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Los hombres libres de Jones

Título original: Free State of Jones
  • 2016
  • 16
  • 2h 19min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,9/10
67 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Matthew McConaughey in Los hombres libres de Jones (2016)
As civil war divides the nation, a poor farmer from Mississippi leads a group of rebels against the Confederate army.
Reproducir trailer1:08
33 vídeos
99+ imágenes
¿GuerraAcciónBiografíaDramaDrama de épocaHistoriaOccidental

Un desilusionado desertor del ejército confederado regresa a Mississippi y lidera una milicia compuesta de otros desertores y mujeres en un levantamiento contra el corrupto gobierno confeder... Leer todoUn desilusionado desertor del ejército confederado regresa a Mississippi y lidera una milicia compuesta de otros desertores y mujeres en un levantamiento contra el corrupto gobierno confederado local.Un desilusionado desertor del ejército confederado regresa a Mississippi y lidera una milicia compuesta de otros desertores y mujeres en un levantamiento contra el corrupto gobierno confederado local.

  • Dirección
    • Gary Ross
  • Guión
    • Gary Ross
    • Leonard Hartman
  • Reparto principal
    • Matthew McConaughey
    • Gugu Mbatha-Raw
    • Mahershala Ali
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,9/10
    67 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Gary Ross
    • Guión
      • Gary Ross
      • Leonard Hartman
    • Reparto principal
      • Matthew McConaughey
      • Gugu Mbatha-Raw
      • Mahershala Ali
    • 277Reseñas de usuarios
    • 188Reseñas de críticos
    • 53Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 3 premios y 4 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos33

    Trailer #2
    Trailer 1:08
    Trailer #2
    Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:38
    Trailer #1
    Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:38
    Trailer #1
    Hes A Boy
    Clip 0:52
    Hes A Boy
    Free State
    Clip 1:15
    Free State
    Free Man
    Clip 0:41
    Free Man
    Hold On
    Clip 0:45
    Hold On

    Imágenes131

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    Reparto principal99+

    Editar
    Matthew McConaughey
    Matthew McConaughey
    • Newton Knight
    Gugu Mbatha-Raw
    Gugu Mbatha-Raw
    • Rachel
    Mahershala Ali
    Mahershala Ali
    • Moses
    Keri Russell
    Keri Russell
    • Serena
    Christopher Berry
    Christopher Berry
    • Jasper Collins
    Sean Bridgers
    Sean Bridgers
    • Will Sumrall
    Jacob Lofland
    Jacob Lofland
    • Daniel
    Thomas Francis Murphy
    Thomas Francis Murphy
    • Elias Hood
    Bill Tangradi
    Bill Tangradi
    • Lt. Barbour
    Brian Lee Franklin
    Brian Lee Franklin
    • Davis Knight
    Kerry Cahill
    Kerry Cahill
    • Mary…
    Joe Chrest
    Joe Chrest
    • James Eakins
    Jessica Ann Collins
    Jessica Ann Collins
    • Annie
    • (as Jessica Collins)
    Donald Elise Watkins
    Donald Elise Watkins
    • Wilson
    • (as Donald Watkins)
    Jill Jane Clements
    Jill Jane Clements
    • Aunt Sally
    Dane Rhodes
    Dane Rhodes
    • Ward
    Lawrence Turner
    Lawrence Turner
    • Chester
    Troy Anthony Hogan
    Troy Anthony Hogan
    • George
    • Dirección
      • Gary Ross
    • Guión
      • Gary Ross
      • Leonard Hartman
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios277

    6,966.8K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    8caseynicholson

    A Great Historical Drama

    I'm surprised to see that this movie is currently averaging 6.5/10 stars--I found it to be worthy of an eight, and I even flirted with ranking it even higher.

    The movie tells of a counter-rebellion in a Mississippi town during the Civil War, and is based on a true story. The film is done in a style that emulates "Twelve Years A Slave", and as such it deals with topics of slavery and secession in a way that is poignant but also constructive.

    In fairness, there are a few things that the film could be rightly critiqued for. The opening scenes of the film are fairly gory and filled with wartime violence, but fortunately that does not dominate the movie. As it progresses, the plot of the film does meander a bit, including a fast forward to a scene from some 85 years after the majority of the film that is interspersed throughout the rest of the movie. That technique felt a bit forced at times, but at the end of the film it made more sense why it had been used.

    Additionally, the movie tells its main tale over the course of more than a decade, which makes for a bit of an odd cinematic journey--but, in my view, none of these issues are so problematic that they greatly take away from the movie. Rather, what we have here is a film that was desperately trying to be Oscar worthy, and that perhaps pushes the creative envelope a tad bit too far.

    But again, there is more good here than bad. The story that the movie has to tell is both engaging and important--engaging in that it captures your attention and makes you care about the subject matter in a captivating way, and important in that it draws attention to historical facts that you probably were not aware of. I know it certainly highlighted some elements of Reconstruction that were new to me.

    Regarding acting, this was perhaps not McConaughey's best role, but it's also not his worst. The supporting cast turns out a strong performance, and all in all the movie is well made.

    That said, I'm going with 8/10 stars on this one. It's not the best Civil War flick ever made, and perhaps pales in comparison with other recent historical dramas like "Twelve Years" and "The Revenant", but it's nevertheless a great movie that deserves a "Very Good" score.
    9Danusha_Goska

    Moving, Authentic, Important

    "Free State of Jones" is a moving, authentic, important film. Matthew McConaughey gives an Oscar-worthy performance as Newton Knight, an historic figure. I forgot I was watching Matthew McConaughey and felt that I was watching Newton Knight. I've really never seen a performance quite like McConaughey's here. His Newt Knight is the most manly man in any room – or swamp – and yet he is also as tender as a mother.

    In the early Civil War battle scenes, he plays a nurse. Knight is not shown mowing down the enemy with impressive, explosive gunfire. Rather, he is shown risking enemy fire in order to save men's lives, or to retrieve and bury the corpse of a boy shot in battle on his first day. My tears flowed freely during these scenes. Later, Knight himself cries after one of his men is hanged. But Knight gets his revenge, an eye-for-an-eye revenge scene that I won't soon forget.

    Newton Knight was a white Mississippi farmer. He was the grandson of a slaveholder, but Knight owned no slaves himself. He served in the Confederate army, but deserted in 1862, after serving for almost a year. He was outraged by the Twenty Negro Law, that allowed families who owned twenty slaves to exempt one family member from service for every twenty slaves they owned.

    Knight and other deserters formed The Free State of Jones, declaring their loyalty to the Union, and flying the stars and stripes rather than the stars and bars. After the war, Knight worked for Reconstruction and married Rachel, a freed slave woman. His children also married cross-racially. He died in 1922. As might be expected, he is a controversial figure in Mississippi. Fans of the Confederacy denounce him as a traitor. Others celebrate him as one white Southerner who had a conscience and resisted white supremacy.

    Newt Knight was clearly someone with a bucketload of charisma. His power inspired men to fight to the death against their own nation. McConaughey radiates charisma in this role. He is masterful and yet intimate. I'd follow this Newt Knight into battle and feel proud to do so.

    "Free State of Jones" is receiving negative reviews. It's easy to see why. There is something in this film to anger multiple grievance mongers.

    First, race hustlers will hate this movie. Race hustlers want the official story to be that all whites are supremacists and all blacks are heroic. A film that depicts a white man who worked for black rights is taboo. Race hustlers anathematized "Mississippi Burning" and "The Help" for the same reason. Such a shame that the race hustlers' ideological blindfolds make it impossible for them to appreciate great art.

    Liberals might hate this film for a couple of other reasons. I don't know if I've seen a movie where almost every scene hinges on how guns are used. Almost everyone is armed, and uses those weapons to keep breathing and to settle disputes. Even little girls have guns and use them heroically. Second amendment fans may love this film. It depicts what they dream of: oppressed citizenry taking up arms to defeat their own government.

    In addition to clinging to their guns, these rebels cling to their God and their Bibles. This is one of the most religious American films I've seen in a while. It's an historical fact that Newt Knight was a devoutly religious Primitive Baptist – he didn't drink, for example. The film drives home Knight's Christianity. He is shown in a long scene using a quill to record a birth in his Bible. In one heartbreaking scene, a slave who has been sexually molested survives psychologically by reciting verses from Genesis. "Free State of Jones" practices a muscular Christianity. One eye-for-an-eye scene takes place in a church.

    Republicans will be torn about "Free State of Jones." On the one hand, Knight, like many populist leaders, preaches against economic inequality. "No man should be poor just so that someone else can be rich." I can hear theater seats squeak as Republicans head for the exits. Knight's words, though, reflect the facts. Poor white Southerners were sabotaged by the slave economy and they knew it. That's why they deserted.

    But Republicans, if they sit through the entire film, will see how the Republican Party was the favored choice of freed slaves in the post-Civil-War era.

    There is a narrative problem in the film. The viewer expects "Free State of Jones" to end after the Civil War. I actually began tying my sneakers, readying to leave the theater. But the film keeps going in what feels like an anti-climax. Gary Ross, the filmmaker, wants to make a point: the Civil War was *not* the happy ending. The KKK rose up, and Jim Crow became entrenched. Black men who tried to exercise their right to vote were lynched. This is an important point, but the film should have been better structured so its narrative flow didn't stop before the film itself did.

    "Free State of Jones" was clearly made by sticklers for authenticity. Everyone looks dirty and tired. The clothes look like clothes people wore in the nineteenth century. A confederate officer's uniform looks baggy and tacky, not sparkling and admirable. Scenes are shot in lamplight. I loved this aspect of the film, as will Civil War re-enactors.
    9in1984

    Civil Wars for the Rich

    9.25 of 10. The many shades of slave and involuntary servitude come to light in this story. A film that's true enough that it deserves to be something shown to students to help their interest and expand their understanding of American history, but too gruesome, violent, and explicit in language for the typical school.

    It may also be a little too quiet and slow moving for some, but the depth to which the film explores obscure American Civil War facts and events, both during and after, makes one curiouser and curiouser to see where it goes.

    This is a rare film that you can watch a trailer of, or not, and not have it ruin the film. In fact, it would be very difficult to anyone to write a spoiler for this. It's also something you want to watch from beginning to end, or at least until the credits shift to white text on black. It may not be the ideal theater film, but it definitely is worthy of a hard copy for your book/DVD shelf.
    7Dan1863Sickles

    An American Hero Erased From History -- Twice!

    This is a movie that got a lot of attention when it came out a few years ago, yet somehow it never connected with audiences. And critics didn't seem to want to go to bat for it either.

    It's easy to see why the mass audience didn't like this movie. It's too long, it covers too much ground, and while Matthew McConaughey gives the role of ex-Confederate freedom fighter Newton Knight everything he's got, the character just doesn't jump off the screen like Charlton Heston in BEN HUR or Mel Gibson in BRAVEHEART. Newton Knight is just a lovable guy from the word go (we first see him hugging a scared boy on the battlefield, then holding him while he dies) and he has no personal demons (or prejudices) to overcome. He's not driven by personal anger or passion, just by an abstract love of justice.

    Related to that problem is the fact that Newton Knight doesn't square off with one single baddie who's tough enough to make it a real fight. Judah Ben Hur goes up against Massala in the chariot race, and they have a whole lot of personal history. William Wallace goes up against Longshanks, Edward I of England, who is so terrifying he almost jumps off the screen. But Newton Knight just fights a bunch of no-name dastardly Confederate officers, most of whom are portrayed as cowardly or incompetent. None of them have any personal grudge against him and no personal magnetism of their own.

    So the bottom line is that the general audience was bored to death.

    Now with critics I think the story is a lot more sinister. A lot of left wing critics tried to put this movie down as a "white savior" movie in which a perfect white guy has all the answers and saves everyone. The problem with that argument is that it would apply equally well to a movie like GLORY which covers similar events in the exact same time period. But none of the critics ever attacked GLORY or patronized the personal story of Robert Gould Shaw the way they patronized the story of Newton Knight.

    And there's a reason why. Robert Gould Shaw, the hero of GLORY, was a real life officer in the Union army. He was a Harvard graduate from a very genteel, distinguished Boston family who volunteered to command black troops and died leading them in a desperate charge against hopeless odds. Nothing wrong with that man's story. But did you notice the words "Harvard" and "Boston" and "distinguished family?" THAT'S the kind of white savior a left-wing film critic can love.

    Someone just like them!

    The thing about Newton Knight that turned off a lot of big name critics, (like Richard Brody of the New Yorker) is that he's not Robert Gould Shaw. He's not Harvard. He's not Boston. He's not even a West Point man like Grant or Sherman. Newton Knight isn't a white savior, he's poor white trash. Those kind of people are trash -- and they're supposed to ACT like it!

    The idea that a poor redneck farmer would make common cause with a bunch of runaway slaves (without government supervision or a liberal college degree) is just as frightening, just as terrifying, to a New York film critic as it would be to a Mississippi planter. Without poor whites to blame for racism, privileged white liberals have no way to justify their privilege. So it's a fundamental article of faith with them that all poor whites are beyond redemption -- a basket of deplorables, as it were.

    If you don't believe me, look up a piece Katha Pollitt published in THE NATION in November 2018. It's called "Conservative White Women Won't Change Their Minds," and it's basically a hate-filled rant against all the white women who voted for Trump. But the real point of the article is that changing their minds is a waste of time. Katha Pollitt needs the white trash to stay trash. All her self-esteem depends on the belief that poor whites were and are and will be trash, now and forever.

    This movie proves that isn't true -- and that's why leftist critics had to bury it.
    7keitharan

    Great story, good acting, worth seeing

    I enjoyed the movie and would have rated it an 8 but for some pacing issues, including how they awkwardly managed the flash forward scenes to the sub-plot with Newton Knight's descendant.

    I'm not a history buff, but also not opposed to learn about compelling stories, and this was one. Who knew that there was this sub-war going on in the middle of the Civil War, or about this Lincoln-esque southern guy willing to fight the good fight? Knight was an inspiring guy who somehow saw forest through the trees and had courage to do right in a world with wrong going on all around him.

    The acting was quite good. I particularly enjoyed fresh faces like Mahershala Ali (Moses) and Gugu-Mbatha Raw (Rachel). The script was not full of period clichés or overly polish, things I appreciated in a movie like Tombstone, but could have been a distraction in Free State which fortunately kept it real.

    Matthew McConaughey was excellent in the lead as the gritty Newton Knight. Not as gritty as his brother Rooster, but the grit suits him. Very believable. But this is not a movie that shines due to his good looks, rather from his good acting.

    Some of the more critical reviews made comment about FSoJ as "hopelessly adrift", "trips over its own themes as it stumbles aimlessly," "is confusing", and "It's not that the story itself is hard to follow, but Gary Ross' script and direction fail to make clear key personal relationships in the film, and throughout its 2 ¼ hours, it makes the audience wonder where the story is going and whether this movie has much of a point at all."

    Wow! All I can tell you is that I did not know the story, and there were some moments where it fumbles, but I kept up with it just fine. For me the movie's strengths far outweighed its weaknesses. Definitely not an average or sub-par movie — the subject matter alone puts it ahead of so many other films.

    At times I questioned the casting on some of the supporting roles, but that may be Hollywood conditioning thing, and on reflection this cast probably showed what people were like back in that day.

    After the movie I read up on the Davis Knight story. He was the great grandson who was embattled in a miscegenation trial in 1940s Mississippi. He was 1/8 African American, looked white (in the movie) and married a white woman; a crime back in the day in Mississippi. Have to wonder why they didn't prosecute the white wife. Hmm.

    It goes to show you how much times have changed: now days in Mississippi Batman can marry Superman, dogs can marry cats, and democrats can marry republicans. You won't see any of that in Raqqa. It's a crazy mixed up world folks.

    To sum things up, it's not a perfect movie, and there were some issues making it hard to track at times, but a fascinating sub-plot to the real Civil War, it kept my interest, and the acting was good. Any movie that has me reading up on its story after the film has got to be worth seeing.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      In 2016 a document was discovered in the National Archives which was a request by Newton Knight's company to join the Union Army in 1864. It lends validity to Knight's claims.
    • Pifias
      When the plantation owner comes back home after the war and walks through the front door, a thermostat is visible on the wall to his left.
    • Citas

      Newton Knight: From this day forward we declare the land north of Pascagoula Swamp, south of enterprise and east to the Pearl River to the Alabama border, to be a Free State of Jones. And as such we do hereby proclaim and affirm the following principles. Number one, no man ought to stay poor so another man can get rich. Number two, no man ought to tell another man what you got to live for or what he's got to die for. Number three, what you put in the ground is yours to tend and harvest and there ain't no man ought to be able to take that away from you. Number four, every man is a man. If you walk on two legs, you're a man. It's as simple as that.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in The History of Jones County (2016)
    • Banda sonora
      Beautiful Dreamer
      Written by Stephen Foster

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    Preguntas frecuentes

    • How long is Free State of Jones?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 16 de septiembre de 2016 (España)
    • Países de origen
      • Estados Unidos
      • China
    • Sitios oficiales
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Site
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Lucha por la libertad
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Buckner Mansion, Nueva Orleans, Luisiana, Estados Unidos(Deason)
    • Empresas productoras
      • Route One Entertainment
      • Vendian Entertainment
      • Bluegrass Films
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 50.000.000 US$ (estimación)
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 20.810.036 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 7.572.206 US$
      • 26 jun 2016
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 25.035.950 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      2 horas 19 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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