Une histoire de vie et de genre basée sur la nouvelle de Stephen King, qui raconte trois chapitres de la vie d'un homme ordinaire nommé Charles Krantz.Une histoire de vie et de genre basée sur la nouvelle de Stephen King, qui raconte trois chapitres de la vie d'un homme ordinaire nommé Charles Krantz.Une histoire de vie et de genre basée sur la nouvelle de Stephen King, qui raconte trois chapitres de la vie d'un homme ordinaire nommé Charles Krantz.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 4 nominations au total
Saidah Arrika Ekulona
- Andrea
- (as Saidah Ekulona)
Avis à la une
I so very much enjoy Tom Hiddleston in films. Karen Gillan is also a treat to watch in selected films. The rest of the cast is worth more than an honorable mention alone, as many familiar faces grace the screen (especially toward the beginning of the film). Lastly, I tend to love this 'type' of movie. I can't give too much away without using a spoiler tag, but if you watch the interview(s) with the cast featured here on IMDB, you'll know what "type" I am referring to. I wonder if I can get away with 'apocalyptic', since that is a word straight from one of these interviews.
That said ... it was a bit of a letdown for me.
The beginning was slow, but it was good. It built an expectancy toward so much more and a feeling that it was going to get so much better. Sadly, that was never fully realized or delivered.
Beginning in the second act, the film definitely starts to bog down and suffers from side or follow-up scenes that are just way too long and a bit far-fetched. The narration, too, is used far too often to the point of it just about verging on annoying.
By the third act, when they begin to introduce what is supposed to be the point of the entire thing, it has already been too bogged down by too much of not enough - if that makes sense. While the child actor is adorable and does so well, here too the movie just drags.
Moreover, everything is so overly-EXPLAINED. It's kind of like Flanagan did not trust the audience to understand what was happening, so either the narrator or characters went to great lengths to explain every detail. Well, while some may disagree, I believe audiences are more intelligent than this film gives them (us) credit for.
Sorry Mike Flanagan fans, but this is the third time I have been let down by one of his offerings. :(
That said ... it was a bit of a letdown for me.
The beginning was slow, but it was good. It built an expectancy toward so much more and a feeling that it was going to get so much better. Sadly, that was never fully realized or delivered.
Beginning in the second act, the film definitely starts to bog down and suffers from side or follow-up scenes that are just way too long and a bit far-fetched. The narration, too, is used far too often to the point of it just about verging on annoying.
By the third act, when they begin to introduce what is supposed to be the point of the entire thing, it has already been too bogged down by too much of not enough - if that makes sense. While the child actor is adorable and does so well, here too the movie just drags.
Moreover, everything is so overly-EXPLAINED. It's kind of like Flanagan did not trust the audience to understand what was happening, so either the narrator or characters went to great lengths to explain every detail. Well, while some may disagree, I believe audiences are more intelligent than this film gives them (us) credit for.
Sorry Mike Flanagan fans, but this is the third time I have been let down by one of his offerings. :(
I went into The Life of Chuck knowing nothing about it other than it being a Stephen King novella.
I assumed the movie was going to be horror, and I was so wrong, in the best way. Mike Flanagan was a director I was unfamiliar with as well - so my expectations were really empty.
That being said - The Life of Chuck took the beats of what makes a great horror film - fleshed out and relatable characters with a unique and mysterious situation to put them in.
I want to leave my critique relatively vague as I believe the hook of the film works best going in without knowing much.
I left the film feeling a mix of joy and melancholy and appreciated the artistry that brought me there.
I do recommend.
I assumed the movie was going to be horror, and I was so wrong, in the best way. Mike Flanagan was a director I was unfamiliar with as well - so my expectations were really empty.
That being said - The Life of Chuck took the beats of what makes a great horror film - fleshed out and relatable characters with a unique and mysterious situation to put them in.
I want to leave my critique relatively vague as I believe the hook of the film works best going in without knowing much.
I left the film feeling a mix of joy and melancholy and appreciated the artistry that brought me there.
I do recommend.
Summed up, Mike Flanagan made a deep, multilayered yet beautiful film about the value of life. It's really hard to explain but Flanagan does not waste a single shot. There is a narration throughout the movie, yet right from 'Act Three,' everything seen and experienced unfolds perfectly in 'Act One.' Ejiofor & Gillan are fantastic in Act Three but if The Life of Chuck is to be nominated for anything, it has to be the sound. From the cosmic elements in 'Act Three' to the dancing scenes in 'Acts Two & One,' Flanagan did an exceptional job incorporating the sound throughout.
Of course, everyone was focusing on Hiddleston and his character, but Tom even mentioned it was really a team effort in Act Two and Annalise Basso, Hiddleston's dance partner in Act Two, and Taylor Gordon (who is in the credits as The Pocket Queen), the busker, all three combined with their choreographers Mandy Moore & Stephanie Powell really make the dance scene sing. Taylor Gordon is a talent in herself in her brief, but excellent role.
What surprised me was how Act One was with young Chuck and no one talks about how excellent the kids were. Their performances were just as brilliant as the adults, if not more so when young Chuck receives a very haunting monologue from his grandfather (an unbelievable Mark Hamill) about certain choices in life. Act One really helps put the puzzle together that was Act Three, where the cosmic elements can be off-putting, but it all serves a purpose. Stephen King is right when he says The Life of Chuck is one of the good ones. The spirit and energy is felt from beginning to end, and with all on board performances giving their best, Flanagan is further establishing himself as one of contemporary's greater directors.
One thing I will say is The Life of Chuck is dedicated In Memory to Scott Wampler. And there are a few cameos in The Life of Chuck but Scott's inclusion just tugged me right at the heart. Great film.
Of course, everyone was focusing on Hiddleston and his character, but Tom even mentioned it was really a team effort in Act Two and Annalise Basso, Hiddleston's dance partner in Act Two, and Taylor Gordon (who is in the credits as The Pocket Queen), the busker, all three combined with their choreographers Mandy Moore & Stephanie Powell really make the dance scene sing. Taylor Gordon is a talent in herself in her brief, but excellent role.
What surprised me was how Act One was with young Chuck and no one talks about how excellent the kids were. Their performances were just as brilliant as the adults, if not more so when young Chuck receives a very haunting monologue from his grandfather (an unbelievable Mark Hamill) about certain choices in life. Act One really helps put the puzzle together that was Act Three, where the cosmic elements can be off-putting, but it all serves a purpose. Stephen King is right when he says The Life of Chuck is one of the good ones. The spirit and energy is felt from beginning to end, and with all on board performances giving their best, Flanagan is further establishing himself as one of contemporary's greater directors.
One thing I will say is The Life of Chuck is dedicated In Memory to Scott Wampler. And there are a few cameos in The Life of Chuck but Scott's inclusion just tugged me right at the heart. Great film.
I haven't read the Stephen King novella the film is based on, but The Life of Chuck feels more like an emotional experiment than a fully fleshed-out story. It clearly wants to be deep, weaving time, memory, and mortality into a puzzle-like structure, but it often slips into sentimentality instead. The film leans heavily on melancholy and nostalgia, which might resonate more with viewers going through personal loss or depression. For me, though, it lacked real emotional depth beneath the poetic surface. That said, the performances are strong, and the concept is intriguing, even if it never quite delivers the impact it aims for.
I went into this with no idea about what this film was about, other than it was supposedly life-affirming and feel-good.
The structure of the movie wasn't something I expected, but understand the intentions. The movie starts with the 3rd act, which is completely detached from the bulk of the movie. I don't want to add spoilers, so won't go into too much detail but to me, this 3rd act sets up a completely different movie to the one that plays out. Again, I understand the intentions, but I was ready for a completely different type of movie by the end of the 3rd act.
Acts 1 & 2 are great and more in-fitting with what I presume are the intentions of the story, but even here, I wouldn't say "life-affirming" or "feel-good" are the emotions I left with. In the end I left with melancholy and sadness, both at the story of Chuck, but also what this movie could have been.
Production, acting and cinematography are all excellent, so no complaints there. It's just that 3rd act at the beginning that threw me. As I said above, I was ready for a totally different type of movie, which I think would have been far more interesting to explore i.e. - end of the world and, rather more interestingly, not setting up a complete hellscape/dystopia, but instead seeing individual and society's reactions as they try to cling on to normality and watching things evolve as things progressively decline.
On the whole, I enjoyed this film, but I didn't "love" it, nor would I sing its praises too much if quizzed about it.
The structure of the movie wasn't something I expected, but understand the intentions. The movie starts with the 3rd act, which is completely detached from the bulk of the movie. I don't want to add spoilers, so won't go into too much detail but to me, this 3rd act sets up a completely different movie to the one that plays out. Again, I understand the intentions, but I was ready for a completely different type of movie by the end of the 3rd act.
Acts 1 & 2 are great and more in-fitting with what I presume are the intentions of the story, but even here, I wouldn't say "life-affirming" or "feel-good" are the emotions I left with. In the end I left with melancholy and sadness, both at the story of Chuck, but also what this movie could have been.
Production, acting and cinematography are all excellent, so no complaints there. It's just that 3rd act at the beginning that threw me. As I said above, I was ready for a totally different type of movie, which I think would have been far more interesting to explore i.e. - end of the world and, rather more interestingly, not setting up a complete hellscape/dystopia, but instead seeing individual and society's reactions as they try to cling on to normality and watching things evolve as things progressively decline.
On the whole, I enjoyed this film, but I didn't "love" it, nor would I sing its praises too much if quizzed about it.
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Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis marks Mia Sara's return to acting since 2013. She had retired but told filmmaker Mike Flanagan she would return to acting for him after watching Sermons de minuit (2021).
- GaffesToutes les informations contiennent des spoilers
- Citations
Charles 'Chuck' Krantz: I will live my life until my life runs out.
- ConnexionsFeatures La reine de Broadway (1944)
- Bandes originalesGimme Some Lovin'
Written by Spencer Davis, Steve Winwood and Muff Winwood
Performed by Steve Winwood
Courtesy of Wincraft Music Inc
By arrangement with Kobalt Music Group
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- How long is The Life of Chuck?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 6 712 600 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 224 585 $US
- 8 juin 2025
- Montant brut mondial
- 13 081 480 $US
- Durée
- 1h 51min(111 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
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