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| Index | 14 reviews in total |
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Uneven but interesting film, 16 September 2002
Author:
Frank Khi Dou from Montreal, Canada
This beautifully photographed film tells the story of a scientist woman trying to explain an unusual phenomenon taken place in the Saint-Lawrence river in a recluse region of northern Quebec. Her work will take her to a journey she was not expecting which primarily deals with her own private longings. Some may say that the film takes way too long to get to the point which, from that perspective, must be the love story. Others may argue the exact opposite; that the love story is secondary to the natural disaster plot it therefore dilutes. I tend to believe that both stories are moving along at the same rate which is fairly slow and might even be perceived as hesitant. The overall effect is one of a very well done piece of cinema with a powerful dramatic finale but also of an almost lazy script that should have went through a couple more rewrites. In short, an uneven film with still lots of charm.
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
I love this movie., 4 February 2003
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Author:
Katharine Montagu from Vancouver, Canada
A beautiful, thought-provoking and sexy film about what happens
when a seismologist returns to her home town to investigate the
mysterious cessation of the tide.
This movie surprised and intrigued me. I never knew where it was
going, but I was satisfied by where it took me. The opening
sequence alone (set in Tokyo) was worth the price of admission.
Funny and tragic at the same moment.
I can see why Pascal Bussiere is a star in Quebec. She brings us
into her story even as her character holds the world at arm's
length. When she began to feel the effects of the tidal disturbance,
I felt them too.
I found director Manon Briand articulate and charming when she
came to the Vancouver International Film Festival, but by then I had
already seen and fallen in love with her movie.
This one is definitely worth watching.
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
This movie is just too inconsistent, 9 October 2005
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Author:
sansay from San Diego, USA
First it starts with a great sci-fi looking introduction set in Japan.
Then we get thrown into a little place in Quebec, and everything falls
apart into a mystic's delirium. Oh well. I don't need to add anything
to this comment since Greg Novik wrote it all in here already. Thanks
Greg for saving me the effort with your excellent review.
I also was quite puzzled and disappointed since this movie was rated 7
at the time when I rented it. I just don't get it, usually high ratings
at IMDb are well deserved. Not so in this case.
I can add this though, I have watched a few movies from Quebec lately
and this is definitely one of the worst. Save your time... watch
Quebec-Montreal for example, much more clever and fun!
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Poetic But Too Explicit, 27 August 2003
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Author:
Lex-13 from Northampton, MA
This film has a lot of good things going for it. The cinematography is
awesome if too
artificial at times. Some of the takes are too clearly references to classic
images but still
make for a nice overall look. The acting is generally convincing and precise
although a
few lines drops the ambiance too abruptly.
The plot itself is interesting if taken as an artistic process. Suspension
of disbelief helps
greatly as it's best to immerse oneself in the overall experience rather
than nitpick on
details. Quite a few counterfactual errors are to be expected in such
situations.
In a way, this could have been a great film if some things had been taken
out. At times,
the viewer is spoon-fed an interpretation of the "poetry" of the film.
Letting the art
speak for itself would have helped greatly.
For some reason, the same is true of the previews. Simply put, they seem to
say too
much although it's hard to tell what effect they would have on someone who
knows
nothing of the movie.
Let's hope that, next time, Manon Briand will let her artistic sense free
and not impose it
on the viewer.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Much more than I expected, 12 December 2002
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Author:
Laurent Auclair from Bardon, Queensland
When I saw this was a movie produced by Luc Besson, I was reluctant to see
it, because his choices are obviously not mine. But the topics and the
Canadian location made me see it anyway. And, for the first time, a Besson
production (through his company Europa Corp.) is a movie worth seeing!
Amazing! Of course, you can't go without the obsessive Asian sub-plot Besson
seems to put in all the movies he produced (is it in the writer's contract
to add it???), but the slow pace of action and the ethereal music takes you
in quite an interesting universe.
A good surprise, then, that I don't recommend to fans of other Besson
productions (Watch out: No martial arts and no poor dialogs in this
movie!!!).
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
A warm and humorous film with a powerful resolution, 10 February 2003
Author:
Howard Schumann from Vancouver, B.C.
In the warm and humorous Quebecois film, Chaos and Desire, shown at last
year's Vancouver Film Festival, Alice Bradley, played by the lovely Pascale
Bussieres, is a seismologist working in Japan studying the factors that can
predict earthquakes. When the tides mysteriously stop flowing on the St.
Lawrence River in her hometown of Baie Comeau, she returns to investigate
and comes up against the bizarre behavior of local residents. In one
instance, a little Chinese girl (Ji-Yan Séguin) sleepwalks every night at
the exact same time. In others, a woman chops down every tree in her front
yard, and the phone number of a fire-fighting pilot named Marc Vandal
(Jean-Nicolas Verreault) has been ripped out of every phone book in town.
Running from a troubled past and consumed by loneliness, Alice must now deal
not only with the problem of the tides but with a growing involvement with
Vandal and the not so subtle advances of her journalist friend Catherine
(Julie Gayet). When Alice uncovers the film's central mystery, the presumed
drowning of Vandal's wife, the investigation turns away from science to the
world of spirit and achieves a resolution of surprising power.
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Fans of Villeneuve and Turpin can pass on this one, 7 September 2002
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Author:
SammyK from Canada
Well, I probably anticipated something more with this one. Or perhaps something else. Coming from Roger Frappier, producer of Maelstrom, and director Manon Briand (of Cosmos fame), I expected something more along the lines of Denis Villineuve or Andre Turpin. In other words, something New-Wavey, fresh, and arty. You do get something visually lavish, containing some great humour, and a nicely understated performed from Pascal Bussieres. However, you also get some trite sentimentality, poorly constructed religious iconography, and the overall feeling of something poppy and mainstream. There's nothing wrong with that, and I'm sure that this film will do very well with domestic audiences (I'm speaking of Quebec, primarily). But it hardly makes for the challenging, satisfying artistic experience of "Maelstrom" and "Un Crabe dans la Tete." Maybe I'm expecting too much. Or something it was never intended to be.
3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Deceiving, 26 April 2003
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Author:
otaku_ariane from Montréal, Québec
When I saw the trailer of the movie and read the synopsis, I thought
"Wow!
This is going to be such a great movie!", but let me tell you I did not
get
what I was expecting.
The movie is a never-ending circle: at each time there is a new element,
it
ends up just like the other one before "because it's a movie about the
resemblance of love and the tides, the sea" (as Manon Briand said herself
in
French when I saw her). It was a falsely profound movie, falling into
total
esotericism.
There were some funny parts, but the movie was not a comedy. The scenery
was
nice and the quality of the images was good too. The actors were good,
but
they were playing characters for whom I was unable to develop any kind of
sympathy.
I believe this movie will be appreciated by many (and I was already
proven
that), but I think it's only OK to watch but not great at
all.
[Actually, Luc Besson did about nothing in the movie. It was only his
studio
that helped a bit at realizing the film.]
3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
I love this movie., 3 February 2003
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Author:
Katharine Montagu from Vancouver, Canada
A beautiful, thought-provoking and sexy film about what happens
when a seismologist returns to her home town to investigate the
mysterious cessation of the tide.
This movie surprised and intrigued me. I never knew where it was
going, but I was satisfied by where it took me. The opening
sequence alone (set in Tokyo) was worth the price of admission.
Funny and tragic at the same moment.
I can see why Pascal Bussiere is a star in Quebec. She brings us
into her story even as her character holds the world at arm's
length. When she began to feel the effects of the tidal disturbance,
I felt them too.
I found director Manon Briand articulate and charming when she
came to the Vancouver International Film Festival, but by then I had
already seen and fallen in love with her movie.
This one is definitely worth watching.
6 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Does the word "Tripe" translate into French?, 26 May 2003
Author:
Greg Novik from Vancouver, Canada
Here is a film that starts with a great deal of promise and winds up
leaving
the viewer miserable, thirsting for a real ending.
If you are like me you will wonder if the producers of this film got
government money to splurge on a trip to Tokyo. I suspect that was the
only
reason those expensive opening scenes could have been shot there. The
Japanese scenes didn't make a bit of difference to the film and could
have
been faked for a lot less money.
As Canadian films go this one is really no different. Too much dialogue
and
pretensions to be an important work of film making. The plot seems to be
some sort of Twin Peaks reincarnation, but without the real intrigue. As
the
movie plods along with some silly investigations of the quasi paranormal
the
viewer is lulled into a sense that nothing is going to happen. And really
nothing does.
Then too late in the film an extremely important scene, perhaps the
pivotal
scene in a newspaper office comes along. By this point you'll be so bored
you might miss it. The direction so dull that what should have been an
extremely dramatic turning point, with intense lighting and close-ups and
a
sensible pace to allow us to absorb the importance of this scene. But no,
it's an over lit room with a cliche newspaper editor. Who ever heard of a
newspaper office in this day and age keeping a clipping file for a specif
ic
story? Even in Quebec they use computers. The whole film suffers from
this
kind of lack of attention to detail. Do they expect us to believe this
stuff? Script doctor required.
The film might be about sex, or love, but it's so catholic and reserved
about the sex it's something that no one at Disney would blush over.
Count
the kisses..are there two in the whole film?
The female lead is struggling with some deeply seated emotional trauma
and
this apparently is causing her to be callously casual about sex on one
hand
and in a bizarre turn around later, suffer a schoolgirl crush....madly
trying to locate the object of her desire. The male "lead" if you can
call
someone who gets 15 minutes of screen time a lead, comes across one
minute
as a devil-may-care, jaunty risk-taker and then later he claims to be
"shy".
This kind of unexplained inconsistent character may be realistic to the
director but for the viewer this guy comes across as a goof who acts like
a
sexy guy one minute and a fool the next.
The film could have been reduced by about a half hour and several
characters
cut without losing anything. In fact it would have been tighter and
better
paced if the editor had been a bit more ruthless. There are some puerile
dabblings with a lesbian sub-plot which really goes nowhere. Incidently
who
ever heard of a police woman kissing a member of their own sex in a squad
car. Then there's the singing nuns. That's how weird this movie can get.
Oh
did I mention the fact that the lead cannot swim? Who ever heard of this?
She must be a rare creature indeed. The writers should learn that you can
only stretch the disbelief of the audience so far---then it snaps and the
whole film begins to look infantile.
The best guess is the writers decided they wanted to have some fun time
in
Japan so they wrote that in. They also wanted a nude scene, so they gave
the
lead the improbable role of a non-swimmer. You'll notice the male lead is
never naked. Men always have time to get dressed before they panic. Women
seem to be slow-dressers.
There is something distressingly childish about the direction of this
film.
Canadians aren't really this afraid of love and sex are they? If you last
until the credits roll you may be just as disappointed as me. Another low
for Canadian film making.
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