Les Désastreuses Aventures des orphelins Baudelaire
- 2004
- Tous publics
- 1h 48min
Lorsqu'un grand incendie tue leurs parents, trois enfants sont livrés à la garde du cousin et acteur de théâtre, le comte Olaf, qui complote secrètement de voler l'immense fortune de leurs p... Tout lireLorsqu'un grand incendie tue leurs parents, trois enfants sont livrés à la garde du cousin et acteur de théâtre, le comte Olaf, qui complote secrètement de voler l'immense fortune de leurs parents.Lorsqu'un grand incendie tue leurs parents, trois enfants sont livrés à la garde du cousin et acteur de théâtre, le comte Olaf, qui complote secrètement de voler l'immense fortune de leurs parents.
- Récompensé par 1 Oscar
- 10 victoires et 28 nominations au total
- Lemony Snicket
- (voix)
- Bald Man
- (as Luis Guzman)
- Constable
- (as Cedric the Entertainer)
- Grocery Clerk
- (as Robert Clendenin)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhen the children first meet Count Olaf and Jim Carrey says, "Wait, let me do that one more time. Give me the line again, quickly, while its fresh in my mind." was not actually in the script. Carrey accidentally forgot his line and staying in character, wanting to try it again, but they kept the cameras rolling and felt it worked the way it happened.
- GaffesWhen Count Olaf asks why the children haven't cooked him roast beef, he is standing on the ground in front of his acting troupe. In the next shot, about a second later, he is shown jumping down from the table (This is due to cutting an extended scene where Olaf gets onto the table and ruins the dinner they have prepared).
- Citations
Count Olaf: I must say, you are a gloomy looking bunch. Why so glum?
Klaus Baudelaire: ...Our parents just died.
Count Olaf: Ah yes, of course. How very, very awful. Wait! Let me do that one more time. Give me the line again! Quickly, while it's fresh in my mind!
Klaus Baudelaire: [uncertainly] Our parents just died?
Count Olaf: [gasps dramatically]
Sunny: [in baby talk] What a schmuck!
- Crédits fousThere is a credit for 'baby wrangler.'
- Versions alternativesWhen aired on Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network, lines with profanity such as "Damn it, this was such a good character" have the offending language removed. In this case the line simply becomes "this was such a good character." However, what is odd is the line "No one knows the precise cause of the Baudelaire fire. My colleagues and I have investigated as best we can. But all we've discovered is that the blaze was started from a great distance through the refraction and convergence of light. And within moments, the entire mansion was in flames." is removed entirely, which is odd since it's an important plot point. However the line " And as mysterious as the source of the blaze, other mysteries began to unfold before the children's eyes. Every family has its secrets, doors left unopened. But as Klaus now realized, the smallest discovery would send his mind reeling with questions." is kept intact.
- Bandes originalesLoverly Spring
By Thomas Newman and Bill Bernstein
The movie encompasses Snicket's first three books, in which Violet (Emily Browing), Klaus (Liam Aiken), and Sunny are foisted off on several guardians by the dimwitted executor of their parents' estate (Timothy Spall). The first and worst of these is Count Olaf (Jim Carrey), a thorough scoundrel who's after the kids' immense inheritance. The children manage to escape, and over the course of the film encounter a kindly snake enthusiast (Billy Connolly) and an ultra-hypochondriac (Meryl Streep), each of whom try to look after the children in their own way. But mostly the Baudelaires look after themselves, each resourceful in their own way--Violet invents contraptions with whatever is at hand, Klaus is a reference desk unto himself, and baby Sunny practices her teething on whatever (or whoever) is convenient. The trio share the sort of unique bond that can only come from having survived a long string of misadventures. Olaf pursues them throughout, aided by disguises which he considers brilliant and which fool everyone except, of course, the ever-observant Baudelaires.
Most of the elements which make Snicket's books so appealing are present here: the entertaining characters, the cleverness of the children, Snicket's delightful black humor (given voice by Jude Law), and even the cunning reverse-psychology promotional scheme of the series (in which the reader/viewer is told, no really, you DON'T want to hear this story, go find something more cheerful, etc.). Carrey gleefully gnaws the scenery as Olaf, and indeed with such a character he can do no less. Browning and Aiken are quite appealing, but the real scene stealer is Sunny (played by twins Kara and Shelby Hoffman). Sunny does not actually speak, but her coos and gurgles are translated via subtitle in a dry and witty manner (another inspiration taken from the series). The production design (combining the best parts of Tim Burton and Edward Gory) creates a fanciful but accessible world which modern inventions like remote car-keys are wielded by characters who dress like they just stepped out of a Victorian melodrama.
It is perhaps too much to ask that the film could have avoided a Hollywood-style attempt to soften its delightfully dreary outlook, or that Carrey could have gone the entire movie without having at least one sequence in which he's just required to be Jim Carrey. But this is kept to a minimum--as Violet herself says, there really is more good than bad here.
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Lemony Snicket, una serie de eventos desafortunados
- Lieux de tournage
- Stage 1, Downey Studios - 12214 Lakewood Boulevard, Downey, Californie, États-Unis(opening scene by the lake; train scene; Damocles Dock; Lake Lachrymose)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 140 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 118 634 549 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 30 061 756 $US
- 19 déc. 2004
- Montant brut mondial
- 211 468 235 $US
- Durée1 heure 48 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1