Un écrivain de science-fiction, récemment veuf, se demande s'il faut adopter un garçon hyper-imaginatif de 6 ans abandonné et socialement rejeté qui dit qu'il vient de Mars.Un écrivain de science-fiction, récemment veuf, se demande s'il faut adopter un garçon hyper-imaginatif de 6 ans abandonné et socialement rejeté qui dit qu'il vient de Mars.Un écrivain de science-fiction, récemment veuf, se demande s'il faut adopter un garçon hyper-imaginatif de 6 ans abandonné et socialement rejeté qui dit qu'il vient de Mars.
- Prix
- 2 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDavid Gerrold, the author of the book, adopted a son as an openly-gay man. In his novella, the sexuality of the protagonist is not disclosed, but in his novel, he is identified as gay. In the film adaptation, the protagonist is straight (with a female love interest), causing some criticism from members of the gay community.
- GaffesWhen David receives the letter from child services, the envelope not only has six digits in the zip code instead of five, the state is listed as "CS", which does not exist. However, an early scene includes a tight shot of the front license plate of David's car, which says at the top "COASTAL STATE" where a real license plate would say "OREGON" or whatever. The production designers invented a state, a postal abbreviation (CS), and a ZIP code; bravo for this attention to detail and imagination!
- Citations
David: Dennis, can I just say one last thing about Mars? - which may be strange coming from a Science-Fiction writer - But right now, you and me here, put together entirely of atoms, sitting on this round rock with a core of liquid iron, held down by this force that seems to trouble you, called gravity, all the while spinning around the sun at 67,000 miles an hour and whizzing through the milkyway at 600,000 miles an hour in a universe that very well may be chasing its own tail at the speed of light; And admist all this frantic activity, fully cognisant of our own eminent demise - which is our own pretty way of saying we all know we're gonna die - We reach out to one another. Sometimes for the sake of entity, sometimes for reasons you're not old enough to understand yet, but a lot of the time we just reach out and expect nothing in return. Isn't that strange? Isn't that weird? Isn't that weird enough? The heck do ya need to be from Mars for?
- Générique farfeluThe end credits include the following: "This film was inspired by actual events; however, the characters and events have been fictionalized."
John Cusack plays David Gordon, a successful science fiction writer. His best selling book is in production as a big budget Hollywood movie. David's agent Jeff (neurotic Oliver Platt) desperately pleads with David to finish his book sequel draft. Their publisher Mimi (Anjelica Huston) anxiously awaits the draft, so she can throw a coming out party in 6 weeks. That is a little wacky. David's wife and the love of his life died two years ago, and since then much of his life is on hold. He lives in a great home with his dog, Somewhere. David's best friend is the beautiful and radiant Harlee (Amanda Peete)his wife's sister. This makes for a dicey storyline, given the way things usually evolve in these situations. Amanda Peete is great here. She has a naturalness and ease.
David gets a call from his social worker friend Sophie (Sophie Okonedo). Obviously David has reservations about a boy in a box who thinks he's from Mars. Sophie reassures, "You write about Mars." Thus, the experiment begins. David brings Dennis to his home on a trial basis. Dennis wears sun block and sunglasses to counteract being on a planet closer to the sun than Mars. He also wears a weight belt so as not to float away. And Dennis only eats Lucky Charmswhich are magically delicious.
David struggles his way through, and begins to really see Dennis. Dennis reminds him of his younger outsider self. David also starts wondering whether Dennis is really who he says he is following meaningful coincidences at a Cubs baseball game, and Dennis's apparent ability to taste color. This seems like a clumsy narrative device.
What eventually wins over "Martian Child" is the brilliant chemistry between John Cusack and Bobby Coleman. There is an inspired moment when Dennis and David gaze above at the stars. Coleman as Dennis embodies the right awkwardness and innocence. He touchingly asks David "Is it good to be like everyone else?" John Cusack is funny, frustrated and nobly compassionate as David evolves into a caring father. In a moving scene he tells Dennis, "There is nothing you can do to change the way I feel about you " Cusack commands the story's humanity and underlying strength.
We all want to make a difference in life. And we all want to able to love and be lovedthat is what it is to be human. "Martian Child" ultimately celebrates our humanity.
- jon.h.ochiai
- 11 nov. 2007
- Lien permanent
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Martian Child?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Martian Child
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 27 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 7 500 310 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 3 650 000 $ US
- 4 nov. 2007
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 9 411 042 $ US
- Durée1 heure 46 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1