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    Home Page > Movies & DVD > Necropolis - La città dei morti

    NECROPOLIS - LA CITTA' DEI MORTI: IL TUO PASSATO TI DARA' LA CACCIA DAL MONDO SOTTERRANEO DI PARIGI

    Dall'11 SETTEMBRE

    (As Above So Below; USA 2014; Thriller Horror; 93'; Produz.: Legendary Pictures; Distribuz.: Universal Pictures International Italy)

    Locandina italiana Necropolis - La città dei morti

    Rating by
    Celluloid Portraits:



    See SYNOPSIS

    Titolo in italiano: Necropolis - La città dei morti

    Titolo in lingua originale: As Above So Below

    Anno di produzione: 2014

    Anno di uscita: 2014

    Regia: John Erick Dowdle

    Sceneggiatura: Drew e John Erick Dowdle

    Cast: Perdita Weeks (Scarlett)
    Ben Feldman (George)
    Edwin Hodge (Benji)
    François Civil (Papillon)
    Marion Lambert (Souxie)
    Ali Marhyar (Zed)
    Cosme Castro (La Taupe)
    Hamid Djavadan (Reza)
    Théo Cholbi (Gloomy Teenager)
    Emy Lévy (Guida turistica)
    Roger Van Hool (padre di Scarlett)

    Costumi: Annie Bloom

    Scenografia: Louise Marzaroli

    Fotografia: Léo Hinstin

    Montaggio: Elliot Greenberg

    Casting: Sarah Finn, Tamara Hunter e Juliette Ménager

    Scheda film aggiornata al: 29 Settembre 2014

    Sinossi:

    IN BREVE:

    Miglia di tortuose catacombe si nascondono sotto le strade di Parigi, la dimora eterna di un numero senza fine di anime. Quando una squadra di esploratori si avventura in un inesplorato labirinto di ossa, scopriranno il segreto per il quale la città dei morti era stata destinata. As Above, So Below è un viaggio nella follia e nel terrore che raggiunge le profondità della psiche umana per rivelare i demoni personali che tornano a dare la caccia a ciascuno di noi.

    SYNOPSIS:

    When a team of explorers ventures into the catacombs that lie beneath the streets of Paris, they uncover the dark secret that lies within this city of the dead.

    Miles of twisting catacombs lie beneath the streets of Paris, the eternal home to countless souls. When a team of explorers ventures into the uncharted maze of bones, they uncover the dark secret that lies within this city of the dead. A journey into madness and terror, As Above, So Below reaches deep into the human psyche to reveal the personal demons that come back to haunt us all. Written by John Erick Dowdle and Drew Dowdle (Quarantine, Devil) and directed by John Erick Dowdle, the psychological thriller is produced by Thomas Tull, Jon Jashni, Drew Dowdle and Patrick Aiello. Alex Hedlund serves as the executive producer.

    Commento critico (a cura di PETER DEBRUGE, www.vavriety.com)

    A FOUND-FOOTAGE APPROACH MAKES IT POSSIBLE FOR CAMERA AND CREW TO EXPLOIT THE PARIS CATACOMBS, WHILE SACRIFICING CINEMATIC THRILLS ALONG THE WAY.

    Beneath the streets of Paris lies a vast network of tunnels just waiting to be exploited by an enterprising found-footage film crew. Imagine the excitement of the rolling-boulder opening scene in “Raiders of the Lost Ark” stretched to feature length, then subtract such vital ingredients as John Williams’ pulse-elevating score, Douglas Slocombe’s visceral cinematography and Harrison Ford’s wry charisma, and you get “As Above, So Below,” in which a Lara Croft-like heroine assembles a team of expendable “cataphiles” (as catacomb obsessives call themselves) to locate the Philosopher’s Stone. It all makes for clumsy-fun escapism, not bad as end-of-summer chillers go, but small-time compared with other Legendary releases.

    Returning to the faux-doc format they helped innovate in such pics as “The Poughkeepsie Tapes” and “Quarantine,” the Dowdle brothers, John Erick

    (who directs) and Drew (his fellow producer), are by now experts at creating suspense within narrow confines. Their previous feature, “Devil,” took place almost entirely in an elevator, and considering all the challenges that the Paris catacombs would pose a traditional camera team — low ceilings, narrow passages and waist-deep water — they’ve managed to generate some genuine tension without straying too far from the realm of the real.

    That means nearly all the thrills come either from things that could actually happen (claustrophobia, cave-ins and encounters with the various weirdos you might expect to meet underground) or directly from the characters (who all have deaths of friends or family members unresolved in their pasts) — the idea being that venturing down certain corridors of the catacombs is a bit like spelunking in one’s own subconscious. Here, in a calculated yet nevertheless welcome twist on traditional gender roles, it’s a young

    woman who emerges as the fearless and resourceful leader of the expedition, recruiting a French ruffian named Papillon (Francois Civil) and two of his grungy sidekicks, Souxie (Marion Lambert) and Zed (Ali Marhyar), as guides.

    Branching out from a resume consisting mostly of small roles in upscale literary projects, British actress Perdita Weeks plays Scarlet, a woman who will stop at nothing to get to the “truth.” Fluent in six languages and a black belt in karate, this readymade heroine probably came preloaded with the Dowdles’ screenwriting software, taking over her alchemy-expert dad’s search for the Philosopher’s Stone after his suicide. Scarlet doesn’t have many distinguishing characteristics beyond that: no bullwhip, no fear of snakes, just a penchant for spouting exposition and a lingering crush on sometime-sidekick George (“Mad Men’s” Ben Feldman), whose hobby involves breaking into places and fixing old monuments — which is basically the opposite of what this

    mission of crumbling walls, collapsing ceilings and breaking centuries-old artifacts entails.

    Once Scarlet gets going, there’s nothing stopping her, whether it’s infiltrating booby-trapped caves in Iran of dousing museum treasures with flammable compounds in search of clues, and Elliot Greenberg’s jump-cutty editing style keeps the adventure going at roughly the rate of Scarlet’s intellect — which makes her wild “Da Vinci Code” ramblings sound more impressive than they actually are, in much the way the pic’s hermeticist title suggests a dimension that informs little more than murals glimpsed along the way. It’s a shame the film doesn’t give the audience time to try solving some of the puzzles, rather than simply watching her and George go at it, though the pacing eliminates any room to question her split-second impulses.

    As the implied dangers start to become real, however, the movie feels as though it’s moving too fast, abandoning fallen team members with

    no time to mourn (don’t be surprised if your favorite characters don’t make it) and plunging forever forward, even when signs — “Abandon hope all ye who enter here” — call for a modicum of caution. Cheating the geography, the Dowdles create the illusion that, as a feral character called “the Mole” (Cosme Castro) puts it, “the only way out is down,” despite the fact that they’re basically taking us in circles around the same locations. By the end, they want to give the impression that the entire world has been inverted and the group is now climbing upside-down through places they’ve already passed. However, since the real tunnels were used more than soundstages, the gimmick never quite works.

    Still, the filmmakers manage to capture the surreal atmosphere of wandering rogue beneath the streets of Paris, where the usual clues humans use to get their bearings (say, locating the Eiffel Tower

    on the horizon) or judge the time of day (via the position of the sun) are denied, making for a truly disorienting experience. At the same time, the film features an enhanced soundtrack, which compensates for a camera that goes all wobbly whenever anything truly exciting should be happening onscreen, tickling our imagination with the sounds of cracking walls, eerie whispers and distant chants.

    The sixth member of Scarlet’s party is her faithful documentarian, Benji (Edwin Hodge), who rigs each of their helmets with HD cams and then spends the rest of his time in a state of panic. Ideally, these camera placements (just above the eyes) would contribute to a relatively subjective viewing experience, and the film does offer a rare chance to see parts of the catacombs not open to the public, though the visuals feel slapdash instead of cinematic — and the film suffers for it, hiding ghostly

    figures on the edge of the frame instead of taking full advantage of the environment, the way “The Descent” or “Mimic” approached dark and spooky spaces.

    When Scarlet finally does uncover the solution to the Philosopher’s Stone — this legend of alchemy rumored to possess healing powers and the ability to turn ordinary objects into gold — the final reveal is unspeakably corny, suggesting that an hour of therapy might have delivered the same advice. For those hoping to find some truly disturbing secrets buried for generations beneath the surface, track down Gary Sherman’s 1972 “Death Line” (aka “Raw Meat”) instead.

    Perle di sceneggiatura


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    Galleria Video:

    Necropolis-La città dei morti - trailer

    Necropolis-La città dei morti - trailer (versione originale) - As Above, So Below

    Necropolis-La città dei morti - clip 'Uscita segreta'

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