Une jeune journaliste américaine bloquée dans le Nicaragua d'aujourd'hui s'éprend d'un Anglais énigmatique qui semble être sa meilleure chance de s'échapper. Mais elle se rend vite compte qu... Tout lireUne jeune journaliste américaine bloquée dans le Nicaragua d'aujourd'hui s'éprend d'un Anglais énigmatique qui semble être sa meilleure chance de s'échapper. Mais elle se rend vite compte qu'il est peut-être encore plus en danger qu'elle.Une jeune journaliste américaine bloquée dans le Nicaragua d'aujourd'hui s'éprend d'un Anglais énigmatique qui semble être sa meilleure chance de s'échapper. Mais elle se rend vite compte qu'il est peut-être encore plus en danger qu'elle.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 5 nominations au total
Avis en vedette
Our protagonists are desperate people. There is subterfuge. There is danger. There's sex. There are secrets. There's heat, in the air and in their touch.
Qualley is riveting. She's on the move. Desperation emanates from her skin. Her glib retorts belie the fear darting from her wide eyes. She is relentless in her ability to look for allies.
Alwyn is at first slow, measured, calm. Later, there's anxiety building within his edifice of control. He is abandoned. He is left.
These are two people caught up in circumstances beyond their control. Each has lost their moorings. Needing each other, yet hesitant to fully trust. They are in their own singular world for which they are ill equipped & poorly prepared.
Sex brings comfort; momentary perhaps, yet with a sense of intimacy and security. They are thrown together on the run.
Denis creates a milieu of darkness, where one cannot see well. Then there cracks letting streaks of light in. Could it be love?
... a well-made (even if was not in 'that' country), and well-acted film.. Margaret Qualley has the MacDowell acting chops of her mom and here in this production it's hard taking eyes off her.. she shines brilliant, even covered in sweat and mud much of the time
... not an entertaining film in the normal sense watching, you just have to go with its raw qualities, feeling like you were there evidencing the happenings... not all questions get answered.
Claire Denis' ability to fill a screen with intensity is often here, but I was expecting a more textured expression of her lifelong engagement with the asymmetries of North-South interactions, so acutely deployed in films like "Chocolat" and "Beau travail". Perhaps because she's working in English (why?) and working in Central America instead of in the African settings in which she grew up, there is a disappointing lack of specificity here -- everything is generic and , surprisingly for this director, much of it verges on cliché. (And, just to make things even more frustrating, much of the dialogue, though in English, is indecipherable, especially that of Margaret Qualley, the high-intensity She in this She/He tale -- she slurs and garbles a lot of her lines, sounding almost like a non-native speaker with some slight but unidentifiable accent, though she's supposed to be an American -- something a native-speaker director might have been at greater pains to correct.)
In the Q&A this evening, Mme Denis emphasized how much she admired. Denis Johnson's novel, making it clear that this project had been in gestation for a long time (longer still due to all the well-known barriers to getting anything done during pandemic times). Though Johnson was dead before the screenplay was written, he is given a screen-writer credit -- Mme Denis was a pains to point out that much of the dialogue was lifted verbatim from the novel. That may be part of the problem -- she speaks reasonably good English, but she perhaps lacks the ability to spot (as surely she would in French) how wooden some of the lines are, and how unnatural much of the speech.
So, despite some trademark striking Claire Denis sequences, the applause at Alice Tully Hall was pretty perfunctory (for the film -- much more enthusiasm, deservedly, for her), and I'm guessing that, of the 1,000, more or less, people there, many, like me, left scratching their heads and wondering what that had all been about, and who was doing what (onscreen and in the opaque background) to whom, and why. Despite its Grand Prix at Cannes, this, alas, will probably not go down as a masterpiece, which, coming from her, has to be a disappointment.
Possibly would have been better with different lead actors?
Script seemed poor, and situations unbelievable.
But hey, you may like it? But it wasn't for me.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRobert Pattinson was originally cast alongside Margaret Qualley as the lead, but had to leave the project due to filming commitments for Le Batman (2022) following delays of shooting due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Taron Egerton was cast as Pattinson's replacement, however he dropped out as well before filming started due to personal reasons and Joe Alwyn took the role.
- Citations
Teen Travel Agent: Fuck is a good word. Fuck is the property of the whole world.
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 225 509 $ US
- Durée
- 2h 15m(135 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1