Un drame sur l'artiste Margaret Keane, son succès phénoménal dans les années 1950 et les difficultés juridiques qu'elle a connues par la suite avec son mari, qui s'est attribué la paternité ... Tout lireUn drame sur l'artiste Margaret Keane, son succès phénoménal dans les années 1950 et les difficultés juridiques qu'elle a connues par la suite avec son mari, qui s'est attribué la paternité de ses oeuvres dans les années 1960.Un drame sur l'artiste Margaret Keane, son succès phénoménal dans les années 1950 et les difficultés juridiques qu'elle a connues par la suite avec son mari, qui s'est attribué la paternité de ses oeuvres dans les années 1960.
- Réalisation
- Scénaristes
- Vedettes
- Nominé pour le prix 2 BAFTA Awards
- 3 victoires et 18 nominations au total
- 2nd Olivetti Girl
- (as Emily Bruhn)
Avis en vedette
traditional biopic
This is a surprisingly traditional biopic from director Tim Burton. Other than the big eyed people that Margaret sees in a couple of scenes, there is nothing that is obviously Burtonesque. Amy Adams does a nice performance although I think her character is a little bit too willful at the beginning. It would be more dramatic to have her character grow over time. Christoph Waltz is amazing as the impresario manic salesman. In the end, this is a well made biopic with a couple of good performances and a couple of funny moments.
Big Eyes was a compelling film about the career of Margaret Keane and her hubby Walter's initial grabbing credit for her work
It's good, but not great.
And then there's the main problem: Christoph Waltz. He's not the only one at fault - his character goes from charming to cartoon villain which can certainly be blamed on the writers and Burton - but his over acted performance, particularly towards the end, completely obscured any depth that Walter's character may have had.
Amy Adams, on the other hand, is fantastic and certainly the movie's saving grace. I would have liked to see more of her relationship with Walter, more of what made her willing to keep cranking out paintings for her husband, though I suspect a more three-dimensional Walter would have been needed for that.
And the narrator/reporter was completely unnecessary. I kept forgetting he existed and then wondering who was talking for a few seconds before I remembered that the movie had a narrator.
All in all, entertaining but disappointing. 6/10
6.5/10
A premise that has lots of potential is partially wasted in aimless scenes or in repetitiveness. The film doesn't really make a point about anything and has way too much flashy stuff to feel grounded in any way. There would be nothing wrong there, but the fact that in it's uneven tone there seems to emerge a will to give an accurate and worthy recounting of these events makes so much of the drama feel out of nowhere. Storytelling isn't exactly where the movie succeeds. The courtroom scenes are definitely the weakest of all and made me mad multiple times because of their absolute preposterousness.
Anyways, the film is built around a strong enough cast, photography, premise, writing and design that it would be hard to get bored in anyway. The pace is fluent enough and the duration of the film is just about right for the content it presents. I wanted to like this more and see the story be given a better portrayal, but in no way I could say "Big Eyes" was a failure.
How manipulative can a person be?
Amy Adams puts on a really good performance as Margaret. Much like her roles in "Junebug", "Enchanted" and "Doubt", her character's idealism collapses when faced with reality. Christoph Waltz turns Walter into a mixture of smooth and terrifying, but a real creep more than anything.
This is a very different turn for Tim Burton. Far from his homages to horror flicks and swipes at suburban America, he takes a serious approach to the subject matter. I recommend the movie. Whether you know of the story or not, you're sure to be impressed with the movie. Margaret's paintings might not appeal to you - they don't appeal to me - it's important to know what she went through, and the movie does a good job looking at that.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMargaret Keane: Reading a book on a park bench behind Margaret and Walter, when they paint in front of the San Francisco Palace of Fine Arts. The end-credit photo of her sitting with Amy Adams was taken when this scene was filmed.
- Gaffes"Tomorrow Forever," the UNICEF painting Margaret Keane painted for the 1964 Worlds Fair, was never actually mounted in the Hall of Education. Robert Moses, who had control over everything that was included in the fair, hated it. Once New York Times critic John Canaday trashed it after seeing a photograph of it, Moses had it thrown into the garbage.
- Citations
Ruben: What's that with the big crazy eyes?
Walter Keane: Oh. Well, I believe that you can see things in the eyes. The eyes are the window to the soul.
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Big Eyes?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 10 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 14 482 031 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 3 001 738 $ US
- 28 déc. 2014
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 29 261 617 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 46m(106 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1






