ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,6/10
57 k
MA NOTE
Une jeune femme solitaire entreprend un voyage d'introspection à travers l'Amérique pour trouver une réponse à ses questions sur l'amour et croise sur son chemin une série de personnages déc... Tout lireUne jeune femme solitaire entreprend un voyage d'introspection à travers l'Amérique pour trouver une réponse à ses questions sur l'amour et croise sur son chemin une série de personnages décalés.Une jeune femme solitaire entreprend un voyage d'introspection à travers l'Amérique pour trouver une réponse à ses questions sur l'amour et croise sur son chemin une série de personnages décalés.
- Prix
- 5 nominations au total
Chad R. Davis
- Boyfriend
- (as Chad Davis)
Tracy Elizabeth Blackwell
- Matron
- (as Tracy Blackwell)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe name of the Jeremy's café "Klyuch" is actually the Russian word for key. It can be seen on the front door of the café in blue Cyrillic letters. Keys are an important plot point in the film because people leave them there often.
- GaffesWhen Elizabeth orders and eats steak at the café, her green knitted hat jumps higher up and lower down on her head multiple times between shots.
- Générique farfeluThe opening credits play over melting ice cream drizzling over blueberry pie, while the font is blueberry colored.
- Bandes originalesThe Story
Performed by Norah Jones
Written by Norah Jones
Courtesy of Blue Note Records
Published by Mutha Jones LLC / EMI Music Publishing
Commentaire en vedette
Wong is one of our three greatest living filmmakers.
He has transformed imagination for a planet. When real histories are written, artists like this will be appreciated for what they begin, giants compared to politicians who can only try to end things.
His last four films were transformative. Now he tries something outside his realm of mastery.
Like his main character, he has decided to travel the US in search of love. Also like his main character, he doesn't care about the story, only the afterglow. Its the mood that matters. In his previous films, he literally works without a script, creating an obvious vacuum where the story would be.
Here, he simply adopts a story that is so vacuous it leaves a similar hole. With a lesser artist, you would actually pay attention to the story and wonder about it. I suggest you simply ignore it, providing it with no more semiotic weight than the doorknobs which are so carefully photographed.
The idea here is simple: he finds a woman who by herself evokes a mood. He's done this before, and found creatures whose screen presence melts boundaries between stones allowing transparent slipperage. In this case, its Norah Jones, who does have a charm. His key image is of her drunk asleep on a diner counter with crumbs of delicious pastry on her full lips.
The way he's chosen to carry her image is through her songs, which contain a deceptive tension of confident tentativeness. This is a woman who is intensely unsettled and so is settled in herself. Jude Law plays a sort of urban domestic who prepares and waits, simply waits and draws her back.
In between the crumbs and the kiss are adventures with two women played by Rachel Weisz and Natalie Portman. They are placed as outer bounds on two sides so that our character's stone can slip home. One is remorsefully constrained by neediness, the other guiltily unconstrained. Both lose men, but not our heroine.
Christopher Doyle is not present on this, and its obvious that it is part of the risk Wong is taking: new country, new language, new mode for moodiness, new crew altogether. Different sorts of lingering and saturation.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
He has transformed imagination for a planet. When real histories are written, artists like this will be appreciated for what they begin, giants compared to politicians who can only try to end things.
His last four films were transformative. Now he tries something outside his realm of mastery.
Like his main character, he has decided to travel the US in search of love. Also like his main character, he doesn't care about the story, only the afterglow. Its the mood that matters. In his previous films, he literally works without a script, creating an obvious vacuum where the story would be.
Here, he simply adopts a story that is so vacuous it leaves a similar hole. With a lesser artist, you would actually pay attention to the story and wonder about it. I suggest you simply ignore it, providing it with no more semiotic weight than the doorknobs which are so carefully photographed.
The idea here is simple: he finds a woman who by herself evokes a mood. He's done this before, and found creatures whose screen presence melts boundaries between stones allowing transparent slipperage. In this case, its Norah Jones, who does have a charm. His key image is of her drunk asleep on a diner counter with crumbs of delicious pastry on her full lips.
The way he's chosen to carry her image is through her songs, which contain a deceptive tension of confident tentativeness. This is a woman who is intensely unsettled and so is settled in herself. Jude Law plays a sort of urban domestic who prepares and waits, simply waits and draws her back.
In between the crumbs and the kiss are adventures with two women played by Rachel Weisz and Natalie Portman. They are placed as outer bounds on two sides so that our character's stone can slip home. One is remorsefully constrained by neediness, the other guiltily unconstrained. Both lose men, but not our heroine.
Christopher Doyle is not present on this, and its obvious that it is part of the risk Wong is taking: new country, new language, new mode for moodiness, new crew altogether. Different sorts of lingering and saturation.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
- tedg
- 8 mars 2008
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- My Blueberry Nights
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 10 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 867 275 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 74 146 $ US
- 6 avr. 2008
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 22 007 671 $ US
- Durée1 heure 35 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Un baiser romantique (2007) officially released in India in Hindi?
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