Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMelodrama about a man cursed with immortality, who tries to declare his undying love for a depressed actress.Melodrama about a man cursed with immortality, who tries to declare his undying love for a depressed actress.Melodrama about a man cursed with immortality, who tries to declare his undying love for a depressed actress.
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- AnecdotesBased on the 1946 novel All Men Are Mortal by Simone de Beauvoir.
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Should've gone with the previous reviewer's 'warning' and not video'd the Jan 1st 3am showing. However there were some interesting moments and appearances - but these do not make this a satisfying cinematic experience. In fact they show how unpleasant and dysfunctional most of the characters are. The leads' presence and acting skill are not enough to lift this from C-movie territory, although as text it may well have worked far better. Occasional strange overdubs ('hospital laughing' scene is so bad it is in fact laughable) and apparent odd edits (may have been ITV's hands though) just add to the lack of atmosphere.
Oddities/highlights include the sole 'warm' character in the film, the lead female's Maid, who should be commended for introducing the only real human elements into this production. John Nettles' appearance as the slightly bumbling Theatre Company Director is quite endearing, and the post-intercourse scene Trumpet-Playing is pretty surreal. Steve Nicolson's ham-actor character with apparent socialist tendencies is somewhat confusing, and the inclusion of his boxing scene (where he gets decked whilst spouting self-written poetry by his true working-class opponent) is lightly humourous, if somewhat detached from the rest of the movie.
Overall a lot of the cast were capable of far more, and you wonder why they were doing this in 1995! Certainly curio value only.
Oddities/highlights include the sole 'warm' character in the film, the lead female's Maid, who should be commended for introducing the only real human elements into this production. John Nettles' appearance as the slightly bumbling Theatre Company Director is quite endearing, and the post-intercourse scene Trumpet-Playing is pretty surreal. Steve Nicolson's ham-actor character with apparent socialist tendencies is somewhat confusing, and the inclusion of his boxing scene (where he gets decked whilst spouting self-written poetry by his true working-class opponent) is lightly humourous, if somewhat detached from the rest of the movie.
Overall a lot of the cast were capable of far more, and you wonder why they were doing this in 1995! Certainly curio value only.
- CRUSHTRASH
- 1 janv. 2004
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 3 000 000 $US (estimé)
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By what name was All Men Are Mortal (1995) officially released in Canada in English?
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