Ambientato nell'area Watts di Los Angeles, il lavoratore di un mattatoio deve eliminare le sue emozioni e continuare a lavorare per il suo lavoro che trova ripugnante.Ambientato nell'area Watts di Los Angeles, il lavoratore di un mattatoio deve eliminare le sue emozioni e continuare a lavorare per il suo lavoro che trova ripugnante.Ambientato nell'area Watts di Los Angeles, il lavoratore di un mattatoio deve eliminare le sue emozioni e continuare a lavorare per il suo lavoro che trova ripugnante.
- Premi
- 4 vittorie e 3 candidature totali
Recensioni in evidenza
Film critic Dana Stevens describes the film's plot as "a collection of brief vignettes which are so loosely connected that it feels at times like you're watching a non-narrative film." There are no acts, plot arcs or character development, as conventionally defined.
What happens in this film is not a documentary, but in many ways it may as well be. How many films really focus on the black community anywhere at any point in time? Very few. And this one does that, in all its gritty and glamorless reality.
The first thing that stood out for me is the way the kids were playing. I pictured myself playing those games and wearing those clothes. The editing of the film is nothing like what happens in todays movies. Our attention span is much too short. There is a scene where two men are carrying an engine down a flight of stairs and into the back of a truck. The camera holds while the men struggle to carry it, pausing in mid-flight for a rest and then continuing on. This film is very real in the sense of how the neighborhoods looked back then and the struggles with money and staying on your feet. Even though I am not from the area, this film reminded me in some ways of how I grew up. I wasn't born yet when this film was in production.
My expectations were set very high for this film because of its previous awards. I started to wonder why it was selected for the national film registry. Possibly because it showed what the area looked like in the post-watts riot era, or was it a film that was created in the blaxploitation era but set itself apart from other films, or did it have to do with watching how kids grow up or how African-Americans were living at the time. I could be unfairly trying to compare this film with the movies that are block busters in our current time. Make sure you see this film.
Filmed sometime in the 70s in Black & White it's the story of a family told over maybe two days and is strangely compelling.
There's no typically Afro-American Urban film scenes just a story about a family and what do. Children play games, dad goes to work and mum looks after the home, an everyday story of life. But don't let that put you off because the film really draws you in somehow. It features a great soundtrack of tunes taken from the 30/40s and some strange (to my mind) editing.
Do try and see this film if it's at a Festival near you because you too will be drawn into it as I was.
Weirdly Wonderful Film.
Black Narcissus
http://www.imdb.com/mymovies/list?l=14198203
The revelations, in the year 2000, are surprising: black kids in the middle of the Ghetto acted up and goofed off exactly the same as white kids in small towns across the midwest...but not like black OR white kids today. The folks in this movie have an innocence about them that survives, along with their dignity, regardless of the social decay around them. You are left with a simple fact: these are still country people, who happen to be living in a city.
For anyone, like me, who grew up in the 1970s, the movie aches with a sense of a lost era, when being a kid meant building forts out of left-over construction materials, throwing dirt clods, and laying down big fat skidmarks with your bicycle.
And all this is just the subplot. The main storyline, of a slaughterhouse-working father trying to run a stable family in the midst of urban decay, is simple, understated, and powerful. The musical sequences inside the slaughterhouse rival Kubrick's ability to juxtapose music and image in a manner that creates infinite levels of meaning and irony. You can only sit with your mouth half agape and think, 'aaah.'
Like La Jetee, this is a movie that will allow you to see life anew, with children's eyes. Never pass up a chance to see it.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe Library of Congress has declared "Killer of Sheep" as a national treasure and one of the first fifty on the National Film Registry. The National Society of Film Critics selected it as one of the "100 Essential Films" of all time. However, since the film was made without the proper legal permits and rights acquisition (due to the expense of the music rights) the film was never shown theatrically or made available on video. It had only been seen on poor quality 16mm prints at a scant few museums and film festivals. Thirty years after its premiere the new 35mm print of Killer of Sheep was brilliantly restored by UCLA Film & Television Archive. In addition, all rights were secured for the music, allowing the film to be shown on the film festival circuit, theaters, and nationally broadcast by Turner Classic Movies. The film is also available on DVD.
- BlooperAfter Stan and his friend load the engine block on the truck, they drive away and it falls out, and a car is then seen parked along the curb. The car was not there when they carried the engine out.
- Citazioni
Stan: [holding a cup of tea] Stu, what does it remind you of when you hold it next to your cheek?
Stu: [taking the cup and placing it to his cheek] Not a damn thing but hot air.
Stan: Didn't it remind you of when you're making love and a woman 'fore it gets sometimes? Just like this?
Stu: Maybe so. I don't go for women who got malaria.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Schafe töten
- Luoghi delle riprese
- E. 99th St. & Towne Avenue, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(scene with stolen TV set)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 100.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 485.435 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 26.154 USD
- 1 apr 2007
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 549.387 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 20 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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