L'histoire du célèbre groupe de rock influent des années 60, The Doors et de son chanteur et compositeur, Jim Morrison, depuis ses années comme étudiant en cinéma à l'UCLA, à Los Angeles, ju... Tout lireL'histoire du célèbre groupe de rock influent des années 60, The Doors et de son chanteur et compositeur, Jim Morrison, depuis ses années comme étudiant en cinéma à l'UCLA, à Los Angeles, jusqu'à sa mort à Paris, à l'âge de 27 ans en 1971.L'histoire du célèbre groupe de rock influent des années 60, The Doors et de son chanteur et compositeur, Jim Morrison, depuis ses années comme étudiant en cinéma à l'UCLA, à Los Angeles, jusqu'à sa mort à Paris, à l'âge de 27 ans en 1971.
- Récompenses
- 3 nominations au total
- Shaman
- (as Floyd Red Crow Westerman)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRobby Krieger, the guitarist in The Doors, insisted that the scene showing the band rehearsing "Light My Fire" makes this clear that he, not Jim Morrison, composed the song.
- GaffesWhen Jim Morrison is on a window ledge in 1971, a billboard advertising 48 heures de plus (1990) is visible.
- Citations
Jim Morrison: Some of the worst mistakes of my life have been haircuts.
- Versions alternativesA special edition of the movie was released in 1997 on laserdisc with additional scenes that were cut from the movie:
- A scene taking place circa 1965 with Jim Morrison (Kilmer) jamming onstage with Ray's band, adding obscene lyrics to the Van Morrison song "Gloria."
- 2 additional scenes of a bearded Jim reciting poetry in the recording studio.
- Additional footage of Jim singing "The Unknown Soldier" at the New Haven concert.
- A scene of Jim getting roughed up and harrassed in jail by police officers after being arrested at the New Haven concert.
- Jim in his hotel room with 2 young women and Pam (Meg Ryan) yelling at him from outside.
- Additional footage in the scene where Jim is on an airplane en route to Miami.
- Additional scene at the end with Jim and Ray (Kyle Machlachlan) walking around Venice and talking before he departs for Paris.
- Jim and Pam talking in the airplane en route to Paris.
Death stalks Morrison wherever he goes from a young age. As a child driving through the New Mexico desert with his family, Morrison happens across the site of a car accident littered with dead and dying Navahos. We watch the young Morrison endure what seems to be a sort of possession rite by spirits of the dead natives. Years later he'll profess to be a shaman and from what we see on screen, he might well have believed it to be true. Native American spirits dance alongside Morrison as he sings on stage. Whether these were real or simply an acid fueled hallucination is left deliberately unclear by Stone. Likewise, a death-like character (Richard Rutowski) shadows Morrison throughout his life as a rock singer. Whether this indicates Morrison saw death as a friend, was actually accompanied by Rutowski (who was a real life friend of Morrison), or was simply hallucinating remains ambiguous. What is clear is the following: in his great desire to self destruct, Morrison drank whiskey like water and spent an inordinate amount of time on precarious ledges outside Hotel windows thirty stories up.
Kilmer's performance as Morrison is easily the finest of his career. Raw, nervy, deliberately off putting and confrontational, moments of sobriety are few are far between for this insecure egomaniac. At times I didn't feel as though I was watching a portrayal of a character long deceased so much as a documentary. From threatening suicide repeatedly to quarreling constantly with police at concerts, scenes of bad behavior are many but moments of insight are few and far between. This doesn't seem a shortcoming on behalf of director Stone so much as an accurate depiction of the highly acidic Morrison as he truly was; this was a man who didn't want to be understood. This was an artist on the constant edge of oblivion; an iconoclast who refused to be loved and was close to intolerable whenever possible. Of course it's less than a pleasant experience following the venomous creature that Morrison became for the film's final hour as he goes from alcohol induced nervous breakdown to drug fueled indecent exposure, but I for one appreciate Stone's refusal to Hollywoodize the life and death of Morrison. Kilmer abandons completely all instinct for self preservation on screen, submerging himself in a performance that can only be described as his magnum opus.
Meg Ryan leads the supporting cast as Pamela "Morrison" Courson, Morrison's longtime lover and common-law wife. Ryan seems lost in the role but thankfully spends a minimal amount of time on screen as Morrison was a firm supporter of the "free love" social movement. Indeed, he spends more time with journalist and witchcraft enthusiast Patricia Kennealy (Kathleen Quinlan), an amalgam of several Morrison lovers who suffered through his frequent alcohol and drug induced impotence. A very fine Michael Madsen is wasted as actor Tom Baker, a friend of Morrison's whose relationship is grossly underdeveloped. The only performance among the supporting cast worthy of praise is that of quirky character actor Crispin Glover in a cameo as Andy Warhol, a scene that is absolutely spellbinding.
Some may criticize The Doors for glamorizing a life of excess; this film gives younger viewers the idea that drugs and promiscuous sex are fun, critics may charge. Those who would are missing the point entirely. As are those who would interpret this film as the cautionary tale of a life wasted. Little about the character we view on screen is glamorous. It seems no accident that Morrison died as he did. This was a man obsessed with death; his demise seems more a moment of wish fulfillment than tragedy. My only significant criticism of the film is that the title is certainly a misnomer; this could have easily been titled "The Jim Morrison Story" as there is not a single scene on screen without the eccentric singer while the remaining members of the band are relegated to obscurity. Call it art imitating life once more.
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Doors?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 38 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 34 416 893 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 9 151 800 $US
- 3 mars 1991
- Montant brut mondial
- 34 494 884 $US