Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn extraordinary journey through the material that makes up our habitat: concrete and its ancestor, stone.An extraordinary journey through the material that makes up our habitat: concrete and its ancestor, stone.An extraordinary journey through the material that makes up our habitat: concrete and its ancestor, stone.
- Réalisation
- Scénariste
- Vedette
- Prix
- 7 nominations au total
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Avis en vedette
Stoned?
Whoever produced this most tedious POS deserves to stand in the corner with a dunce cap for a long time. So terribly boring & saying basically nothing except that gravity exists & rocks fall when dislodged that I could not skip forward fast enough. The most pretentious attempt at saying nothing that I have seen in a long time.
& those guys in the yard with the circle? They would do well in the back ward of a psychiatric hospital with their staggering vision & insights.
& those guys in the yard with the circle? They would do well in the back ward of a psychiatric hospital with their staggering vision & insights.
Natural World Crumble
Architecton is an interesting documentary that explores the ancient buildings, constructions, and the world perspective about the stones graved into the earth. It's a surreal experimental piece of art.
Director Victor Kossakovsky does a beautifully work on capturing the stones and the world of concrete by using gorgeous camerawork, intensifying soundtracks and colors presented. Each shot of the buildings and the rocks shines well on the magic about rocks and the amazement of concrete surface. The use of incredible sound designs, imagery and poetic nature structure was very purposeful and intriguing.
Being near dialogue free, at times, I did wish the documentary did focus a bit on certain context since there are certain aspects that I thought could have been explored a bit more. But overall, a really good documentary.
Director Victor Kossakovsky does a beautifully work on capturing the stones and the world of concrete by using gorgeous camerawork, intensifying soundtracks and colors presented. Each shot of the buildings and the rocks shines well on the magic about rocks and the amazement of concrete surface. The use of incredible sound designs, imagery and poetic nature structure was very purposeful and intriguing.
Being near dialogue free, at times, I did wish the documentary did focus a bit on certain context since there are certain aspects that I thought could have been explored a bit more. But overall, a really good documentary.
Yoo bad he cant architect a film
Watch the trailer for 2 hrs and that's pretty much the film. What a pretentious POS! Horrible documentary, how this has more than 10% is astounding. If you aren't able to answer the questions u ask at the end of the film than you need a broader education. Why do we use cement? Because it's the cheapest. It has to do with money. You obviously haven't been around the world as there are ple ty of places that still use natural resources to build with , such as wood and bamboo. What a useless, Garbage piece of a documentary.
Powerful journey through time and art
Wow. This is a really wild and amazing film. The visuals and cinematography are undeniably stunning! Just takes you to another place and time as it explores building, stone, and how we build as a society. Music was powerful and really important to the film as well. The story is a bit hard to decipher.. until later in the film when there is a conversation that sort of spells it out. Not sure that if that was the most effective or powerful way to relay the message to the audience. But even with that, it was a powerful ride that we were taken on. I really enjoyed it.
Incredible camera scheduling
The further you watch this film, the clearer your ideas become and the stronger the emotions. The text of the few lines is extremely sophisticated. The two old people do not try to give answers, but just describe a dream. Behind the dream are all the images of the film.
From destroyed building facades to ancient buildings, blasting to construction, the director filmed them all from an unusual perspective. The small stones are like running water, but the huge quarry is like a ripple.
From ancient times to the present, stones have been manipulated in this way in images and reality from start to end.
The tangled thoughts and emotions in the first half suddenly became clear when the "circle" was formed and began to expand slowly. Then you will start to admire the director's magical camera scheduling and arrangement. Master skill.
But the sound of the explosion was too sudden, even if it counted down.
After I left the house, I was still not satisfied, so I listened to "Cai Shi" by Omnipotent Youth Society. The perfect background music comes from "The theory of becoming".
From destroyed building facades to ancient buildings, blasting to construction, the director filmed them all from an unusual perspective. The small stones are like running water, but the huge quarry is like a ripple.
From ancient times to the present, stones have been manipulated in this way in images and reality from start to end.
The tangled thoughts and emotions in the first half suddenly became clear when the "circle" was formed and began to expand slowly. Then you will start to admire the director's magical camera scheduling and arrangement. Master skill.
But the sound of the explosion was too sudden, even if it counted down.
After I left the house, I was still not satisfied, so I listened to "Cai Shi" by Omnipotent Youth Society. The perfect background music comes from "The theory of becoming".
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesA24's first film to be rated G by the MPAA.
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 117 280 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 63 513 $ US
- 3 août 2025
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 278 906 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 38m(98 min)
- Couleur
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