AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,8/10
17 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Lili luta para proteger seu cão Hagen. Ela fica devastada quando seu pai finalmente libera Hagen para as ruas. Ainda inocentemente acreditando que o amor pode superar qualquer dificuldade, L... Ler tudoLili luta para proteger seu cão Hagen. Ela fica devastada quando seu pai finalmente libera Hagen para as ruas. Ainda inocentemente acreditando que o amor pode superar qualquer dificuldade, Lili se propõe a encontrar seu cão e salvá-lo.Lili luta para proteger seu cão Hagen. Ela fica devastada quando seu pai finalmente libera Hagen para as ruas. Ainda inocentemente acreditando que o amor pode superar qualquer dificuldade, Lili se propõe a encontrar seu cão e salvá-lo.
- Prêmios
- 8 vitórias e 21 indicações no total
Lili Horvát
- Anya
- (as Horváth Lili Anna)
Enredo
Você sabia?
- Curiosidades274 dogs were used in the making of this movie which is the world record for the most dogs used in a feature film.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhenever we see a character wandering on the streets, let it be Lili, Hagen or others, they always take quite odd and complicated routes, passing places quite far from each other. In the opening scene we see Lili cycling in downtown Budapest, on the Pest side (the Eastern bank of the river Danube) but in the next cut she's on the bridge heading to the Eastern bank again. It's not unlikely that she went back to Buda and back again, but doesn't make much sense.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditos[Opening tittle card] "Everything terrible is something that needs our love." -Rainer Maria Rilke
- ConexõesFeatures Concerto para Gato e Piano (1947)
Avaliação em destaque
The opening and closing shots of White God are beautiful and powerful realizations of Director Kornél Mundruczó's allegorical horror/thriller vision. Unfortunately, much of the movie does not meet this lofty ideal.
White God tells the story of Lili who is forced by her hard-hearted father to leave her dog, Hagen, on the streets to fend for himself. As Hagen falls into a cycle of abuse and abandonment, Lili becomes more independent and forgets about him. Hagen retaliates against his human oppressors by leading his fellow shelter-dogs in an apocalyptic revolution.
Let's get one thing out of the way first: the fact that this movie was shot entirely with real dogs and practical effects is simply masterful. The angry canine horde is the most terrifying group of animals since The Birds, but Mundruczó works very hard to keep the audience sympathetic towards them. Animal Trainer Teresa Ann Miller deserves some sort of award for convincingly training over 200 dogs to convey such a wide breadth of emotion. Although I cringed seeing scenes of abuse and dog-fighting, "they were always happy, and just playing," said Mundruczó to Fangoria magazine.
Unfortunately, the acting of the dogs is by far the best acting in the movie. The actress who plays Lili does this annoying pursed-lip thing that will make you want to smack her through the screen. Lili's father remains a contemptible a** to the very end. Even the evil dog trainer, despite having the most well-scripted character, couldn't be more two-dimensional if he had a mustache to twirl.
To make matters worse, the only parts of the movie that are any good are those with Hagen. Lili's story is droll beyond belief and just feels like a distraction from Hagen. I wish that I could have read this movie as an allegory about man's abuse of animals or as a metaphor for how easily the middle class forget about the poor. Unfortunately, the tediousness of Lili's story, which was obviously written in after Hagen's, kept distracting me from the movie's emotional and philosophical core. When the movie should have been showing similarities between Lili and Hagen, it often simply drove their stories further apart.
Now, don't get me wrong, this was definitely a "good" movie. I would consider it required viewing for fans of horror and suspense. As a dog-lover, Hagen's story really hit the emotional nail on the head. Mundruczó's ambitious vision is, in itself, highly commendable. It is unfortunate that a few poor directorial choices kept this movie from becoming the masterpiece it deserved to be.
Maybe an American remake will fix some of these problems? Probably not...
White God tells the story of Lili who is forced by her hard-hearted father to leave her dog, Hagen, on the streets to fend for himself. As Hagen falls into a cycle of abuse and abandonment, Lili becomes more independent and forgets about him. Hagen retaliates against his human oppressors by leading his fellow shelter-dogs in an apocalyptic revolution.
Let's get one thing out of the way first: the fact that this movie was shot entirely with real dogs and practical effects is simply masterful. The angry canine horde is the most terrifying group of animals since The Birds, but Mundruczó works very hard to keep the audience sympathetic towards them. Animal Trainer Teresa Ann Miller deserves some sort of award for convincingly training over 200 dogs to convey such a wide breadth of emotion. Although I cringed seeing scenes of abuse and dog-fighting, "they were always happy, and just playing," said Mundruczó to Fangoria magazine.
Unfortunately, the acting of the dogs is by far the best acting in the movie. The actress who plays Lili does this annoying pursed-lip thing that will make you want to smack her through the screen. Lili's father remains a contemptible a** to the very end. Even the evil dog trainer, despite having the most well-scripted character, couldn't be more two-dimensional if he had a mustache to twirl.
To make matters worse, the only parts of the movie that are any good are those with Hagen. Lili's story is droll beyond belief and just feels like a distraction from Hagen. I wish that I could have read this movie as an allegory about man's abuse of animals or as a metaphor for how easily the middle class forget about the poor. Unfortunately, the tediousness of Lili's story, which was obviously written in after Hagen's, kept distracting me from the movie's emotional and philosophical core. When the movie should have been showing similarities between Lili and Hagen, it often simply drove their stories further apart.
Now, don't get me wrong, this was definitely a "good" movie. I would consider it required viewing for fans of horror and suspense. As a dog-lover, Hagen's story really hit the emotional nail on the head. Mundruczó's ambitious vision is, in itself, highly commendable. It is unfortunate that a few poor directorial choices kept this movie from becoming the masterpiece it deserved to be.
Maybe an American remake will fix some of these problems? Probably not...
- jessemobile1021
- 9 de jul. de 2015
- Link permanente
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- How long is White God?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- HUF 700.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 282.358
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 16.139
- 29 de mar. de 2015
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 616.277
- Tempo de duração2 horas 1 minuto
- Cor
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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