L'histoire du célèbre groupe de rock influent des années 60, The Doors et de son chanteur et compositeur, Jim Morrison, depuis ses années comme étudiant en cinéma à l'UCLA, à Los Angeles, ju... Tout lireL'histoire du célèbre groupe de rock influent des années 60, The Doors et de son chanteur et compositeur, Jim Morrison, depuis ses années comme étudiant en cinéma à l'UCLA, à Los Angeles, jusqu'à sa mort à Paris, à l'âge de 27 ans en 1971.L'histoire du célèbre groupe de rock influent des années 60, The Doors et de son chanteur et compositeur, Jim Morrison, depuis ses années comme étudiant en cinéma à l'UCLA, à Los Angeles, jusqu'à sa mort à Paris, à l'âge de 27 ans en 1971.
- Prix
- 3 nominations
- Shaman
- (as Floyd Red Crow Westerman)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRobby Krieger, the guitarist in The Doors, insisted that the scene showing the band rehearsing "Light My Fire" makes this clear that he, not Jim Morrison, composed the song.
- GaffesWhen Jim Morrison is on a window ledge in 1971, a billboard advertising 48 heures de plus (1990) is visible.
- Citations
Jim Morrison: Some of the worst mistakes of my life have been haircuts.
- Autres versionsA special edition of the movie was released in 1997 on laserdisc with additional scenes that were cut from the movie:
- A scene taking place circa 1965 with Jim Morrison (Kilmer) jamming onstage with Ray's band, adding obscene lyrics to the Van Morrison song "Gloria."
- 2 additional scenes of a bearded Jim reciting poetry in the recording studio.
- Additional footage of Jim singing "The Unknown Soldier" at the New Haven concert.
- A scene of Jim getting roughed up and harrassed in jail by police officers after being arrested at the New Haven concert.
- Jim in his hotel room with 2 young women and Pam (Meg Ryan) yelling at him from outside.
- Additional footage in the scene where Jim is on an airplane en route to Miami.
- Additional scene at the end with Jim and Ray (Kyle Machlachlan) walking around Venice and talking before he departs for Paris.
- Jim and Pam talking in the airplane en route to Paris.
As good as Kilmer is you can't help but feel that his performance deserved to be surrounded by a better film. The film might as well have been titled "Morrison" because it is much more the story of one man than it is the story of his band. And therein lies much of the problem because while Kilmer is undeniably terrific, Morrison, at least as he is portrayed in this film, is not a very sympathetic character. That shy, quiet guy we see on the beach at the film's beginning becomes a bit of a monster, at times almost completely unlikable. And since the film revolves entirely around Morrison it makes the film often hard to embrace. Many would argue that Morrison was unfairly portrayed here, not nearly as mean-spirited and hot-tempered as we are led to believe. The truth probably lies somewhere in between but the fact remains that in this film it is very hard to embrace Jim Morrison and as such it is very hard to completely embrace the film.
With the focus almost completely on Kilmer's Morrison the rest of the cast comes off as little more than bit players. Kyle MacLachlan as keyboardist Ray Manzarek has the most to do amongst the remaining band members and his performance is fine but it really gets swallowed up by the ever-present and always center stage Morrison. Meg Ryan, playing Morrison's longtime companion Pamela Courson, is allowed only to react to Morrison's antics and never establishes a character and identity of her own. Even when stoned out of her mind, as everybody in this film always seems to be, Pamela comes across as the wholesome girl next door who is, well, rather dull. Kathleen Quinlan has a more memorable turn as another woman in Morrison's life, Patricia Kennealy, who is anything but dull. But again her character is there only to serve Jim. It's always about Jim. Nobody could deny that Jim Morrison was the most captivating figure in The Doors. But as the film unfolds and you watch Morrison stumble from one stupor to the next you'll probably wish we could have spent a little more time with some of the other characters. This film version of Jim Morrison is a hard guy to love.
So in the end what are we left with? You get one awe-inspiring, magnificent performance but that performance overshadows everything else going on in the film. You get a fascinating life story but one that unfortunately proceeds mostly in a frustrating drug-induced haze. You certainly get a tremendous soundtrack with all of The Doors' most notable songs. Well, most of them anyway. There seems to be a real yin and yang with this movie. There is plenty that is very good about it, but all that is good seems to be balanced out by something which frustrates. Jim Morrison led an extraordinary life but this film which tells his tale ends up being rather ordinary.
- hall895
- 29 mai 2006
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 38 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 34 416 893 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 9 151 800 $ US
- 3 mars 1991
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 34 494 884 $ US