VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,9/10
8534
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Per avere la meglio sull'ultimo villaggio ostile ai romani, Cesare ordina che il druido Panoramix, l'unico a conoscere la ricetta della pozione magica, sia gettato oltre i confini del mondo.... Leggi tuttoPer avere la meglio sull'ultimo villaggio ostile ai romani, Cesare ordina che il druido Panoramix, l'unico a conoscere la ricetta della pozione magica, sia gettato oltre i confini del mondo. Così facendo egli verrà catapultato in AmericaPer avere la meglio sull'ultimo villaggio ostile ai romani, Cesare ordina che il druido Panoramix, l'unico a conoscere la ricetta della pozione magica, sia gettato oltre i confini del mondo. Così facendo egli verrà catapultato in America
Roger Carel
- Astérix
- (voce)
Pierre Tornade
- Obélix
- (voce)
Robert Party
- Jules César
- (voce)
Olivier Jankovic
- Stupidus
- (voce)
Nathalie Spitzer
- Falbala
- (voce)
Claude Chantal
- Bonemine
- (voce)
Philippe Sollier
- Baba, la vigie des pirates
- (voce)
- (as Philippe Solier)
Philippe Valmont
- Un sénateur #1
- (voce)
- (as Jean-Philippe Bouton)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn an early version of the movie there was a scene where Vitalstatistix opens his fly, pulls out a fish and asks Unhygienix to smell it, but Albert Uderzo (Asterix creator) hated the joke and asked for it to be removed.
- BlooperCaesar and the other Romans seem to think the world is flat. In truth, they would have known it was round, since scientists from Greek culture had determined this several centuries earlier.
- Versioni alternativeIn 2003 the film was re-released in Germany with a different dubbing featuring the voices of John Friedmann and Florian Simbeck (the infamous comedy duo "Erkan & Stefan", best known for their pseudo-Turkish/Bavarian accent). That dub was also included on the DVD/Blu-ray (called the "Schwörerdeutsch-Version").
- ConnessioniEdited from Asterix e la grande guerra (1989)
- Colonne sonoreWe Are One People
Written by Harold Faltermeyer & David Cooke
Performed by Aswad
French version performed by Zouk Machine
Rap by Soloman
Produced by Harold Faltermeyer & Uli Fisher
Published by BMG Ufa
Recensione in evidenza
Somehow it just has never quiet worked out to translate the "Asterix"-comics to the big screen. For one, the graphic novels always had an appeal for both young and old. More than being your average, "funny comic-book adventures", "Asterix" contained insight and informative, valuable facts on cultural references, language and history. Not all of those would reveal themselves to the adolescent reader, but appealed to the older crowd (generally the parents). Indeed, I dare say that the Latin which most of kids from my times learned came straight out of "Asterix".
The cartoons on the other hand, perhaps with exception of the first two films, "Asterix the Gaul" and "Asterix and Cleopatra" (that caught the essence of the first album) and the psychedelic "Twelve Tasks of Asterix", clearly catered to an adolescent audience. Combining various story lines from the comics, the wit and cultural and political references were mostly been replaced with juvenile jokes and slapstick.
Generally most of the Asterix-films are an amalgamation of various comics. In the case of "Asterix conquers America" the story sticks pretty close to "Asterix and the Big Crossing" (but excluding the meetings between the two Gauls with the "actual" discoverers of America, namely a bunch of Danish Vikings). The visuals are okay if you prefer computer-animations over hand-drawings (which I don't), but lack the richness in details that was typical in the graphic novels. However, the gags and jokes are so infantile and predicable, that I doubt it will raise many laughs even during a screening of some children's channel. If you never liked the cartoons, give it a miss and stick to the comics. If you enjoyed the early cartoons, it still is one of the weakest of the whole series.
To those who criticize that there are some genitalia visible in the film, I'll let you in on a secret: We all have them, we've all seen them and very little ill has come from this fact. Only dirty minds think dirty things.
3 from 10 points
The cartoons on the other hand, perhaps with exception of the first two films, "Asterix the Gaul" and "Asterix and Cleopatra" (that caught the essence of the first album) and the psychedelic "Twelve Tasks of Asterix", clearly catered to an adolescent audience. Combining various story lines from the comics, the wit and cultural and political references were mostly been replaced with juvenile jokes and slapstick.
Generally most of the Asterix-films are an amalgamation of various comics. In the case of "Asterix conquers America" the story sticks pretty close to "Asterix and the Big Crossing" (but excluding the meetings between the two Gauls with the "actual" discoverers of America, namely a bunch of Danish Vikings). The visuals are okay if you prefer computer-animations over hand-drawings (which I don't), but lack the richness in details that was typical in the graphic novels. However, the gags and jokes are so infantile and predicable, that I doubt it will raise many laughs even during a screening of some children's channel. If you never liked the cartoons, give it a miss and stick to the comics. If you enjoyed the early cartoons, it still is one of the weakest of the whole series.
To those who criticize that there are some genitalia visible in the film, I'll let you in on a secret: We all have them, we've all seen them and very little ill has come from this fact. Only dirty minds think dirty things.
3 from 10 points
- t_atzmueller
- 15 nov 2014
- Permalink
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
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- Asterix conquista l'America
- Aziende produttrici
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- Budget
- 19.000.000 DEM (previsto)
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By what name was Asterix in Amerika (1994) officially released in Canada in English?
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