影片改编自格拉西克·吉本《苏格兰的书》三部曲中的第一本。男主角英勇的投入战斗并死于第一次世界大战,女主人公克里斯受过教育却被土地束缚,飞快的从女孩变成妻子又变成遗孀,让人振奋又心碎。它的语言音乐般美妙、抒情,就像它描述的这片土地一样的美丽。跟随着他们我们经历了一生,目睹了农民生活以及古老的苏格兰本身。
Matt Zoller Seitz
"Sunset Song," about a rural Scottish girl growing to womanhood in the years before World War I, is one of the great director Terence Davies' best films: an example of old school and new school mentalities coming together to create a challenging and unique experience. The movie feels as if it could have been made in the 1940s, were there no such thing as censorship. There's frank sex and violence, and the movie doesn't shy away from the nastier aspects of life in that time and place. But there's never a feeling that Davies is rubbing our noses in suffering, because the film displays so much empathy for its characters and such awareness of the social, political and historical forces that hover beyond the edges of their consciousness.
What to tell you about the plot? I don't want to tell you anything, not because the events themselves are surprising (they aren't—and Davies often purposefully telegraphs what's coming, as a 19th century novelist might) but because the pleasure and pain of the tale lies in the telling. As the observant, reactive Chris, Agyness Deyn makes a marvelous audience surrogate. Her narration suggests that she one day escaped the grinding life depicted here and became the writer and teacher you always figure she could become. But there's no undue self-awareness or condescension in Deyn's acting, or in Davies' presentation of her character, and the supporting cast contains not a single bad performance or false note. Among the standouts areEwan Tavendale as Deyn's suitor and later husband, Kevin Guthrie, who is clearly too kind to emerge from this maelstrom of misfortune unscathed; and Peter Mullan, the poster boy for toxic manhood, as Deyn's father, a scowling King of the Castle-type whose power resides in his propensity for violence and his society's sanctioning of it, not in moral authority. (In its deft illustration of how macho values oppress men as well as women, "Sunset Song" is one of the most eloquent feminist statements of the screen year; that its statements mostly emerge organically from Davies' portrait of a time and place make them resonate more strongly.)
"Sunset Song"has gotten mixed reviews, and I can see why. Adapted by Davies from Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s novel, a national touchstone written in Scottish dialect, it'salready a tough sell because it deals with a historical period that has passed from living memory, and features actors who aren't household names. But rather than invite viewers into this film's world by going warm and cuddly and reassuring them that people back then were Just Like Us, Davies constantly underlines how different things were, and how hard life could be if you were a poor Scottish farmer living in a glen; harder still if you were a sensitive or, God forbid, pacifist man—or any sort of woman. Childbirth often ended in death. Battery and rape were considered unfortunate but standard aspects of married life. Sudden changes in political fortunes could send a generation of men off to suffer and die in war to prove their patriotism and machismo; anybody who objected was demonized or worse. There are moments when the film veers into what feels like polemic—you'll know them when they come—but not too many. Davies is committed to the here and now—to the present-tense triumphs and struggles of the characters.
But the filmmaker doesn't revel in misery and ugliness; it's not his way. Instead, Davies, his cinematographer Michael McDonough, art directorsMags Horspool, Ken Turner and Diana van de Vossenberg, and costume designer Uli Simon have made a movie that's beautiful rather than superficially pretty—a film that has soul, and that is more concerned with the emotional meaning of shocking events than the precise physical details.When a teenaged son is whipped with a belt for disobeying his father, the boy faces us, and we see the blows but not the impact of the belt on flesh. Both rough off-screen sex and childbirth are conveyed entirely through sound: we hear moans and screams upstairs, but the movie shows the reactions of characters who are sitting downstairs. A sexual assault begins with a struggle that grows more frenzied and desperate until the camera finally lowers itself slowly on the other side of the bed, creating a wipe effect that blacks out the screen; it's as if the film is covering our eyes for us.
Davies, a nostalgia buff steeped in the traditions of old Hollywood movies, weds John Ford dramas about poor families (in particular "How Green Was My Valley" and "The Grapes of Wrath") and the lush widescreen epics of director David Lean ("Lawrence of Arabia," "Ryan's Daughter"), weaving period folk songs (some performed live, others recorded) into the soundtrack and shooting the Scottish landscapes on 65mm film, the format used for so-called "road show" pictures in the 1960s. At the same time, he retains a modernist sensibility, lingering on empty rooms after all the people have left them (a technique he's deployed in other movies, notably "Distant Voices, Still Lives"), never shying away from the story's harsher aspects, and shooting the film's interiors on high definition digital video, which captures such fine gradations of shadow that you can make out the textures of characters' skin, hair and clothing even when they're lit by candles alone.
Davies and cinematographer McDonough capture the splendor of late-night dinners and wedding receptions,sunlight and moonlight streaming through windows and the way a field trembles as a breeze strokes the grass. The wind, the birds, the bleating livestock and whirring insects provide another sort of music on the soundtrack.The dialogue and voice-over make a point of reminding us of these squabbling humans' smallness in relation to the land on which they work, love, reproduce, age and die. The film has an awareness of the eternal that's rare in Western cinema. People come and go but the land remains. The ethereal nature of human relationships (and humans, period) gives the entire movie a stoic quality: we do the best with what we have, and try to be thankful to be alive, and take pleasure in moments that begin to fade the second we realize that we're in them. As the film's heroine puts it, "There are lovely things in this world—lovely that do not endure, and the lovelier for that."
Matt Zoller Seitz is the Editor at Largeof RogerEbert.com, TV critic for New York Magazine and Vulture.com, and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in criticism.
徒有其表-02/17/16 at FilmLinc
后面关系转折的有点莫其妙
冲着苏格兰景色4K画面去的,女主颜值撑起了半边天,有撸点福利哇咔咔,修长手指+平胸+比男人高的身材简直超模标配。男人行军回来的性格突变非常突兀,女主哥哥去了阿根廷就再没出现也是醉,两个弟弟跟着姨妈走了爸爸死了都没回来也是神奇,所以剧情不能多推敲只能看画面和女主各种柔光镜,旁白英语美
#北京电影节# 实在是看睡着了………2016/04/23 15:45@UME华星影城
攝影是很美,可是劇本沒能成功寫出一條戲劇核心來。因此價值觀顯得陳腐,關於女人與土地的關係,同類的亂世佳人是多麼活靈活現啊。
女主角很漂亮,而且片中有露点。
3.5;又见拿手的平移镜头,如水流淌过一个动荡的时代,见证少女走向成熟及心碎的历程;环形镜头拼接无缝,窗框和楼梯的架构作用;浓重父权阴影,对母亲的依恋,死亡的突如其来,Terence Davies的细腻依旧令人动容;风景美轮美奂,光线迷醉,可惜前后故事脱节。
构图依旧持有导演印迹,摄影也很棒,但是其余因素丝毫不见导演的风格和魅力,四平八稳的平庸。又见bad dad.
55/100 慢节奏,更是沉闷了两个多小时,难免让人催眠。一个苏格兰女人充满磨难的一生,文学般的旁白来补救稀疏的对白。感情表达的却如此单薄,简单到没有几处配乐,全靠着苏格兰风笛声来渲染。
苏格兰漂亮,每个人物形象都好扁平,不明白这么瘦弱一个女演员怎么演得来农妇…
开始还吸引人的,结果时间拉太长,剧情进展太慢,沉闷程度和《蔚蓝深海》不相上下,最诧异的是如此文艺诗意的一部电影,女主角居然是超模阿格妮丝·迪恩,不知道是故意要制造一种反差还是真的找不到女演员了。然而本片的摄影、用光、音乐制造出的气氛,还是让我无法对它恶言相向,因为真的很舒服。
烂到爆!!!剧本烂到家 到底要讲什么不知道 剪辑基本只会fadeout 演技也不行 就摄影还凑合 这样还拍了两个多小时 去你大爷的
太差了!!导演能不能稍微克制一下对漫无目的长镜头和留白的迷恋而尊重一下观众的时间也就是观众的生命?!!还有这卡司是什么鬼?女主不会演戏完全不会!!
光靠苏格兰元素是不行的
一如既往地很漂亮很慢,这样的故事(也可以说是没有故事...)大概也只有戴维斯这种心思极细的人才能拍出感觉吧。几部片里的女性形象都和童年回忆有关联。倒是不觉得闷,就是两个主角都有点没选好的感觉😳
bad casting
1. 苏格兰英语。2.这里的男人都那么粗鲁,不善于表达感情。3.有些情节、人物就那样消失了,从女主的生活中。她妈妈、她哥哥、她念书时候的同学。
上海电影节第十一场,女主这一生太悲惨了。
0311 Quoi de neuf?
就像结束时关于土地的独白说得那样,对于以农业为生的人民来说,他们的情感真诚质朴,所有深情寄托都集中在这片土地上,他们对周遭的人与事也爱得纯粹毫无保留,所有的变故落在他们单薄的肩上都显得沉重而残忍,但片中智慧坚强的女性让我感到了人性所有美好品质的凸显原著还未有中译本,下到了英文三部曲,Sunset Song,Cloud Howe,Grey Granite,这些名字意象就像片中广袤的苏格兰光景,有那么一些时刻感觉回到了Shire,那些吟唱与霍比特人欢聚的歌谣如出一辙,简单纯粹,歌颂人性的真善美btw最初是因为女主是曾经特别喜欢的一位模特查她近况找到的这部电影,加上导演也是我一直很想看的,因为觉得他的题材充满了人文关怀和艺术感。这种缓慢真挚文学性强的家庭题材确实引起了我很多共鸣