matter - wildly overdone by Malick with wide angle distortion added.

    Ultimate indie pioneer John Cassavetes used improvisation for rehearsals and prep to invent a unique filming style; Malick uses improvisation as a lazy self-indulgence.

    Film Festival-itis: making movies to be "consumed" on the antiquated, dating back to the '30s and '40s of Venice and Cannnes, international film festival as exhibition venue circuit, pandering to the gatekeepers of same: selection committees and junket-style critics, as witness the empty "eroticism" (not) thrown in as chief fetish of a "festival junkie".

    Brain-dead stars: many a big name attracted to this no-script, no- nothing project in order to boast "I worked with Terrence Malick" and then spout gibberish in the inevitable BTS bonus interviews on DVD.

    Film School Error 101: The Shot: when I first became a film buff over 5 decades ago I was fascinated with the "striking shot", a Bertolucci or for that matter Antonioni composition or moving camera that stuck out - the opposite of crafting a real, functioning feature film where both camera-work and editing (and SPFX especially) are ideally invisible once a filmmaker has matured. It's not the shot (battle) that counts, it's the film (war).

    Antonioni, not Clapton or Kilroy, is God syndrome: not just the ending but the endless expanses of emptiness, as mentioned by loyal production designer Jack Fisk, not symbolic but merely undigested Antonioni imitation, see: "La Notte".

    Elephantiasis: in the '60s I watched hundreds if not thousands of experimental film short subjects, screened at Midnight every Saturday and Sunday night at the local art theaters back in Cleveland, drawn from Ann Arbor and other regional festivals. Very educational and formative for a young film buff, with Stan Brakhage, George Kuchar and Ed Emshwiller raised to a pedestal for me. I'm sure Malick did too, but his big-budget feature-length imitations of same are embarrassing and a slap in the face of the many progenitors of the "underground movement" ranging from Maya Deren to even the '60s future pornographers -the Findlays. But he gets away with it, as current viewers and critics have no grounding in film history.

    The Fellini scenes: TM couldn't resist "throwing a party" just like Fellini, but the maestro's parties have life and invention, while here we see clichéd Hollywood types milling about, over-wrangled by some anonymous assistant director, completely artificial in their groupings and movements.

    Lastly, Bale as empty as the project. He gives new meaning to the derisive term "walk-through". And this is after, like the other hapless cast members, being given free rein by an absentee "director".
    5SnoopyStyle

    dreamlike disembodiment

    Rick (Christian Bale) is a successful movie screenwriter in Hollywood. He goes out with free-spirited Della (Imogen Poots). He goes to a tarot card reading. Barry (Wes Bentley) is his brother and Joseph (Brian Dennehy) is his father. Nancy (Cate Blanchett) is his ex-wife. Elizabeth (Natalie Portman) is another woman from his past. Tonio (Antonio Banderas) is a womanizer. Helen (Freida Pinto) is a model. Karen (Teresa Palmer) is a stripper. Fr. Zeitlinger (Armin Mueller-Stahl) is a priest. Rick moves through L.A., Vegas, and other places as he searches for meaning with various loves and hookers.

    The acting is improvisational. The movie moves through L.A. and this world in a dreamlike fashion. Rick doesn't say much. The camera moves through his world like a spirit observing his life. In a way, it's a very fitting vision of LaLaLand. It reminds me of an IMAX movie I saw back in the 80's with disconnected action vignettes in Canada. It was disembodying but fascinating... for about thirty minutes. Luckily, that's how long that IMAX movie was. In this case, this movie lasts for two hours. One does check out sooner or later. I try to stay with it but it does get away from me a couple of times.
    kdavies-69347

    A Difficult Movie to Follow

    Knight of Cups was a very different subject than I was expecting from director Terrence Malick. Few directors delve into the raw emotional content that carries us through our daily narrative. Most of his films approach the viewer from the very abstract to the rather mundane. I was quite impressed with most of his previous work, but I failed to grasp what was going on here.

    Christian Bale confirmed in an interview with The Guardian, a few things that people should know before watching this film. Mostly that the director did very little in terms of actual direction and scripting. Every scene in this film was either unscripted or improvised. Actors were playing off each other and had very little to go off of scene by scene.

    Bale plays a successful Hollywood Screenwriter, who is haunted by his traumatic past and fails at most of his relationships. Not out of poor decisions but because he seems lost more than anything. The events that lay before him are strange and somewhat unconnected, but the recurring theme of his affairs, love interests, and strange breathy narration (which is fairly typical for Malick's films), make this film somewhat of a repeating loop of the same events over and over again. You're left a bit confused at the end wondering, what was this film about. There are some beautiful shots in it, yet still a difficult movie to follow.

    A rather contemporary, if unguided effort on the director's part, and falls somewhat flat next to his more spectacular body of work.

    5/10
    7giggs-32527

    A subtle degree of existentialism which grows on you the longer the movie runs

    It takes a while of watching the movie before starting to appreciate it. However, the longer you get, the more it starts growing on you. Its modernistic style is certainly not for everyone - but the combination of beautiful pictures and captivating music as well as the subtle messages of the flick, is in my opinion brilliant. As with many modernistic pieces it requires that you as a spectator participate, which is very giving, that is, if you actually do it. Then you will experience the emptiness we as human beings have to wrestle with: the apathetic nature of just following the flow: the slumber we experience the moment we stop being active and stop shaping our existence. The movie is a reminder not to fall in slumber, but to wake up and see the pearl.

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    Related interests

    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
    Psychological Drama
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Elijah Wood in Le Seigneur des anneaux : La Communauté de l'anneau (2001)
    Fantasy
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although there was a script reported to be between 400 and 600 pages long, all of the scenes were improvised.
    • Quotes

      Joseph: You think when you reach a certain age things will start making sense, and you find out that you are just as lost as you were before. I suppose that's what damnation is. The pieces of your life never to come together, just splashed out there.

    • Crazy credits
      "For optimal sound reproduction, the producers of this film recommend that you play it loud." (In the opening credits.)
    • Connections
      Featured in Hipertenzija (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      The Pilgrim's Progress
      Composed by Ralph Vaughan Williams

      Performed by John Gielgud (as Sir John Gielgud), City of London Sinfonia

      Conducted by Matthew Best

      Courtesy of Hyperion Records LTD, London

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Knight of Cups?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 25, 2015 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
      • Spanish
      • Serbian
    • Also known as
      • Caballero de Copas
    • Filming locations
      • Death Valley National Park, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Dogwood Films
      • Waypoint Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $566,006
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $60,551
      • Mar 6, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,026,288
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 58m(118 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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