Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThis two-part, four-hour documentary delves into the world of a 15th-century art titan and unravels his journey while shedding light on his lasting impact on future generations.This two-part, four-hour documentary delves into the world of a 15th-century art titan and unravels his journey while shedding light on his lasting impact on future generations.This two-part, four-hour documentary delves into the world of a 15th-century art titan and unravels his journey while shedding light on his lasting impact on future generations.
- Création originale
- Stars
- Nommé pour 1 Primetime Emmy
- 2 nominations au total
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Informative but reverential
Ken Burns makes solid, comprehensive documentaries about self-counsciously big subjects - not for him small, quirky tales. Leonarda da Vinci is thus perhaps an unsurprising subject, and the result is genuinely educational, but also extremely reverential. The narrative talks about the maestro's sense of fun, but the documentary itself is characterised by awe. In its conclusion, it does mention that a previous view, of Leonardo as a self-contained superman aside from broader renaissance thought, has gone out of fashion; but it might almost be seen as trying to restore it. To its credit, the series isn't all gush, and it does explain what made his art (and thinking) revolutionary. It's certainly worth watching even if it tries a bit too hard.
Great material...but told in a rather boring way.
Leonardo Da Vinci was an incredibly interesting man. However, there's one huge problem...the guy died 500 years ago and very few of his paintings exist today. This makes it difficult to imagine a four-hour documentary about him, but Ken Burns did manage to tackle it...four hours and all. For me, this is one of the big problems with the documentary...there's enough material for about two hours and as a result the show seems VERY padded. Additionally, I have no idea why some folks were in the film...especially Guillermo Del Toro. The link between this great director and Da Vinci aren't clear at all. Overall, while Burns made some terrific documentaries, this isn't one of them...being too long, too slow and it actually manages to make Leonardo a bit dull!
A most inquisitive mind
I found this documentary to be captivating and insightful. The degree of Da Vinci's scope, talents, creativity, and inquisitive nature are on full display. This doc shows how important and ahead of his time Leonardo's drawings, paintings, designs and scientific inquiries were.
Some of the bad reviews I've seen are almost laughable. It's boring or...it has some subtitles. Really? That speaks volumes of the mindset of some of the negative reviews. Dullards who seem to need popcorn mainstream fare, instead of a thoughtful, poetic, insight into one of the most magnificent minds this world has ever known.
Watch this documentary and be captivated by an inquisitive and supremely talented man and the amazing world he lives in.
Some of the bad reviews I've seen are almost laughable. It's boring or...it has some subtitles. Really? That speaks volumes of the mindset of some of the negative reviews. Dullards who seem to need popcorn mainstream fare, instead of a thoughtful, poetic, insight into one of the most magnificent minds this world has ever known.
Watch this documentary and be captivated by an inquisitive and supremely talented man and the amazing world he lives in.
Subtitles?
I basically agree with Jezlang's comments on the use of subtitles in this presentation. This is a film about ART; the subtitles are just annoying and distracting. This would have been more effective if there had been a translated voiceover of the non-English speakers. That way I would not have had to split my attention between what was being said, and the art that was being discussed. And yes, somebody should have noticed that small yellow subtitles don't work well on a sepia background!
Ken Burns should know better. Imagine the great Civil War series with subtitles instead of narrations.
These subtitles are almost as annoying as the IMDB character count!
Ken Burns should know better. Imagine the great Civil War series with subtitles instead of narrations.
These subtitles are almost as annoying as the IMDB character count!
Review of Reviewers
This is not a review of the series, because I think it is compelling and interesting.
My review is of the idiocy of the reviews. The main complaint seems to be that there are subtitles and people don't want to read, which to me is pure laziness. Italians speak italian. Get over it. If you need things narrated for you and hate hearing non-English speakers, you are the problem. Not this documentary.
And the other complaint is there is not enough focus on the Mona Lisa, which has been discussed ad nauseum by others. I loved learning about his sketches and writings and smaller works. This is not a Mona Lisa doc. There are plenty of others out there for you to watch.
Reviewers, do better.
My review is of the idiocy of the reviews. The main complaint seems to be that there are subtitles and people don't want to read, which to me is pure laziness. Italians speak italian. Get over it. If you need things narrated for you and hate hearing non-English speakers, you are the problem. Not this documentary.
And the other complaint is there is not enough focus on the Mona Lisa, which has been discussed ad nauseum by others. I loved learning about his sketches and writings and smaller works. This is not a Mona Lisa doc. There are plenty of others out there for you to watch.
Reviewers, do better.
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Détails
- Durée
- 3h 40min(220 min)
- Couleur
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