PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,1/10
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TU PUNTUACIÓN
Una pareja de leñadores, inmersa en tiempos de guerra, halla a una niña perdida en el bosque donde viven. Al adoptarla, sus vidas y las de aquellos a su alrededor dan un giro inesperado.Una pareja de leñadores, inmersa en tiempos de guerra, halla a una niña perdida en el bosque donde viven. Al adoptarla, sus vidas y las de aquellos a su alrededor dan un giro inesperado.Una pareja de leñadores, inmersa en tiempos de guerra, halla a una niña perdida en el bosque donde viven. Al adoptarla, sus vidas y las de aquellos a su alrededor dan un giro inesperado.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 1 premio y 10 nominaciones en total
Adam Carage
- Le soldat Armée Rouge
- (voz)
- (as Adam Karage)
Alexander Petrov
- Narrator
- (Russian version)
- (voz)
- (as Aleksandr Petrov)
Reseñas destacadas
The Most Precious of Cargoes is a friendly reminder that life is not fiction, and that much more important things can happen that are way further beyond belief.
The film takes place in a dark, wintry forest on the outskirts of Auschwitz during the height of World War II. A poor woodcutter and a poor woodcutter's wife have lost their only child and aged out of the potential to have more. They pass their days in uneasy détente, him content without worrying another mouth to feed while she prays to every god at her disposal for another chance at motherhood. It's a cold, cruel world; always winter, but never Christmas, and the snowflakes that dance gently upon the wind evoke the ashes that rise from the fiery stacks of the nearby camp.
The film takes place in a dark, wintry forest on the outskirts of Auschwitz during the height of World War II. A poor woodcutter and a poor woodcutter's wife have lost their only child and aged out of the potential to have more. They pass their days in uneasy détente, him content without worrying another mouth to feed while she prays to every god at her disposal for another chance at motherhood. It's a cold, cruel world; always winter, but never Christmas, and the snowflakes that dance gently upon the wind evoke the ashes that rise from the fiery stacks of the nearby camp.
"Cartoons are for children," they say - and then a film like The Most Precious of Cargoes proves otherwise. Set during the Holocaust, this animated tale uses simplicity to its advantage, telling a stripped-down yet deeply moving story that feels part fairy tale, part nightmare. With haunting visuals and a quiet emotional weight, it reminds us that kindness and courage are not just noble ideas but actions - especially when humanity is at its most fragile. It's a powerful use of animation to reflect on real horrors and lasting hope. A deeply human story, told with grace.
An absolute a hopeless cinema.
An absolute a hopeless cinema.
Michel Hazanavicius first animated feature isn't the grandest of storytelling when it comes to discussions about the holocaust. However, the ambitious nature, beautiful score, voice performances, and realistic colorful uses of animation provides a promising tale of family, the harsh realities and the natures of war during the WWII era.
Michel Hazanavicius has made a few good movies like The Artist and Redoubtable but he hasn't been good movies in some time. However, with this one, Hazanavicius offers a good glimpse of humanity. Demonstrating through the characters and animation about how despite the cruel reality and the war effects, hope remains strong and compassion is important. The characters between a woodcutter couple were interesting as their emotions and personalities, while could have been a bit more broader, offers a good examination of their goals and personalities. Alongside with the good musical score and the voice performances from the cast.
The animation holds well with the models, colors, and sound designs. Although, a little picky moments were some of the lip movements didn't match the animation at times. The direction from Hazanavicius is good and including a good pacing.
At the end, it's not the best WWII tale but a good animated tale and reminder of the past.
Michel Hazanavicius has made a few good movies like The Artist and Redoubtable but he hasn't been good movies in some time. However, with this one, Hazanavicius offers a good glimpse of humanity. Demonstrating through the characters and animation about how despite the cruel reality and the war effects, hope remains strong and compassion is important. The characters between a woodcutter couple were interesting as their emotions and personalities, while could have been a bit more broader, offers a good examination of their goals and personalities. Alongside with the good musical score and the voice performances from the cast.
The animation holds well with the models, colors, and sound designs. Although, a little picky moments were some of the lip movements didn't match the animation at times. The direction from Hazanavicius is good and including a good pacing.
At the end, it's not the best WWII tale but a good animated tale and reminder of the past.
Initially, I thought we were in for a reversion of "Tom Thumb" as a surly woodcutter and his wife live a subsistence existence in the snowy forest where she longs for a child, but we are swiftly disabused of that theory! Their lives are only ever broken up by the disturbance of the train as it passes through, and it's when praying to that one day that she thinks she hears a baby crying. Searching the snow, she quickly discovers an infant wrapped in a distinctive blanket and quickly takes it to their home. Her husband, though, feels the child to be an ill omen and wants nothing to do with it, so with her and the bairn confined to the cold of the woodshed, she has to try to find it some milk! That's just the start of her travails, though, as we are gradually clued in to where this baby came from, and of the fate that awaited it's parents that led to such a desperate act of love. What now ensues follows her struggle to keep herself and the child from an increasingly approaching war that had hitherto largely left them be, and that might ultimately dot the i's and cross the t's of a story that is touching, courageous and heartening. The almost constant wintery scenario adds an additional chill to a stylishly presented animation that features a sparing degree of dialogue, but some fairly effective audio effects to help create a variety of emotions as the child begins to grow and this simple, decent, family find they no longer have their problems to seek. It's perhaps the last half hour that resonates most, as threads of the tale start to bind together revealing a degree of bleakness and inhumanity on one hand and yet the diametric opposite on the other. What wouldn't a parent do for a child?
The second world war is one of the darkest tiles in humanity. A time where humanity just swore off the grey war, where the world was witness to the extent of human cruelty. A time where promised was rebirth, redemption and peace. Faith's hand just struck Europe in its most habitual gruesome fashion, the towering debt of a great war and a lost generation towering over it. The world stood still, not because of the Schick, or at least not only because if it but because of what lies beneath. Ahead of what is the world's greatest tragedy up to that time lies an ever more bleak future. Germany was in ruin, having just lost a war, the faith if its people and the power of its empire. Vengeance was sworn for the humiliation. A few years after that remarkably dark period, there was a humble and old couple of German woodworkers. The man goes to cut down big trees and the woman bundles the small branches. Both spending a hard day of work to come to a small house in the middle of the forest where hit soup and a tired old dog await. Never had a child the woman begs all that there is, having forsaken god or never having brought up to date with it. She begs the sky, the wood and even the train gods for a train. And one day the train gods answered her prayers. In that empty corner of the forest, a train pierced through the white winter snow, slowly but surly reaching it's dreaded destination. And one day a baby is thrown from the train only for the old wood woman to pick it up. A heartless thing for some, but not for her. What ensues is a beautifully made tragedy, a tale of humanity: the loving force within it that builds and sacrifices and it's inherently evil side that avenges and retributes. Michel hazanavicius animation film borrows a very comic like style that puts you within the heart of an enchanted forest, together with its peculiar set of characters and the bleak setting of the second world war, it's one of the years finest looking tear jerkers. A beautiful farewell to the illustrious career of Jean Louis Trintignant.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis is the first animated film since Vals con Bashir (2008) to be in the main competition of Cannes Film Festival.
- ConexionesReferences Luces de la ciudad (1931)
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 4.339.427 US$
- Duración1 hora 21 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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What is the Canadian French language plot outline for La mercancía más preciosa (2024)?
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