AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
12 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Durante os últimos dias do sangrendo apartheid, quatro valentes fotógrafos (Greg Marinovich, Kevin Carter, Ken Oosterbroek y Joao Silva) arriscam suas vidas para capturar o desenvolvimento d... Ler tudoDurante os últimos dias do sangrendo apartheid, quatro valentes fotógrafos (Greg Marinovich, Kevin Carter, Ken Oosterbroek y Joao Silva) arriscam suas vidas para capturar o desenvolvimento desta violenta luta.Durante os últimos dias do sangrendo apartheid, quatro valentes fotógrafos (Greg Marinovich, Kevin Carter, Ken Oosterbroek y Joao Silva) arriscam suas vidas para capturar o desenvolvimento desta violenta luta.
- Prêmios
- 13 indicações no total
Lika Berning
- Vivian
- (as Lika van den Bergh)
Alfred Kumalo
- Alf Khumalo
- (as Alf Khumalo)
Khutso Shilakwe
- K.K.
- (as Kuutso Shilakwe)
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesKevin Carter's daughter Megan Carter is featured in the bar scene where she turns around and says 'You must be Ken Oosterbroek.' Standing next to her is Kevin Carter's stepdaughter Sian Lloyd.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen Greg Marinovich and Joao Silva are reviewing Kevin Carter's film of the vulture and child, the negatives they view through the magnifier are actually halftone images, not normal negatives that one would be examining before publication. (Halftones are the "dotted" images used to print photographs in newspapers and magazines, etc.)
- Citações
Kevin Carter: They're right. All those people who say it's our job to just sit and watch people die. They're right.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosPhotos taken by the real photographers, including portraits of one another, are used as a backdrop during the first section of the credits. The taking of some of these photographs is portrayed in the film itself.
- ConexõesFeatured in The Hour: Episode #7.81 (2011)
- Trilhas sonorasGroovin' Jive No. 1
Written by Noise Khanyile (as Noise Kanyile)
Performed by Noise Khanyile
Avaliação em destaque
Kevin Carter's Pulitzer prize winning photograph is one of those images that gets burned into the back of your mind. It haunts you long after you see it. I saw this photo of the young Sudanese girl, about 10 years after it was taken, and it still fills me with sorrow. It makes you wonder what happened to the poor girl. It makes you question how the world can have both a massive obesity epidemic, and massive global starvation at the same time. It isn't something you can easily forget, and it's the type of image photo journalists spend an entire career searching for.
In this multi-biography, director Steven Silver tells the story of four friends, all combat photographers in the mid 1990's before the fall of the Apartheid. They tell the story of the Zulu and their tribal warfare all the while photographing the constant death, starvation, and violence that surrounds them, all the while building their camaraderie and forming the Bang Bang Club.
It's a very well written film and it brings up many issues. Most notably the hypocrisy of the situation, is that these journalists are living a life of comparative wealth and debauchery in this time of strife, and at the same time trying to make a name for themselves by taking photos focused on the very visceral suffering of others. Where the film really shines is in the background and the violence therein. I was quite impressed with the sheer number of extras for most of the fighting scenes. There are a lot of graphic sequences of course, but it's not the violence that makes the film. It's the exploitation of that violence that makes the film so interesting.
There were a couple of issues I had with the movie. For example, 4 white guys with cameras strapped to their bodies standing in the middle of battles while dodging bullets is certainly unbelievable at times. Yelling "PRESS! PRESS!" doesn't keep you safe in a war-zone. The dialogue is believable for the most part, except when they are joking around in the middle of the battle scenes. I did enjoy Taylor Kitsch's torn and dark portrayal of his character Kevin Carter. Ryan Phillippe does well as prize winning photographer Greg Marinovich, but I thought he was perhaps too good looking to be believable. Compare him to the real Greg Marionovich during the end credits and you'll see what I mean.
That being said, it's an excellent film and Steven Silver certainly has an eye for very personal story telling.
7/10
In this multi-biography, director Steven Silver tells the story of four friends, all combat photographers in the mid 1990's before the fall of the Apartheid. They tell the story of the Zulu and their tribal warfare all the while photographing the constant death, starvation, and violence that surrounds them, all the while building their camaraderie and forming the Bang Bang Club.
It's a very well written film and it brings up many issues. Most notably the hypocrisy of the situation, is that these journalists are living a life of comparative wealth and debauchery in this time of strife, and at the same time trying to make a name for themselves by taking photos focused on the very visceral suffering of others. Where the film really shines is in the background and the violence therein. I was quite impressed with the sheer number of extras for most of the fighting scenes. There are a lot of graphic sequences of course, but it's not the violence that makes the film. It's the exploitation of that violence that makes the film so interesting.
There were a couple of issues I had with the movie. For example, 4 white guys with cameras strapped to their bodies standing in the middle of battles while dodging bullets is certainly unbelievable at times. Yelling "PRESS! PRESS!" doesn't keep you safe in a war-zone. The dialogue is believable for the most part, except when they are joking around in the middle of the battle scenes. I did enjoy Taylor Kitsch's torn and dark portrayal of his character Kevin Carter. Ryan Phillippe does well as prize winning photographer Greg Marinovich, but I thought he was perhaps too good looking to be believable. Compare him to the real Greg Marionovich during the end credits and you'll see what I mean.
That being said, it's an excellent film and Steven Silver certainly has an eye for very personal story telling.
7/10
- kdavies-69347
- 4 de abr. de 2016
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- How long is The Bang Bang Club?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- The Bang Bang Club
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 221.292
- Tempo de duração1 hora 46 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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