A Baleia

  • USA The Whale (mais)
Trailer 1

Conteúdos(1)

The Whale é a história de Charlie (Brendan Fraser numa interpretação inesquecível e comovente), um professor de inglês que vive fechado em casa devido à sua condição de obesidade mórbida, e que, numa tentativa de redenção, tenta reaproximar-se da sua filha adolescente. "Esta história permite-nos entrar na pele de um homem que, de outra forma, nunca poderíamos sequer imaginar, e lembra-nos que a possibilidade de redenção e de amor está presente em cada um de nós. Para mim, esse é o poder do cinema", afirmou Aronofsky. (Medeia Filmes)

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Vídeos (2)

Trailer 1

Críticas (12)

POMO 

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português Uma mistura equilibrada de psicologia íntima e sentimento comovente. Especialmente envolvente graças ao personagem principal que o cinema nunca viu, chocante na sua aparência, e o seu interior é divertido de estudar. Ótimo Brendan Fraser com uma maquilhagem incrível e perfeitamente acompanhado pela filha do filme, Sadie Sink. Os seus encontros fervem através emoções não ditas, raiva das mágoas de um lado e de arrependimento do outro. Sim, o personagem de Fraser tem demasiada pena de si próprio e a sua descoberta da importância da honestidade na vida é risível, mas A Baleia continua a ser um filme bonito e sensível, ao qual não falta o contributo artístico do realizador ()

Marigold 

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inglês An acting masterclass combined with a masterclass in unnecessary directorial manipulation. If Darren had reined in his desire to drag the viewer into a fit of transcendent emotion and had carried the film through to the end as an intimate story about a human mass of guilt and loneliness, it might have had the punch that he last achieved in The Wrestler. Unfortunately, however, this is how the redemption of a self-destructive man becomes more distant the more the director tries to make it poignant. Fraser, on the other hand, deserves maximum respect, as he account for all of the humor and humanism in this dubious dramatic cetacean. ()

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D.Moore 

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inglês In my opinion, The Whale is Aronofsky's second best film, after The Fountain. It isn’t nasty like Requiem for a Dream, nor is it bloated like Black Swan or weepy and formulaic like Wrestler (although it has a lot in common with the latter), but this time it just worked. Although the story doesn't really surprise with anything, it's so well written (you can see the theatrical backbone), acted (Brendan Fraser is brilliant, I'm rooting for him) and filmed (we practically don't leave the apartment, but it doesn't matter) that my cautious curiosity turned into enthusiasm pretty quickly. But I must also praise Sadie Sink and Hong Chau, without whom Charlie would not be Charlie, and I must not forget Simonsen's music. I was originally going to give it four stars, but after a couple of days my reservations melted away under the weight (ahem) of all the unexpectedly positive things the film brought. ()

Goldbeater 

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inglês In terms of sentimentality and weepiness, Darren Aronofsky takes it to absurd lengths, and while I don't feel that it ever slips into the realms of emotional blackmail, I imagine that many viewers will have a big problem with this. I was able to get over it, mainly thanks to the almost hypnotic performance of the lead actor. Yeah, if there's anything about this movie that really needs to be highlighted and remembered, it's Brendan Fraser. He simply pulls it off on his weight as far as his heart and blood vessels will take him, and the whole film relies on his performance. I was also pleased to see that Aronofsky went for a more civil, intimate and straightforward material and was not as overly pretentious this time as he is wont to be. He could have cut down a bit on the tearfulness, but it's definitely a morbidly fat thumbs up for me. ()

Kaka 

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inglês If this were a raw last confession of a lost human soul without any pretensions and all sorts of gimmicks, it would be an absolute blast. The Whale shouldn't have been made by the master of allegories, Aronofsky, who combines uncompromising depression with religious motifs, art literature, and strange human creatures that might not be there at all – I was just waiting for parallel universes and other dimensions to appear. Two stars for the phenomenal Brendan Fraser and the moments when the film is exactly the coherent genre composition it should be for the entire runtime and not just a few fragments. ()

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