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Rien ne sera plus comme avant
Une scientifique livre son dernier combat sur Terre contre une invasion de fantômes extra-terrestres, avec l'aide d'une équipe indisciplinée de soldats.
Avis de la communauté (11)
although I no longer find it as visually impressive as when I saw it in the cinema, I still like it
Overall: 7-8 Personal Subjective Score: 9 Perhaps the greatest lost opportunity in the past half-century of filmmaking. A critical miscalculation in marketing and a failure of imagination by the public squandered what could have been a revolution in the capacity of fantastic filmmaking. Final Fantasy fans complained, rather hypocritically, that it had nothing to do with the games when the games were connected by themes, not setting or characters. The critics weren't willing to take it seriously because it was "animation", and half of their jobs are posturing for their peers. And the public... just didn't go to see it. I personally don't get the last fact. The sheer beauty and originality of what was shown in the trailers before the film's release, alone, _should_ have made it a media phenomenon... but it didn't, and that makes me legitimately sad. And here we are today, 20 films deep into mind-numbingly banal, jokey-joke, Americans in America + a little space Marvel films and actors in *ridiculous caked on "alien" makeup*, and I think of what could have been, and that this film... this gentle, beautiful fantasy parable in the shape of a sci-fi action drama was a box office failure that ended up being the actual Final Fantasy of the talented and inspired staff of Square Pictures. We * need* more films from this studio. It was fitting that this film was released in the first year of the new decade, (and century, and millennium), as it was a culmination of the imagination of science fiction and fantasy films of the 1980s and 1990s, and a maturation and apotheosis of the themes they followed, along with a revisitation of the lost theme of environmental culpability and responsibility, rendered with the state of the art of computer animation, and had the boldness, integrity, and intelligence to play it for real, instead of with some perversely colorful, happy meal, kiddie lowest-common-denominator "family" toy movie, but to make a legitimate adult drama, and to even have a serene, positive message. Failing stories like this film tells, not appreciating the transcendent personality of its protagonist and not understanding the film's transcendent theme, and going on to create the reality that we have _instead_ is damning evidence that humanity will never learn. The stupid, the pathologically optimistic, the majority, and its sycophant class of rulers will destroy this planet with mindless and careless greed as everything of our culture degenerates as we slowly die out on a radioactive, plastic, and smog-filled planet. We either had to achieve the sublime or fail to save ourselves from our self-made apocalypse. We have failed.
I might be a statistical anomaly for this film. I saw this in theatres 37 times during its original 2001 run in Calgary, Canada. While most people say “no one went to see it,” I was there week after week, even catching at least one showing where I was the only person in the theatre. The visuals were what kept pulling me back. At the time, it felt like watching the future. It's been 25 years since this movie came out, and to quote/paraphase Dr. Ross herself, >It's been 25 years, since they arrived on this planet, and not a day passes, that the survivors... forced to live in barrier cities, do not live in fear. I have vowed to end that fear. I believe the dream that **Final Fantasy: The Spirits within** hold the key. Looking back now, I understand the criticisms about the story, but I still think this film was ==way ahead of its time== and maybe judged too harshly on release. Curious if anyone else here saw it more than once back then?
Interesting. I had no idea what to expect with this film, but was pleasantly surprised. At least many of the production team were Japanese, so it had more intelligence behind it than most recent offerings (which have me avoiding anything with American accents). I wonder, if the film were made today, with the same production team, would the cast appear slightly less plastic? Also I'm not sure whether the rest of the series (of which there appear to be quite a few) will stand up to similar scrutiny. I see a comment below which I resonate with - a great opportunity and a very interesting film- though I didn't think the opportunity was completely lost. It was certainly a breath of fresh air after some of the recent sh*t offered in the form of fantasy or sci fi.
My first movie with complete CG world. It’s a shame that DI was only 2k because it’s caused that the quality of picture looks only little bit better than Blu-ray. Sharpness is quite good, colors are little bit dull. HDR10 not help as much as it can. Any surprise on audio, too. Old fashioned Dolby Digital 5.1. I’m worried that this 4k UHD is final destination of this movie for this time.