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Moby Dick

  • Mini-série télévisée
  • 2011
  • PG
  • 1h 32m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,2/10
2,4 k
MA NOTE
Ethan Hawke and William Hurt in Moby Dick (2011)
The sole survivor of a lost whaling ship relates the tale of his captain's self-destructive obsession to hunt the white whale, Moby Dick.
Liretrailer2 min 36 s
1 vidéo
10 photos
AventureDrame

Le seul survivant d'un baleinier perdu raconte l'histoire de l'obsession autodestructrice de son capitaine de chasser la baleine blanche, Moby Dick.Le seul survivant d'un baleinier perdu raconte l'histoire de l'obsession autodestructrice de son capitaine de chasser la baleine blanche, Moby Dick.Le seul survivant d'un baleinier perdu raconte l'histoire de l'obsession autodestructrice de son capitaine de chasser la baleine blanche, Moby Dick.

  • Stars
    • William Hurt
    • Ethan Hawke
    • Charlie Cox
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,2/10
    2,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Stars
      • William Hurt
      • Ethan Hawke
      • Charlie Cox
    • 32Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 8Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 3 nominations au total

    Épisodes2

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux cotés1 saison2011

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:36
    Trailer

    Photos9

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    Rôles principaux25

    Modifier
    William Hurt
    William Hurt
    • Captain Ahab
    • 2011
    Ethan Hawke
    Ethan Hawke
    • Starbuck
    • 2011
    Charlie Cox
    Charlie Cox
    • Ishmael
    • 2011
    Eddie Marsan
    Eddie Marsan
    • Stubb
    • 2011
    Gillian Anderson
    Gillian Anderson
    • Elizabeth
    • 2011
    Billy Boyd
    Billy Boyd
    • Elijah
    • 2011
    Raoul Max Trujillo
    Raoul Max Trujillo
    • Queequeg
    • 2011
    Daniyah Ysrayl
    Daniyah Ysrayl
    • Pip
    • 2011
    James Gilbert
    James Gilbert
    • Steelkilt
    • 2011
    Matthew Lemche
    Matthew Lemche
    • Flask
    • 2011
    Billy Merasty
    Billy Merasty
    • Tashtego
    • 2011
    Lucky Ejim
    • Dagoo
    • 2011
    Gary Levert
    • Perth
    • 2011
    Richard Donat
    Richard Donat
    • Inn Landlord
    • 2011
    Sandy MacLean
    • Quaker Preacher
    • 2011
    Glen Matthews
    Glen Matthews
    • Tom
    • 2011
    Stephen McHattie
    Stephen McHattie
    • Rachel Captain
    • 2011
    Donald Sutherland
    Donald Sutherland
    • Father Mapple
    • 2011
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs32

    6,22.4K
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    Avis en vedette

    6echarlesgoodall

    linguistically soft on history

    The story treatment, production, and acting are all very good. The casting is excellent. The dialogue moves well among the characters.

    The long fiction takes a while to spin out when reading, and the writers have managed to retain the story in an efficient format. The historical background lays easily under the plot and dialogue and in short long shots. The character development and setup are worth the wait for the ocean drama.

    doubt though that we would find, in the novel or in the time period, statements like "I didn't sign on for this?" and "Are you OK?". OK for example is a modern word that came about in the middle of the last century, not a hundred years before. Nevertheless, the modern attributes to add to the flow and so I don't object.
    9m_winship

    Call me what you want!

    Call me Murf, no scratch that, call me Ishmael ! This version of Money Dick, and save your penis jokes for later, is quite good! I'd remembered at Newman we pulled apart all the characters and analyzed them to death! Ishmael in the bible, meant every man was for him, and every man was against him. Sounds like you and me! I think the reason most people enjoyed this awesome book was they could relate to all the characters plight and sorrows and hopes! You'll be pleased to know Ethan Hawke does a spectacular job at acting as the main protagonist ! Have fun with this three part movie, and as always, read the tome too! Pax, Murf
    jmcdnnll99

    Huh?

    It seems that each filmed version of Moby-Dick is compelled to be worse than the one before and that each embodier of the partially disembodied Ahab must make his predecessor seem better, not just in the distance of time but also in distanced performance. Who will underperform William Hurt I hope never to see. Each scriptwriter also must feel a need to demonstrate the superiority of Melville's original, both in his concept and execution. The most recent version appears somewhat like a Second City take on Moby-Dick Meets The Outsiders: all the tortured Jugendangst! Ethan Hawke does do a good C. Thomas Howell sendup, but Hawke should rather be doing a good performance of a first mate, one who is one step below the ship's master. Even the Pequod gets nonverisimilitude. A square-rigged whaler gets turned into a bark. If people cared enough to write, finance, film, and present what is generally regarded as a if not the preeminent work of American fiction, why was care and cash not more carefully scripted and directed? Even the cgi attempt at the whale of whales had the look of an audition submission for an early ScyFy project.
    6emmalsearle

    Not the best of Ahabs.

    I'm going to go out on a limb and say Moby Dick doesn't lend itself to film and TV adaptations. The tale is dramatic, it's action-packed, it's visual and it's exciting, but there's an awful lot in the original text that you have to leave out in order to film it coherently. Melville's book is encyclopedic. It tells you a lot about whales and whaling; the motivations of the whalers, the camaraderie on board, the mechanics of capturingand dissecting the largest animal in the ocean and extracting theuseful stuff that keeps America burning. This adaptation (and probably ANY adaptation) cuts to the chase, omitting these complex descriptions of whaling life in favour of characters and action, the meat and potatoes of Hollywood filmmaking. In doing so, it loses something of the quality of the story. It also loses the narrator: on TV, Ishmael, a witty and endearing narrator, becomes a one-dimensional protagonist, totally overshadowed by Ahab.

    This is Ahab's film. William Hurt dominates every scene he appears in, and he appears in most of them. I'm convinced he's pulling out all the stops, aiming for an Emmy. I'm not sure how else to explain the hammy overacting, the grizzly beard, the cheesy dialogue delivered in a carefully cultivated "old salt" accent (ie. "aargh!" "aye!"). Hurt thinks he's playing Hamlet, and he wants Ahab's descent into madness to be central to the story.

    Ahab is typically dark, cursed, scarred, traumatised, intimidating and vengeful. Hurt's Ahab is just plain crazy. He jokes around with his men, delivers many of his most serious lines while grinning through his beard and squinting his eyes. On board the Pequod, he's like everybody's affectionate but slightly volatile Grandpa, not averse to a hug or a bit of laugh over a stein of grog. He says too much, and much of it is hard to understand, delivered in a sing-song cadence with emphasis in unusual places. Oscillating between booming vocal projection of Shakespearean proportions and just plain talking to himself, and introspective mumbling in which he appears to be talking to himself, Hurt seems to be performing for his own benefit rather than for an audience. This is an attempt to indicate Ahab's madness in a way nobody else has done before, but it alienates the audience as well as his fellow actors, and it's just not good acting. He's a piratey caricature whose attempts at pathos are unpersuasive. I prefer Gregory Peck's intense, brooding Ahab. A good Ahab should indicate more than he actually says, a dark exterior concealing untold depths of turmoil and mystery - like the sea! Argh!

    Ethan Hawke is a solid Starbuck, and a very human foil to Hurt's gruff, squinty captain. He's emotional, penetrative, and seriously worried about the fate of the ship. More than anyone else he embodies the atmosphere of impending doom that plagues the voyage, and his sense of mortality is a visibly heavy burden. When Starbuck says that what he wants most from the journey is "to see Nantucket again", you believe him. He's a homesick sailor. At that point, everything's beginning to go awry and we'd all like to see the Pequod turn around and go home. Starbuck's finest hour comes at the very end - I won't give anything away, but it's profoundly moving. Hawke's performance salvaged something of an otherwise perfunctory adaptation.

    Moby himself is, of course, CGI. In short, like so many massive movie monsters, he doesn't look real. It's not bad CGI, but it's difficult to convey the sublime weightiness of such a vast, living creature with special effects. Moreover, Moby is no ordinary animal - he's an icon, with a personality and a sense of mischief. At it's heart, the story of a whale cheating a whaler is almost comic, with the feel of a fable. I wonder if an animation might capture the spirit of the character (Moby is a character!) more than live action film with CGI. For the most part, they do a pretty decent job of Moby, except for a totally unnecessary scene at the very end which is embarrassingly rudimentary and looks like a scene from a video game.

    In summary, as a production it could be worse, but it didn't add anything to my experience of the story. I couldn't help feeling some of the actors involved (Donald Sutherland, Gillian Anderson, William Hurt) were simply trying to add another period piece to their CV's. They fulfilled the brief, but their performances were not memorable. Honourable mentions go to Eddie Marsan, who was an excellent Stubbs, and Billy Boyd who makes an impressive cameo as deranged prophet Elijah. There were some saving graces, but I'm yet to see an adaptation of Moby Dick that captures the spirit of the book. As nautical tales go, Peter Weir's Master and Commander gives a more vivid impression of life at sea.

    This canonical story with the feel of a great myth is told and retold, so perhaps there is yet hope for a cinematic adaptation that does the book justice. No doubt someone will take another stab at Moby Dick in the not-too-distant future; pun absolutely intended.
    7mbristow-260-747932

    Well worth watching!

    (7.5/10) My husband and I picked it up at our local rental place and we were surprised at how well it was done. Really strong performances from William Hurt and Ethan Hawke as Ahab and Starbuck, and the rest of the roles were well-cast, too. The filmmakers managed to capture a lot of the symbolism and themes of Melville's novel, and if you think about what was happening in Melville's time (civil war was brewing, American society seemed to be disintegrating), the mini-series makes it clear that the story was about much more than a Nantucket whaling expedition. Melville was issuing a warning to his fellow Americans that still has resonance today. We're Canadian, so it was fun to see that much of the movie was filmed in Nova Scotia. The whale special effects were a little weak at times, but otherwise, well worth watching.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Cast member Gillian Anderson first came to fame playing Dana Scully on the TV series Aux frontières du réel (1993). It was mentioned several times throughout the run of the series that Scully and her family were big fans of Herman Melville's book 'Moby Dick': her nickname for her Naval officer father was "Captain Ahab;" his nickname for her was "Starbuck;" and her dog, which she named Queequeg, was, like its namesake, also an eater of humans (the dog ate the body of its previous owner).
    • Connexions
      Referenced in The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Episode #19.190 (2011)

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    • How many seasons does Moby Dick have?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 27 novembre 2011 (Germany)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Germany
    • Sites officiels
      • arabuloku.com
      • Official site (Germany)
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Mobi Dik
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Malta Film Studios, St. Rocco Street, Kalkara, Malta
    • sociétés de production
      • Gate Filmproduktion
      • Tele München Fernseh Produktionsgesellschaft (TMG)
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 32 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.78 : 1

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