Un giovane, condannato a sette anni in prigione per aver derubato un ufficio postale, finisce con il trascorrere trent'anni in isolamento. In questo periodo la sua personalità viene soppiant... Leggi tuttoUn giovane, condannato a sette anni in prigione per aver derubato un ufficio postale, finisce con il trascorrere trent'anni in isolamento. In questo periodo la sua personalità viene soppiantata dal suo alter ego Charles Bronson.Un giovane, condannato a sette anni in prigione per aver derubato un ufficio postale, finisce con il trascorrere trent'anni in isolamento. In questo periodo la sua personalità viene soppiantata dal suo alter ego Charles Bronson.
- Premi
- 3 vittorie e 7 candidature
- Nurse 1
- (as Mark Davenport)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizCharles Bronson was not allowed to see the film, but said that if his mother liked it, that would be enough for him. According to Refn, his mother loved it. In 2011 Bronson was finally allowed to see the film and called it "theatrical, creative and brilliant".
- BlooperAt (11:00) The tutor asks Charles "What's the matter, Charlie?" But in this stage of the story Charles Bronson still had his original name Michael Peterson. He had not yet changed his name to Charles Bronson.
- Citazioni
Charles Bronson: [Real Life Charles Bronson Quote] How would you feel, waking up in the morning without a window? My window is a steel grid, I 'ave to put my lips against that steel grid and suck in air, that's my morning... 'cause I got no air in my cell. I have to eat, sleep and crap in that room twenty-three hours of a twenty-four hour day. You tell me, what human being deserves that? Apart from the stinking paedophile or a child killer. I don't deserve that, I done nothing on this planet to deserve that. My bed is four inches off the floor, it's a concrete bed, my toilet hasn't even got a seat on it or a lid, and I 'ave to live like this month after month after month, and the way it's looking it's year after year after year. Now is that's right then so be, but let somebody else 'ave a fucking go at it, 'cause I've had twenty-six years of this bollocks and it's time to come out, and I want the jury at my trail to come and see how I'm living. But I'm not living, I'm existing.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: Zombieland/A Serious Man/Whip It (2009)
- Colonne sonoreVa pensiero (Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves)
from Verdi's "Nabucco"
Written by Giuseppe Verdi
Performed by Orchestra e Coro del Teatro alla Scala (as Chorus and Orchestra of La Scala, Milan)
Conducted by Lovro von Matacic
Licensed courtesy of EMI Records Limited
I don't mean to undersell the above compliments, however. Tom Hardy as lowly criminal Michael Peterson and his imprisoned superstar alter ego Charles Bronson, displays a remarkable, feral intensity in the role, spitting meaty, cockney chunks of dialogue with a truly disquieting voracity. And Hardy makes a perfect match for Refn: both share a larger- than-life approach to their craft. The director's visual audacity is never more sublimely paired with Hardy's performance than during Bronson's intermittent narrations; snippets of a surreal one-man stage show for some great, unseen audience. The cutaways recall the feel of Alex's presentation following the successful administration of the ludovico technique in "Clockwork Orange." Swooping crane and sweeping dolly shots, along with some fantastic locations, also evoke Kubrick's directorial sentiments, as does the more obvious accompaniment of classical score to key sequences.
Unfortunately, the failure of "Bronson" is not only that there's very little dramatically to be done with a man who spends the better part of his life in solitary confinement, but that beyond a vague notoriety, Peterson's ultimate goal is never particularly clear. The ending of the film is startling in its abruptness given that the scene seems interchangeable with any number of the fights Bronson picks over the course of the film. It doesn't feel a particularly epic brawl, and by that point, the tedium of Bronson's outbursts, battles, and increasingly severe punishments had worn me (though it could maybe be called a statement on the nature of desensitizing cinema--in that respect a reverse "Clockwork Orange") into a sleepy passivity.
The film is nevertheless a step the right direction for the usually-schlocky and hyper- masculine Refn, but "Bronson" still wants for the substantiality that makes great films great films. It isn't likely to inspire any further meditation on its subject beyond perhaps provoking a curiosity about the man himself in those intrigued but unsatisfied with the screenplay's frugal allocation of hard data and social context. But despite the film's inability to make clear its greater thematic intent, I don't think "Bronson" is a perversely violent film or that it exists solely as a fetishistic idol to counterculture, as some will likely label it, and have labeled Kubrick's masterpiece. Its beautiful cinematography (courtesy Larry Smith, interestingly enough, the lighting cameraman for Kubick's own "Eyes Wide Shut") and stellar lead may make it a worthwhile rental next year, but as it stands, "Bronson" is a precautionary tale. It's a film that has everything going for it except the the thing that matters most: its story. And you don't need to be Stanley Kubrick to figure that out.
- colinrgeorge
- 5 apr 2010
- Permalink
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Бронсон
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Welbeck Abbey, Worksop, Nottinghamshire, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(Rampton psychiatric hospital)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 230.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 104.979 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 10.940 USD
- 11 ott 2009
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 2.260.712 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 32 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1