Realização:
Lars von TrierArgumento:
Lars von TrierCâmara:
Manuel Alberto ClaroElenco:
Kirsten Dunst, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Kiefer Sutherland, Charlotte Rampling, Udo Kier, Alexander Skarsgård, Stellan Skarsgård, John Hurt (mais)Streaming (1)
Sinopses(1)
O misterioso planeta Melancolia aproxima-se do planeta Terra. Será uma passagem breve e um momento para recordar? Ou este planeta azul representa uma verdadeira ameaça para todos? E enquanto o Melancolia se aproxima, ameaçador, a difícil relação de Justine e Claire é posta à prova definitivamente… (Leopardo Filmes)
Vídeos (2)
Críticas (15)
A primeira, não muito excitante (três estrelas) metade é maravilhosamente representada e encanta com um conjunto internacional delicioso em papéis secundários. Mas não oferece mais do que qualquer cena de conversação de qualquer outro filme Trier (ou Ozon). A segunda metade (quatro estrelas), mais perturbadora, mais impressionante, mais bela visualmente e com o argumento mais interessante, aumenta a experiência e deixa a impressão final atordoada pela arte do audiovisual, no entanto, com pensamentos perturbados e não cumprida. Trier parece estar a experimentar algo, como se estivesse apenas a transmitir um sentimento, uma ideia de um verso curto. Para alguns pode ser uma meditação interessante e espirituosa (afinal, é um jogo extremamente elegante com imagens, música e personagens), mas para mim Melancolia continua a ser apenas um pequeno conjunto de impressões positivas, cujo peso se esvaiu em nada após o fim dos créditos finais. ()
After comedy, musical and horror, Lars von Trier ruins another genre and I bite it hook, line and sinker. The best film of the first half of 2011 and a purely emotional affair about the end of good things (not necessarily the world), pointless hopes and relationships. What captivated me the most was the evolution of the two main characters. Even though the film can be seen as a poem about the end of the world, there are couple moments that open the door for the most diverse interpretations (the 19th hole, the gangway that can’t be easily crossed, the celestial bodies that behave as if they didn’t know basic school physics). Lars von Trier is number one in the list of my favourite Nazis. That was the review, now a short spoiling interpretation to think about: In the first part of the film they say that John’s golf course has 18 holes, but in the second part we see Claire and her son at the 19th hole. This means that at least one part of the film is not real, or that it is based on reality, but it takes place in a different way than we what we can see. The key is in the conversation in the first part that stresses the fact that the course has 18 holes. That’s nonsense. 18 hole courses are standard, why would the characters explicitly point that out? They would point it out only if John’s course had a non-standard number of holes. We have therefore reason to believe that the events in first part of the film take place in a different way than we what see. We see all of them through the eyes of Justine (after whom the chapter is titled), who, facing the end of the world, transforms the apocalypse into a botched wedding in a world where the planet Melancholia is only a dot in the sky that reminds that whatever happens, things can always get worse (regardless of whether the wedding is a memory or fiction). The world in the first part of the film is a desired world without the 19th hole / without a final and unsolvable problem. So, even though Melancholia left me with a pretty unpleasant feeling right after watching it, after some time what I get is a cynical, though essentially positive message: never mind earthly worries, things will be worse when the universe starts making trouble. But it doesn’t really matter what Lars thought, anyone who willing can find something for themselves, the rest can ignore it. That’s the beauty of post-modernism. PS: Plenty of Visigoths left the cinema, lol. ()
It’s impossible to prepare oneself for Melancholia and the end of the world. Von Trier manages to capture that mood when there’s nothing you can do with a similar sense of urgency as Bergman. But he angers more people and additionally has Earth destroyed. Melancholia is a logical follow-up to Antichrist, which involved a clash between a man and a woman. This time, the clash is between two sisters, two approaches to life and ultimately two planets. The depressive Justine passively accepts her fate. She knows that she can’t change anything. At the same time, she represents extreme individualism. She would rather stay at home alone than submit to social conventions. Claire cares more about others. She doesn’t resign herself to the situation, but she wants to have it under control. Only at the end they switch roles and one finds understanding for the other. In its own way, it is a happy ending that, at the same time, shows how we spend our whole lives running away from the thought of death into magical caves, which can take different forms for everyone, but in the end they are of little help. Melancholia is also a biting polemic on American disaster movies, which conversely try to convince us that tragedy can be averted with human action and ingenuity (and Bruce Willis). Instead of a saviour, von Trier only offers two possible ways to accept the inevitable. On top of that, he forces us to spend the last hour before the end of the world with decadent representatives of high society who are definitely not bearers of noble qualities and have enough problems of their own. He thus doesn’t offer many reasons to wish for the end not to come, which I find more honest than the Hollywood approach. 85% ()
I was really looking forward to this one, but in the end, the only thing that made me happy was Kirsten Dunst. Melancholia is yet another wild ride from Lars von Trier after Antichrist, filled with abstract scenes. I get it, but honestly, I enjoyed Dancer in the Dark way more. ()
There aren't many male authors who write out their feelings and then let women play it out. I consider Melancholia one of the most honest authorial statements of recent years and the opening prologue with slow motion shots and Richard Wagner's impressive music an aesthetic orgasm. What the 19th hole meant is, I don't think, very indicative (I can already see Von Trier laughing under his beard as he reads the various nonsensical explanatory theories). ()
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