Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA 1930s-set story centered on the University of Washington's rowing team, from their Depression-era beginnings.A 1930s-set story centered on the University of Washington's rowing team, from their Depression-era beginnings.A 1930s-set story centered on the University of Washington's rowing team, from their Depression-era beginnings.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Prix
- 2 victoires et 6 nominations au total
Tom Varey
- Johnny White
- (as Thomas Stephen Varey)
Avis en vedette
I don't like sport but I do love a good sport's movie after my Sunday roast.
This has everything you would expect, down-trodden beautiful people who need to strive to win a game of sports.
This has a very traditional feel about it with a fairly standard hero and romantic interest which, bizarrely, felt quite refreshing.
The boys row the boat and get knocked down but then do better to some rousing music.
There really is nothing new here but the people making this film realised it and ran with it.
It is great to watch a film that isn't trying to be something it is not.
The costumes and sets are amazing and you get a real (although sanitised) feel for the time.
The story focuses on a few characters meaning other members of the crew fade into the background - but the main characters have enough to them to carry this along.
There is nothing to get excited, upset or hot under the collar here - just a good honest story.
I miss movies like this.
My only criticism is it felt a little long - but then that is what Sunday afternoons are all about.
This has everything you would expect, down-trodden beautiful people who need to strive to win a game of sports.
This has a very traditional feel about it with a fairly standard hero and romantic interest which, bizarrely, felt quite refreshing.
The boys row the boat and get knocked down but then do better to some rousing music.
There really is nothing new here but the people making this film realised it and ran with it.
It is great to watch a film that isn't trying to be something it is not.
The costumes and sets are amazing and you get a real (although sanitised) feel for the time.
The story focuses on a few characters meaning other members of the crew fade into the background - but the main characters have enough to them to carry this along.
There is nothing to get excited, upset or hot under the collar here - just a good honest story.
I miss movies like this.
My only criticism is it felt a little long - but then that is what Sunday afternoons are all about.
We waited so long for this movie to be made, ever since Daniel James Brown wrote the story. A serendipitous set of events led to the story even being recorded, as Judy Rantz Willman just happened to have Daniel James Brown as a neighbor, and eventually persuaded Brown to visit her father, who was in hospice care. What he thought was a social visit, she saw as a book about to be written. His initial skepticism evaporated quickly, when Joe began sharing his story. In Joe's remaining couple of months of life, Brown met with Rantz several times to begin creating the outline for the book. He then met with the families of the other crew members, followed by two years of further research, aided by Judy Rantz. The eight were amazing people, accustomed to hardship and personal challenges. For example, when Don Hume's family moved from Anacortes to Olympia, Don tossed his belongings into a rowboat and paddled down Puget Sound to his new home, roughly 100 miles away. Look at a map! A multiple-sport letterman in high school, he had also placed third in a state pianist's competition. And Joe Rantz was such a standout athlete in gymnastics at Roosevelt High School, that Coach Ulbrickson already had his eye on him then. So, what did we miss in the movie? Joe's difficult pre-college life is mostly absent, and worth the read by itself. We also miss Joe's wanderings around Berlin, where he witnesses Germany's horrific treatment of its Jewish population, under its totalitarian leader. Like nearly everything from Hollywood, a bit of romance is thrown in to add spice, but the story shines, throughout the picture. Here and there a bit of drama is added for effect, but personalities presented by the actors conform closely with who they represented. George Pocock really was the sage he seemed in the movie. Don Hume comes across as a bit socially awkward in the movie. A good friend met him several years ago where she worked, and described him as, uh, gruff. The fearless audacity of the team comes through in a story told only in the book. Before sailing to Germany for the Olympics, the team decides to drop in, unannounced, on Franklin Roosevelt at his home. Although they didn't find the president at home, they did spend the evening there. The story behind this movie is too remarkably wonderful to be fiction. See the movie, but by all means read the book!
Boys in the Boat is maybe my favorite nonfiction book of all time. The story of Joe Rantz is inspiring tragic and incredibly easy to root.
The boys in the boat movie captures the beauty of rowing and team work, but it only begins to scratch the surface of the depth of these real life characters.
The biggest flaw in this movie is the writing and at times the dialogue. The writers boil down the tragedies of Joe Rantz and his teammates to simplistic and generic back stories when it would have lead to a more emotional movie to focus on how little these people were given in there life's and how much they were able to accomplish.
While it was still enjoyable and inspiring to watch this classic story, with the material that they had, they should have created a much more emotional and factual film.
I would recommend this movie to anyone but I would highly recommend people read the book.
The boys in the boat movie captures the beauty of rowing and team work, but it only begins to scratch the surface of the depth of these real life characters.
The biggest flaw in this movie is the writing and at times the dialogue. The writers boil down the tragedies of Joe Rantz and his teammates to simplistic and generic back stories when it would have lead to a more emotional movie to focus on how little these people were given in there life's and how much they were able to accomplish.
While it was still enjoyable and inspiring to watch this classic story, with the material that they had, they should have created a much more emotional and factual film.
I would recommend this movie to anyone but I would highly recommend people read the book.
I loved book, I saw the PBS documentary, but was sorry to see early poor reviews for this film. Saw a promo on tv that it was opening on Christmas Day, and snagged a seat, but I had very little expectation that it would be good. Boy, was I wrong! This film held my attention fully, and given the terrible nature of our society right now, it was a total breath of fresh air to be transported to another time and place. Not since Indiana Jones have I felt so fully ensconced in The Great Depression, by the beautiful cinematography, perfect costuming, and fine acting depicting the sheer difficulty of just surviving in the US then. I understand some poignant issues for Joe Rantz needed to be removed from the movie due to time constraints, but all are easily accessible to anyone wanting more information. In short, I have a newfound respect for George Clooney, who made a very fine film.
These were the days of an almighty depression, when the world and its people were enveloped by recession, when food was hard to find, most folks were in a bind, and a group of desperate lads, came together as one plus seven. Coach Al Ulbrickson selects the team that he believes can win, makes a change or two to bolster a new cox as the kingpin, there are trials tribulations, before they challenge other nations, at the 36 Olympics taking place, Deutschland, Berlin. So the tensions elevated and the heats are raced and rowed, the strategy is simple at half way they just explode, but the Germans take a shot, in front of Adolf their despot, you'll have to watch the final sequence to find out winning boatload.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn a scene during the Olympics, there is mention of Ran Laurie in the British boat. Ran Laurie was the father of actor Hugh Laurie.
- GaffesThe newsreel in the movie says Jesse Owens is from the University of Ohio. While there is an Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, he was actually a student at The Ohio State University --- so named in 1878, well before 1936.
- Citations
German Oarsman: Heil Hitler!
Johnny White: Remember the Alamo!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Jimmy Kimmel Live!: George Clooney/Kumail Nanjani/Lenny Kravitz (2023)
- Bandes originalesUntil Life Turns Your Way Again
Written and Performed by Ian James Donaldson
Courtesy of Black Toast Music
Meilleurs choix
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Boys in the Boat
- Lieux de tournage
- Cleveland Lakes Nature Reserve, Ashton Keynes, Swindon, Wiltshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(University of Washington Boathouse, Berlin Olympics)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 40 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 52 641 306 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 8 400 548 $ US
- 31 déc. 2023
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 55 501 365 $ US
- Durée
- 2h 3m(123 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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