CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.7/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA small brilliant boy is tormented by two large idiotic bullies.A small brilliant boy is tormented by two large idiotic bullies.A small brilliant boy is tormented by two large idiotic bullies.
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The Swan is heartbreaking but ultimately powerful stuff, a story of never backing down or letting monstrous people win. It's uneasy viewing and definitely the darkest of the Wes Anderson Roald Dahl shorts in the most rewarding way possible.
Rupert Friend essentially carries this, narrating everything with almost no support until Fiennes' closing words that adds real power to it. Until then Friend is phenomenal, narrating at a fast speed with a real pain to his voice as he describes what is clearly a very painful memory.
Wes Anderson's direction works so well here, the whimsical world created contrasts so effectively against the dark nature and it's generally just so stunning. This fully artificial world that acts like a play is endlessly watchable and each short has been so unique.
Rupert Friend essentially carries this, narrating everything with almost no support until Fiennes' closing words that adds real power to it. Until then Friend is phenomenal, narrating at a fast speed with a real pain to his voice as he describes what is clearly a very painful memory.
Wes Anderson's direction works so well here, the whimsical world created contrasts so effectively against the dark nature and it's generally just so stunning. This fully artificial world that acts like a play is endlessly watchable and each short has been so unique.
Part of Anderson's clutch of Netflix adaptations, and the second I saw after Henry Sugar. Stylistically it follows much the same Jackanory vibe of a singular narrator simply reading the story aloud surrounded by cinematic flourishes. Rupert Friend manages the breakneck staccato delivery with spellbinding intensity. Dahl's dark little satirical stories fit Anderson's mild sarcasm rather well and the all-encompassing aesthetic gels it fantastically. The rail tracks becoming stairs are an amazing flourish and it is hypnotic but I can't help but wonder if these stories could do with more space to breathe. There's an element of self consciousness behind the speed and artifice that takes away a little. Otherwise, very much dig it.
Interesting, engaging and calmer than I would've thought. Rupert Friend is wonderful since being in Homeland awhile ago, it's great that he's had multiple roles in Wes projects! I love this one superb scenery as always and quite well made! Only a little about a Swan. The field is great, writing is smooth, and these Wes shorts are complex a lot to take in. Not a lot needs to be said but I'll try a nice mix of southern, action, storytelling, and somber. Not sure how anyone could hate on Wes projects except Rat Catcher that one was very peculiar even most the movies are all fantastic pieces of cinema.
A young boy relentlessly bullied by two older boys finally finds the strength to escape his tormentors. The pair of cruel older boys, who enjoy shooting songbirds in the hedgerow and ultimately kill the titular bird while it's nurturing its young are so repulsive that they drift into caricature (as perhaps was the intent, as they are figments of the narrator's memories). Like Anderson's other recent Dahl interpretations, 'The Swan' is a stagy, borderline surreal, meta-production that puts style far ahead of content. The cast is great, as is the intricate imagery, so I enjoyed the short despite the disagreeable and mean-spirited cruelty that permeates the story.
Wes Anderson has four new short-films on Netflix. I think they're all based on Roald Dahl stories. Last night I watched the one called "The Swan," and I really had no idea what I was in for. I guess I had expected something comical, with melancholy undercurrents, like most of Anderson's work. Instead, the story is one of the most diabolical horror stories I've ever heard, diabolical because it is so realistic, so believable - describing the ordinary way in which young boys can do terrible things to each other. And yet, because it is expressed through Anderson's cute, stagey, pastel-colored style, there is a distancing effect which somehow makes the piece hit harder than a more realistic style might have. It has the power of a poem, or a song. The magical-realist ending concludes the piece on a mysterious, ambiguous note which can be read in different ways. My god, it's good. So sad, so powerful.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaOne of four Netflix shorts directed by Wes Anderson and based on stories by Roald Dahl, all released over four days in the same week: September 27-30, 2023.
- Part 1, La maravillosa historia de Henry Sugar (2023) - September 27
- Part 2, this film - September 28
- Part 3, The Rat Catcher (2023) - September 29
- Part 4, Poison (2023) - September 30
- Citas
Roald Dahl: Some people, when they have taken too much and have been driven beyond the point of endurance, simply crumble and collapse and give up. Others however, though they are not many, who will for some reason always be unconquerable. You meet them in time of war and also in time of peace. They have an indomitable spirit. And nothing, neither pain, nor torture, nor threat of death will cause them to give up. Little Peter Watson was one of these.
- ConexionesEdited into La maravillosa historia de Henry Sugar (2024)
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- Tiempo de ejecución17 minutos
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- 1.66 : 1
- 16 : 9
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By what name was The Swan (2023) officially released in India in English?
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