Ulysses

2004 • 119 minutes
5,0
1 avis
91%
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Aucune piste audio ni de sous-titres ne correspond à votre langue. L'audio est disponible dans les langues suivantes : Anglais.

À propos de ce film

It's hardly surprising that it took 45 years for someone to attempt an adaptation of James Joyce's dazzling modernist masterpiece that parallels a day in the life of unassuming Jewish advertising man Leopold Bloom with the events of Homer's Odyssey. It is a novel that's the very definition of the term "unfilmable". But Joseph Strick made a BAFTA, Oscar and Golden Globe nominated go of it, helped by some outstanding Irish actors (Milo O'Shea, Maurice Roeves, T.P. McKenna, Sheila O'Sullivan) who are fully alert to the musicality of Joyce's prose - almost every word in the Oscar-nominated screenplay was taken directly from the book. Wolfgang Suschitzky's black and white photography of authentic Dublin locations brings Joyce's famously detailed descriptions vividly to life, and Barbara Jefford's impassioned delivery of Molly Bloom's notoriously erotic monologue caused such a furore that the film was banned from general release in Ireland until 2000, something that would doubtless have amused Joyce himself. Dublin June 16th, 1904. Stephen Daedalus, a poet, embarks on a day of wandering about the city during which he finds friendship and a father figure in Leopold Bloom, a middle-aged Jew. Meanwhile, Bloom's day, illuminated by a funeral and an evening of drinking and revelry that stirs paternal feelings towards Stephen, ends with a rapprochement with Molly, his cuckolding wife.

Notes et avis

5,0
1 avis