Video Sources 0 Views

  • Watch traileryoutube.com
  • Source 1123movies
  • Source 2123movies
  • Source 3123movies
No Home Movie 2016 123movies

No Home Movie 2016 123movies

Feb. 24, 2016115 Min.
Your rating: 0
6 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: No Home Movie 2015 123movies, Full Movie Online – Chantal Akerman films her mother, an old woman of Polish origin who is short lifetime, in her apartment in Brussels. For two hours, we will see them eating, chatting and sharing memories, sometimes accompanied by Sylvaine, Chantal’s sister. Also, and to show how small the world has become, Chantal remains in contact with her mother at other times of the year via Skype from lands as far away from Belgium as Oklahoma or New York..
Plot: Documentary about humans dealing with changing technology, the basic concepts of communication, cinema, and Akerman’s mother, seen in her Brussels apartment.
Smart Tags: #text_based_poster #triple_f_rated #f_rated #brussels_belgium


Find Alternative – No Home Movie 2015, Streaming Links:

123movies | FMmovies | Putlocker | GoMovies | SolarMovie | Soap2day


Ratings:

6.6/10 Votes: 959
89% | RottenTomatoes
81/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 27 Popularity: 2.348 | TMDB

Reviews:

Many years ago, Akerman burst onto the scene as a challenging provocateur. With this film, she leaves the same way.
Leave it to Chantal Akerman to close her career – and then her life – with a film that is by turns boring, heartrending, funny, confounding, symbolic, literal, dreamlike, experimental and concrete.

Akerman’s mother Natalie mother was often her muse, either literally, as in the documentary “Letters From Home, where a visual portrait of New York City is given context by the voice- over reading of letters from her mother, or more symbolically as in her 1974 masterpiece “Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles” – a terribly haunting but difficult 3 hour film about a single mother whose horribly boring on screen life – presented in glacial long shots of activities like cooking potatoes – covers up remarkable and deep secrets and emotions within. And here, right near the start of the film we see Akerman with her mother in a kitchen that is eerily identical to the one in “Jeanne Dielman” sitting and eating potatoes (and discussing their cooking) in the same kind of lengthy, static boring/fascinating shot. It’s clear Akerman intends us to make the connection – that kind of mysterious playfulness is also often deep at the heart of her work.

For a film that on some levels is a pretty straightforward and melancholy portrait of her loving, complex relationship with her mother, this is very much a challenging ‘art film’ on others. Shot over an indeterminate period of time, we see Natalie slowly deteriorating, death drawing ever nearer, but that is not only never discussed, but almost studiously ignored by the film-making. It’s a film about death and loss where those subjects are rarely touched on, and where the whole thing starts with a 4 minute shot of a old tree in an unnamed desert being mercilessly blown by a howling wind.

The location of that tree is never revealed, and it’s connection to the larger story is left for the viewer to fill in. To me it represented her mother’s resilience in a life where she faced much – including the Nazis, but also the kind of tough individualism that marked the lives of both mother and daughter. It also evoked Israel and seemed an ironic counterpoint to her mother’s current housebound life. And last, it seemed to be issuing a challenge to watch closely, to not turn off our brains in boredom, but to transcend frustration to notice the kind of details that only come though actively looking over time, as opposed to passively watching (that challenge is another hallmark of many of Akerman’s films).

The film also has a deeply tragic meta aspect, We know that Natalie died during the finishing of the film and that Chantal took her life not long after. That knowledge suffuses even the most mundane moments with emotion and fascination. And as much as the film refers Akerman’s earlier work in style and feel, there is also much that’s new. In her earlier experiments in portraiture – whether of people or places – the lack of ‘event’ was always offset with the brilliant formal framing of the images. Here the camera placement feels – not saying is – totally random, often cutting off people’s heads, or partially blocking the focus of the scene, as if Akerman has let go of trying to comment on life with the image, and is looking instead to capture a sense of being there in the more random way we see things in life. At times it can make the film itself feel annoyingly unfocused. But at others it brings a fresh variation to the very concept of cinema verite.

This is not a film for everyone. Familiarity with, and admiration for Akerman’s work certainly helps. But no question it is experimental, slow and sometimes just plain dull. On the other hand, it also touches things about the end of life – one’s parent’s and one’s own – that are startling and sad, and couldn’t be gotten to with a more familiar, comfortable and easy to digest approach.

Akerman burst onto the scene as a challenging provocateur. With this film, she leaves the same way.

Review By: runamokprods
Not worthy of watching
Sorry. I have to disagree with other reviewers. This was possibly the most boring movie ever made. I know it was the worst I’ve ever watched. Long, long sequences of nothing–wind blowing, empty rooms, silence–need I go on? OK–even when there was dialog, much of it is mumbled. The film maker was apparently attempting an homage to her mother, but ended up with two hours of sheer boredom.

I have lived in France, frequently visited Belgium, and love my own mother. It was unfortunate that that this mother was captured so starkly and unsympathetically.

The title is “No Home Movie” but it would more appropriately have been named “Unedited Home Movie”. I suggest you watch paint dry rather than this misfire.

Review By: dewer-2

Other Information:

Original Title No Home Movie
Release Date 2016-02-24
Release Year 2015

Original Language fr
Runtime 1 hr 55 min (115 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Not Rated
Genre Documentary
Director Chantal Akerman
Writer Chantal Akerman
Actors Chantal Akerman, Natalia Akerman, Sylvaine Akerman
Country Belgium, France
Awards 4 wins & 7 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process Digital (HD)
Printed Film Format DCP

No Home Movie 2016 123movies
No Home Movie 2016 123movies
No Home Movie 2016 123movies
Original title No Home Movie
TMDb Rating 6.63 27 votes

Director

Cast

Similar titles

David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet 2020 123movies
This Is A.I. 2018 123movies
Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father 2008 123movies
George Michael: Freedom 2017 123movies
15 Minutes of Shame 2021 123movies
Roseanne for President! 2015 123movies
Tom Hanks: Hollywood’s Mr Nice Guy 2022 123movies
Nfinity Champions League Cheerleading Event 2014 123movies
Burden of Dreams 1982 123movies
Judi Dench: All the World’s Her Stage 2016 123movies
Garbage Warrior 2007 123movies
88MPH: The Story of the DeLorean Time Machine 2021 123movies
TVMuse.app