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Sirene

Sirene (1968)

January. 01,1968
|
7.2
| Fantasy Animation Drama Comedy

Monsterlike cranes reign over an inhospitable harbour as prehistorical reptiles. The only human being they accept is a lonesome fisherman. He is to witness a strange encounter between a ship's mate and a mermaid. Imagination or reality?

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SpuffyWeb
1968/01/01

Sadly Over-hyped

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Rijndri
1968/01/02

Load of rubbish!!

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Fatma Suarez
1968/01/03

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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Mathilde the Guild
1968/01/04

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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MartinHafer
1968/01/05

The highlight of this film is the animation. While compared to many animated films today this isn't a great film, for 1968 it is very good and creative. As for the story, it was, well, very odd and not the best aspect of SIREN.The story begins with an odd red and black animation. Not until later are there any other colors and the city is very odd to say the least. There are giant flying reptiles in the skies, weird mechanical cranes and a ship that suddenly changes colors as a mermaid appears. What happens next is just bizarre...very bizarre and involves an ambulance and a truck from the zoo. See if yourself--it's really too hard to try to explain.Overall, an interesting piece of art and not a traditional film in any way. Kids will no doubt hate it, but if you like experimental films, give it a try--it's very nice.

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krebstar
1968/01/06

quoting from Philippe Moins and Jan Temmerman's book called a painter-filmmaker's journey:after `chromophobia`'s narrative lead with drums beating, `Sirene` looks like a much less linear, more meandering, atmospheric and poetic film, even if the context to which it refers has links with society and its defects... everything here is more nervous, faltering with black edges, much like the pteranodons which dominate the scene with their heavy flight... the only notable presence, a little fisherman, brings back nothing but fish-skeletons in his baskets, and the entire city, with its cranes and its mooring cables, appears like a pile of nets and fish-bones, carcass of a declining industrial universe... as an idyll between eerie representations (a bow ofa ship and a siren), `sirene` was perceived as an early denouncement of the degradation of the environment. today, the film comes to us both as a poem dedicated to freedom and as a sarcastic vision of the order imposed by human society.

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