Laden...
Laden...



In den 90er Jahren war die Affäre der damals 36-jährigen Gracie (Julianne Moore) und des 13-jährigen Joe (Charles Melton) ein handfester Skandal und ein gefundenes Fressen für die Boulevardpresse. Mehr als 20 Jahre später führen die Beiden ein scheinbar perfektes Vorstadtleben mit netter Nachbarschaft, gepflegtem Garten und drei fast erwachsenen Kindern. Doch ihr häusliches Glück wird gestört, als die berühmte und beliebte Hollywood-Schauspielerin Elizabeth (Natalie Portman) ankommt, um vor Ort für ihre bevorstehende Hauptrolle in einem Film über Gracie zu recherchieren. Während Elizabeth sich in das Alltagsleben von Gracie und Joe einschleicht, kommen die schmerzlichen Fakten der damaligen Ereignisse ans Licht und lassen verschüttete Gefühle wieder aufleben.
Avis de la communauté (12)
I love these condensed, boiled down character studies so much, even if they're told with this level of camp and soap-operatic flair between scenes. It tells such a thematically dark story, but keeps it bubbling under the surface for the entire runtime, only told through brief glimpses and passing conversations between these embroiled characters. Gripping and thoroughly engaging, with a lovely layer of double-speak dialogue and symbolism, May December will leave you feeling disparaged and gross, but also deeply sad and empathetic towards some of the people wrapped up in this morally questionable tale. -- Incoherent, spoiler-filled ramblings -- Although on the nose, I really did like some of the framing and symbolism woven through this movie. Joe cultivating butterflies, caged and trapped while they are given time to cocoon and transform, a direct metaphor for Joe himself. I like the hope this builds around the character, he's still in chrysallis, all he needs to do is break out of the cocoon he finds himself in, be reborn and start anew. I really liked the shot of Elizabeth going to see Joe at his place of work. These two people of equal age, but with completely different levels of maturity and posture. One plucked from childhood by Gracie before he's had a chance to grow, still a child in demeanour, shoulders slouched and unable to confidently talk or hold a conversation. The other fully grown, at the top of her respective field, speaking coherently and with projection. It was a very nice way of showing the difference between the two, and how regressed Joe really is after this entire ordeal. Gracie is shown as a proficient hunter, holding a snake in the reenactment, a predator, only giving off the fascade of innocence and softness to entice and ensnare her prey. We see throughout that she attempts to instill a sense of purity, innocence and childlike maturity to those around her to control and make people do what she wants. It's only when Joe later attempts to speak openly about how he really feels do we finally see the real Gracie. Cutting, manipulative, and immediately on the defensive, blaming those around her with a deft spin. She tells her son from her first marriage to lie about being a victim of incest to try and win sympathy; to give a cosy explanation as to why she is the way that she is while also trying to manipulate his way onto the movies production. The apple doesn't fall far from the tree it seems. Elizabeth's monologue to the drama class is also very apt and inkeeping with the themes of the movie. Firstly it shows the maturity difference between boys and girls at that age and by extension Joe when he was groomed by Gracie. All the girls in the class are mature, poised, ready to listen, while the boys are all joking around, unserious, immature. Elizabeth talks about actors accidentally becoming one with their characters and scene partners, the line between reality and fiction blurring, becoming one in the same. This directly relates to Gracie, who is playing a character of her own creation, trying to convince everyone she's lovely and innocent when she's really the exact opposite. Controlling, manipulative, sociopathic. We also see Elizabeth fall victim to this as well, growing too close to Gracie and Joe, culminating in her sleeping with the latter. I still can't decide if Elizabeth is just as bad for preying on this couple for her own career, I feel I might need to go back and watch this one again to fully understand how I feel about her.
i felt uncomfortable for 90% of this movie, and the other 10% was me feeling guilty for enjoying the campiness and eccentricity of it, mostly represented by natalie portman's character. she's soooo off-putting. sick and twisted. anyways, charles melton (riverdale's best boy, i miss that goof) is amazing. his scenes are so heartbreaking... you need to run away, boy. just run away :(
No doubt that Natalie Portman was great here, but it just didn't do it for me.
Just slow and boring. Waste of some excellent actors.
Character study at it's finest. Very interesting dynamics between the members of the family and a script that creates a weird circumstance between Portman and Moore's characters that kept me glued to the screen. Strong themes of trauma and morality. ***May December*** poses interesting questions on age gap relationships(?) It has a lot to say and demands a second viewing to get all the symbolisms. I kinda didn't want it to end, that's how interesting I found it. Filled with visually creative shots like the mirror scene at the beginning with Natalie Portman between two Julianne Moore's, one of my favorites. One of the best scores i've heard this year, nicely done lighting, atmospheric, lots of tension and three awesome performances (favorite was Natalie Portman, I watched that monologue three times). A weird tone for the subject matter that could totally be off-putting for some but for me... it works! I wanted more of a confrontation towards the end, something more memorable, but the character arcs and themes did come full circle and that's satisfying.