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See You Up There

2017 [FRENCH]

Action / Comedy / Crime / Drama / History / War

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Laurent Lafitte Photo
Laurent Lafitte as Henri d'Aulnay-Pradelle
Émilie Dequenne Photo
Émilie Dequenne as Madeleine Péricourt
Mélanie Thierry Photo
Mélanie Thierry as Pauline
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
995.33 MB
1280*534
French 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 57 min
P/S 0 / 1
1.87 GB
1920*800
French 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 57 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by artee-410 / 10

Utterly magnificent !

This movie will restore your faith in movie making, a most wonderful film that was even better second time around. Acting, photography, special effects, music - everything of the highest order. Would I see it for a third time ? Oh yes.

Reviewed by deloudelouvain8 / 10

Albert Dupontel has a new fan from now on.

I watched Au Revoir Là-Haut (See You Up There for the English title) followed by Adieu Les Cons (Bye Bye Morons for the English title),both movies by writer/director Albert Dupontel, in which he also plays the major role. I can only say I'm a fan from now on. Au Revoir Là-Haut has a very artistic touch in the story, which made it very enjoyable to watch. It's just a special movie, something different from the rest, with an interesting engaging story, all well written, but also very well acted and that from the whole cast. It clearly deserves it's high rating on here. I can't see what people could dislike about this movie. It's certainly one of the better French movies I watched this decennia. You can't really compare it to Adieu Les Cons which has a totally different story but you certainly recognize that typical vibe you get from Albert Dupontel.

Reviewed by dromasca9 / 10

victims of war

It's one hundred year since the world entered in the final year of the first global conflict. WWI was a fractal event in history. It changed the world order that had been in place for the last century, it led to the crumbling of empires that had lasted for many centuries, it changed the map of the world, created new nations and countries, and gave birth to one of the most cruel totalitarian regime ever, seeding the seeds for the emergency of another less than 20 years later. Tens of million of people died, the lives of other tens of millions were shaken, shattered, destroyed. It also changed the course of the history of culture, art and literature. Artists caught in the turmoil of war reflected their experiences (mostly traumatic) in dramatic works - paintings, music, poems, novels, films. One hundred years later, the experience of WWI is still subject to novels and films. Some of them are outstanding and this is the case with the novel of Pierre Lemaitre which won the Goncourt Prize in 2013 and the film it inspired written and directed by Albert Dupontel. "See You Up There" ("Au revoir là-haut" is the original title) shows that we still try to understand the feelings and sufferings of the men caught in that war (or in any war),to make sense of the absurdity, to learn where there may be no lesson to be learned.

The trigger of the story in "Au revoir là-haut" takes place in the last days of WWI. Armistice is rumored to happen any moment, but there are still commanders who have a hard time putting aside their war toys and continue to fight absurd missions sending soldiers in the way of useless deaths and mutilations. One of the last victims of the war is private Edouard Pericourt, an artist whose talent and style allude to the works of Egon Schiele. He is badly wounded and disfigured, and for the rest of his life will wear masks that hide the mutilation but also express his moods and feelings. Nahuel Pérez Biscayart spends much of the film behind masks that he created, and this is one more challenge for that he overcomes with superb talent. His friend and companion is an older soldier, Albert Maillard, (acted by Albert Dupontel himself). Pericourt refuses to return to his rich family, the old conflict with his severe and authoritarian father being part of the reason. He just wants to disappear as dead, to hide the identity and cut short the destiny brutally destroyed by war. The revenge he devises is not aiming personal benefit, it's a revenge against the system and society that sent him and his whole generation to war and does not care about the living victims, the survivors traumatized physically but especially psychologically, and against the demagogues and the war profiteers who switched businesses from selling arms to building cemeteries and monuments of war.

I will not reveal more about the story to leave intact to the readers of this note the pleasure of viewing. It's a very well written story (excepting maybe the final) with characters that succeed to be both original and credible. It's beautifully filmed, with a cinematography work that is expressive and attractive, seeking permanently surprising angles that make the experience of seeing this film interesting at all moments. Art plays a special role, there is a lot of original art (drawings, masks) created for this film in the spirit of the immediate post-war artistic movements. As viewers we are delighted with a beautiful and authentic image of Paris in 1919 and of the evolution of art in the aftermath of the war, at the time art-deco artists were turning to Expressionism and Abstract to express their feelings.

One of the best films about and against war that I have ever seen.

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