Résumés(1)

Edmund Zuwanie, le dictateur du Matobo, arrive aux Nations unies, à New York, pour y prononcer un discours devant l’Assemblée générale. Peu après, Sylvia Broome, une interprète maison, surprend une conversation et comprend qu’on projette d’assassiner Zuwanie dans l’enceinte de l’ONU. Elle alerte sa hiérarchie et deux agents secrets sont dépêchés sur place pour mener l’enquête. L’un d’eux, Tobin Keller, est aussi chargé de la protéger, car si elle n’a pas pu voir les comploteurs, elle craint d’avoir été repérée. Mais Keller découvre rapidement que Sylvia est originaire du Matobo et que, comme beaucoup de ses compatriotes, elle a de très bonnes raisons de désirer la mort de Zuwanie. A-t-elle menti ? Ou pire, fait-elle partie du complot ? (Arte)

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Critiques (8)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français L'ennui académique bien joué. Les émotions bouillonnantes entre les personnages principaux perturbent le plan politique, qui en soi n'est pas convaincant non plus. Et rien de transcendant ne peut en sortir. Dommage. ()

3DD!3 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A political thriller with a rather weak start and an excellent second half. Nicole is beautiful, mysterious, and fully inhabits the role of a woman torn between extremes who has gone through the personal hell of losing her family, and Sean Penn plays the role of a not-so-ordinary secret agent in his own skillful way. Initially, I was expecting a much weaker picture, but I’m glad I was wrong. ()

Annonces

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Under different circumstances, this would be an absolutely solid thriller that kills the good premise by actually taking place in Nicole Kidmanʼs head and everyone else looks as if they were some extras. At the same time, you keep hoping that the movie will not be futile and will at least offer a solid set. But after watching, you realize that wasn’t really the case. Rather it will seem to you that the whole story actually selfishly took place on the sofa in Nicoleʼs flat. However, it deserves the fourth star for the final scene, which keeps you on tenterhooks, and mainly for Sean Penn. That’s mainly thanks to the finale which showed once again how great and honest actor he is. ()

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I like Sydney Pollack. His pleasantly restrained direction, without quick cuts and wannabe cool shots (hello Tony Scott), lets the skill of the actors shine through (hello Clint Eastwood), but here he had a weaker moment. For a thriller it lacks suspense, as a political drama it's unconvincing and too slippery on the surface, and the melodramatic level is brought down by the chemistry between the two main protagonists, which has the sparkle of a burnt down Christmas light. The result is an unclear bit of tedium with one big logical lapse at the end. Still, a certain three stars, I quite like these old-fashioned thrillers, without fancy frills. ()

gudaulin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The interpreter plays out on the well-worn paths of Sydney Pollack's thrillers and to some extent imitates the framework of his Three Days of the Condor. However, unlike that film, it is not as precise, and the plot of the political conspiracy and the budding love affair between the main heroine and the investigator is somewhat forced. Sean Penn stands very high in my opinion as an actor, but his role as a secret service agent is perhaps the first one I did not believe in, even though I do not claim that he gives a weak performance. It's just that his interpretation is somewhat indigestible to me. I don't think secret service agents should be bruisers and nerveless people, but if my colleague showed such strong emotions, I would probably be afraid that he would not pass the psychological tests and he would unsettle me somewhat. Nicole Kidman's performance is a decent standard, but let's be honest, it would be much fairer to cast a black girl in the role given the subject matter and plot. I didn't believe in her as a partisan either, thankfully it was just the one photograph. Pollack has an uneven pace and a somewhat forced ending, but the plot with a twist is compelling and quite original, and the 20 minutes framed by the interpreter's meeting with the opposition leader and the subsequent bus assassination are absolutely precise. If the film maintained such an atmosphere and dynamism throughout, it would be worth five stars. Overall impression: 65%. I was disappointed with the use or rather non-use of Catherine Keener, who is an excellent actress, and she simply did not deserve to play such an unnecessary character... ()

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