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Aiello a écrit:Tant que c'est pas sur ton avatar.![]()
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horatio a écrit:Perso je pourrais faire un topic de 30 pages sur "la cité de la peur".
Bilge Ebiri dans Village Voice, LA Weekly, New Times Broward-Palm Beach, Houston Press et Phoenix New Times a écrit:(Gaze of Heaven:)* Malick's IMAX Lulu Gapes at the Roots of the Tree of Life
By Bilge Ebiri
Voyage of Time: The IMAX Experience might be the most narrative film of Terrence Malick’s career. The enigmatic director’s recent work has been marked by a turn toward elliptical, stream-of-consciousness meditations, pretty much discarding any semblance of conventional storytelling. But going as far back as Badlands (1973), he’s had a complicated relationship with things like plot and character development — often opting for dreamy cutaways to the natural world when other filmmakers would tighten focus and build suspense. Some wags have complained that Malick cares more for trees and leaves and birds than he does for people. So it is simultaneously perverse and totally appropriate that this 40-minute IMAX nature documentary narrated by Brad Pitt would find Malick in the guise of storyteller.
That’s not to say that he’s stopped being a poet. Malick opens with onscreen text addressed to a child, announcing that the film will trace the origins of life, reveal the birth of the stars and demonstrate that we all “belong to the same story.” Images of a young girl wandering through an empty lot and a verdant lawn, gazing around in curiosity, quickly give way to almost-abstract patterns moving in the darkness meant to represent the beginnings of the universe — amorphous, ever-changing shapes, slowly gathering in size and luminescence.
Malick worked with natural historian and NASA consultant Andrew Knoll and visual-effects designer Dan Glass to imagine what the earliest forms of matter and space might have looked like. What they’ve conjured is endlessly fascinating and varied: We might see something that resembles the inside of a crystal, only to cut to what looks like a bubble suspended in flame. You could get high before you see the movie, but what's the point? You can also get high just from watching it.
Voyage of Time could be seen as a companion to Malick’s 2011 masterpiece The Tree of Life, which framed the autobiographical tale of a Texas family in the 1950s and ‘60s with the beginnings of the cosmos, the emergence of life on Earth and the eventual consumption of our planet by the sun. To make things even more confusing, a 90-minute version of Voyage also did the festival rounds last month. That one, subtitled Life’s Journey and narrated by Cate Blanchett, is an altogether more searching, lyrical affair — more “Malickian,” in other words — and has yet to find a release date. I don’t think either cut of Voyage uses any actual footage from Tree of Life, though some moments suggest the earlier film. This new, shorter work — the IMAX version, likely intended for both cinematic and institutional settings — is tighter, more focused. Its scope is cosmic, but its ambitions are curiously modest.
Pitt’s narration embodies that tension between the metaphysical and the educational, between wonderment and authority. He’ll tell us that centuries of rainfall helped cool the surface of our blazing planet one minute — as we see exploding volcanoes and streams of lava hardening into globular forms — before asking, quietly, “When did dust become life?” This questioning quality is reflected in the varied nature of the images. Malick’s great feel for metaphor serves him well. He represents the various stages of life through the specific examples he and his team have created and captured, but there’s always a sense that he’s leaving the door open to alternatives — as if he's saying, “It might have looked like this, or it might have looked like something else.” Voyage of Time is authoritative, but never insistent. As always with this director, there’s an overarching humility to his visions.
And so the movie hurtles forward in time — whispered and hesitant, sure, but also precise and swift — as it leaps millennia and earth ages. After the earth cools, bacteria begin to form communities in shallow pools and lagoons. Schools of jellyfish undulate through silent seas, their bodies opening and closing with hypnotic grace. Huge cuttlefish slowly drift along the deep, bumping against rocks, their giant eyes peering out at us. A vampire squid hovers in the current like like some kind of prehistoric ghost or priest. (A spiritual dimension is hinted at but ever-present.) The migration of life from sea to land is represented by what appear to be black millipedes squirming around a tide pool. Dinosaurs make a cameo — even shorter than their appearance in The Tree of Life — and are wiped out by an asteroid. The camera wanders over a dead land — “Earth is covered in a pall of dust,” Pitt tells us — and then suddenly, we see monkeys playfully hopping in trees and giraffes peacefully padding around a stretch of grass.
All throughout, the images and the narration circle around the themes of destruction and creation. Ever since The Thin Red Line (1998), Malick has quietly obsessed over this “war in the heart of nature,” the idea that death and violence live in eternal, elemental co-dependence with love and cooperation. It shapes Voyage of Time. Cells consume other cells, majestic schools of fish practically explode as they’re ravaged by small armies of diving birds. We cut from the eyes of a dying whale to the first human hands, chasing after a bug.
The idea gains even more resonance as Malick follows these first Homo sapiens in a quick succession of cuts. An early man sees his reflection in a pool of water, after which we catch glimpses of a violent confrontation, followed by a lifeless figure who lies beside a dead tree. Someone wanders into the desert as if headed into exile. Then we see a mother and child wearing animal skins, and a settlement built into the face of a cliff. And suddenly, a modern city agleam with light as the camera glides over the top of Dubai’s Burj Khalifa.
There we have it: From an insect caught in a patch of prehistoric dirt to the tallest tower of our world — the tale of humanity, of conflict and civilization, expertly crammed into a few brief shots. It’s merely one enthralling part of this inspiring cinematic journey — full of overwhelming beauty, and ready to set the curious viewer’s mind aflame.
*: Cette partie du titre n'est que dans une seule des éditions.
IMAX Entertainment's Voyage of Time: The IMAX Experience® from acclaimed director Terrence Malick opens October 22 exclusively at the Ontario Science Centre under the OMNIMAX® dome
A stunning artistic rendering of suspected beginnings of life from the film Voyage of Time: The IMAX Experience opening October 22 at the Ontario Science Centre.” (CNW Group/Ontario Science Centre)
TORONTO, Oct. 18, 2016 /CNW/ - Voyage of Time: The IMAX Experience, the new film from acclaimed American filmmaker Terrence Malick and IMAX Entertainment, will open at the Ontario Science Centre on October 22. The film — a 45-minute, giant-screen adventure narrated by Brad Pitt — transports audiences directly into the story of the universe and life itself. Tickets are on sale at http://www.OntarioScienceCentre.ca.
"Voyage of Time promises a truly immersive experience for visitors at Ontario's only dome IMAX theatre," said Dr. Maurice Bitran, CEO and Chief Science Officer for the Ontario Science Centre. "The Centre is pleased to offer the exclusive Toronto run of this unique cinematic experience chronicling the history of our universe." The film will screen on Saturdays at 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. and Sundays at 4 p.m. beginning October 22, 2016.
Voyage of Time premiered at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival. The IMAX® release of Voyage of Time: The IMAX Experience will be digitally re-mastered into the image and sound quality of The IMAX Experience® with proprietary IMAX DMR® (Digital Re-mastering) technology. The crystal-clear images, coupled with IMAX's customized theatre geometry and powerful digital audio, create a unique environment that will make audiences feel as if they are in the movie.
Voyage of Time: The IMAX Experience is a one-of-a-kind celebration of life and the grand history of the cosmos, transporting audiences into a vast, yet up-close-and-personal journey that spans the eons from the Big Bang to the dinosaur age to our present human world … and beyond.
A labour of love from one of American cinema's most acclaimed and visually exciting filmmakers, Terrence Malick (The Thin Red Line, The Tree of Life), Voyage of Time represents the filmmaker's first foray into documentary storytelling. The film's panorama of awe-inspiring images will take you into the heart of the most monumental events ever witnessed — from the birth of the stars and galaxies to the explosion of diverse life-forms on planet earth, including humankind — in captivating new ways that only IMAX can deliver. This is a cosmic experience — a hymn to the glories of nature, life and scientific discovery - in which all the elements come together to form Malick's most original film to date.
IMAX Entertainment presents in association with IMAX Documentary Films Capital and Knights of Columbus.
Learn more about Voyage of Time: The IMAX Experience by visiting its official site at http://www.imax.com/VOT.
The Ontario Science Centre is located at 770 Don Mills Road at Eglinton Avenue in Toronto.
For more information including tickets and show times, please call 416-696-1000 or visit the web site at http://www.OntarioScienceCentre.ca.
The Ontario Science Centre has welcomed more than 51 million visitors since it opened in 1969, implementing an interactive approach now adopted by science centres around the world. Today, the Science Centre is an international leader in free-choice science learning and a key contributor to Ontario's education and innovation ecosystem, offering lifelong learning through hands-on, engaging experiences. The Ontario Science Centre is an agency of the Government of Ontario funded in part by the Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport. As a publicly assisted organization, the Science Centre relies on generous individuals, corporations and foundations who share a commitment to science and education for additional operating support. For more information about the Ontario Science Centre, please visit http://www.OntarioScienceCentre.ca.
IMAX®, IMAX® 3D, IMAX DMR®, Experience It In IMAX®, An IMAX 3D Experience® and The IMAX Experience® are trademarks of IMAX Corporation. More information about the Company can be found at http://www.imax.com. You may also connect with IMAX on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/imax), Twitter (http://www.twitter.com/imax) and YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/imaxmovies).
Social Media:
Hashtag: #VoyageOfTime
Twitter: @OntScienceCtr
Facebook: http://www.Facebook.com/OntarioScienceCentre
Instagram: @OntarioScienceCentre
YouTube: YouTube.com/user/OntarioScienceCentre
For images and video, please visit: http://www.OntarioScienceCentre.ca/Media/ImagesVideo
SOURCE Ontario Science Centre
Hugues a écrit:En clair, sauf changement, si vous voulez voir le documentaire au cinéma, réservez déjà votre soirée du 11 mai. C'est ce soir-là ou jamais.
Hugues
Hugues a écrit:Il passera peut-être au Pathé Quai d'Ivry.
Mais en IMAX non. Contrairement à la quasi totalité des films, où le film IMAX et le film cinéma sont sortis par la même société, ici les droits des deux films sont séparés.
Et la société de la sortie du 4 mai, n'a pas les droits de l'autre version, droit qui sont mondialement la propriété de la société IMAX (c'est un des rares films IMAX propriété d'IMAX donc) qui n'a voulu le sortir qu'en Amérique du Nord.
Hugues
sheon a écrit:Hugues a écrit:Il passera peut-être au Pathé Quai d'Ivry.
Mais en IMAX non. Contrairement à la quasi totalité des films, où le film IMAX et le film cinéma sont sortis par la même société, ici les droits des deux films sont séparés.
Et la société de la sortie du 4 mai, n'a pas les droits de l'autre version, droit qui sont mondialement la propriété de la société IMAX (c'est un des rares films IMAX propriété d'IMAX donc) qui n'a voulu le sortir qu'en Amérique du Nord.
Hugues
C'est vraiment dommage.
Bon bah ça sera le Max Linder en arrivant une heure avant pour ne pas avoir une mauvaise place
Hugues a écrit:Après un intéressant documentaire sur Zhu Xiao-Mei (0h45), grande interprète de Bach qui après l'exil a pu revenir jouer en son pays, la Chine est diffusé sur Arte la Messe en si mineur de Johann Sebastian Bach, interprétée par le choeur de la Radio bavaroise, l’orchestre de chambre Concerto Köln, dirigés par Peter Dijkstra
Mais pas besoin d'attendre 1h45![]()
..
C'est déjà visible et écoutable et pour 28 jours sur Arte Concerts:
http://www.arte.tv/guide/fr/061699-000-A/messe-en-si-mineur
Cortese a écrit:Bon, alors réunion forumiste au Max Linder ? Comment va t-on se reconnaitre ? Masque d'Anonymous, casque de Schumacher, rose à la boutonnière ?
Marlaga a écrit:Cortese a écrit:Bon, alors réunion forumiste au Max Linder ? Comment va t-on se reconnaitre ? Masque d'Anonymous, casque de Schumacher, rose à la boutonnière ?
Un drapeau palestinien à la boutonnière ?
Cortese a écrit:Marlaga a écrit:Cortese a écrit:Bon, alors réunion forumiste au Max Linder ? Comment va t-on se reconnaitre ? Masque d'Anonymous, casque de Schumacher, rose à la boutonnière ?
Un drapeau palestinien à la boutonnière ?
Je pensais à quelque chose de plus consensuel.
Cortese a écrit:Bon, alors réunion forumiste au Max Linder ? Comment va t-on se reconnaitre ? Masque d'Anonymous, casque de Schumacher, rose à la boutonnière ?
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