L'historienne et écrivaine de renommée, Deborah Lipstadt doit se battre pour la vérité historique pour prouver que la Shoah a réellement eu lieu quand le négationniste David Irving intente u... Tout lireL'historienne et écrivaine de renommée, Deborah Lipstadt doit se battre pour la vérité historique pour prouver que la Shoah a réellement eu lieu quand le négationniste David Irving intente un procès contre elle pour diffamation.L'historienne et écrivaine de renommée, Deborah Lipstadt doit se battre pour la vérité historique pour prouver que la Shoah a réellement eu lieu quand le négationniste David Irving intente un procès contre elle pour diffamation.
- Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
- 7 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAll the dialogue in the courtroom scenes is taken verbatim from the trial records.
- GaffesDuring the visit to the Auschwitz Concentration Camp it is said that the Germans blew up the ruins of the gas chambers one week before the end of World War II. That would have been end of April/beginning of May 1945.
Auschwitz was liberated by the Soviet Red Army on January 27th, 1945.
- Citations
Deborah Lipstadt: Now, some people are saying that the result of this trial will threaten free speech. I don't accept that. I'm not attacking free speech. On the contrary, I've been defending it against someone who wanted to abuse it. Freedom of speech means you can say whatever you want. What you can't do is lie, and then expect not to be held accountable for it. Not all opinions are equal. And some things happened, just like we say they do. Slavery happened, the Black Death happened. The Earth is round, the ice caps are melting, and Elvis is not alive.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Film '72: Épisode #46.2 (2017)
The performances are uniformally excellent, especially those of the four leading characters. The very under-rated Rachel Weisz plays American author and historian Deborah Lipstadt upon whose part biographical book, the film is based. Her publishing company Penguin Books is sued for libel in the UK, by the self-styled and self-promoting David Irving, a so-called expert historian on Nazi German history. Timothy Spall plays the oily Irving, with just the right mix of reptilian fascination. Lipstadt, deciding to defend the case in London hires a legal team led by solicitor Anthony Julius and barrister Richard Rampton, which must prove that Irving had lied about the Holocaust to win the case. Tom Wilkinson is outstandingly good, as Rampton, reputed to be at the time, one of the best legal minds in Britain, an accolade we later learn he earned with good reason. Anthony Scott, whose work is mostly seen in the film's first half provides plenty of that quietly self-deprecating, understated humour for which the Brits are well-known and which adds just the right dash of comic relief to proceedings, which frequently cover exceedingly grim territory.
Besides unveiling the overarching true contest about what constitutes true history and what is false and confronting issues of racism and anti-Semitism, Denial fascinates, with its detailing of the defence's trial strategy, with which for much of the lead-up to and trial itself, Lipstadt didn't necessarily agree. Ultimately she puts her faith in her legal team and is rewarded in a genuinely moving climax.
Director Mick Jackson, whose cinema work I haven't seen for many a day, handles the production, like the defence team itself, in a smartly proficient, non-flashy manner. This is especially noticeable when the defence team tour the skeletal remains of the Auschwitz death camp in Poland, seeking to find weaknesses in Irving's historical accounts of Nazi actions. The temptation to recreate large-scale scenes of human horror are strongly controlled and only briefly hinted at.
Denial is that rare cinematic beast. It's about as close as you'll come to getting a dramatised true story, without it falling into the documentary genre. Indeed much of the dialogue during the compelling trial scenes of the second half is taken directly from the courtroom records. I have to admit to some surprise that Denial didn't have a greater impact at some of the high profile awards ceremonies.
- spookyrat1
- 8 avr. 2019
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- How long is Denial?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 10 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 4 073 489 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 93 728 $US
- 2 oct. 2016
- Montant brut mondial
- 7 994 527 $US
- Durée1 heure 49 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1