Calme blanc

  • Australie Dead Calm
Bande-annonce
Australie / États-Unis, 1989, 95 min

Résumés(1)

Pour oublier la mort tragique de leur fils dans un terrible accident, un couple décide de partir en mer. Sur l'océan, ils vont à la rescousse d'un homme qui est en train de couler. Mais ce que John et sa femme Rae ne savent pas encore, c'est que leur nouveau passager est un dangereux psychopathe... (Orange Cinéma Séries)

Critiques (4)

Othello 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Quite rightly, Dead Calm has kicked the vast majority of those involved, from the director to the writer to the actors, into the Hollywood big leagues. In fact, the film offers far more than the forlorn plot summary would suggest. Namely in three points: 1) Billy Zane plays not the usual trendy cool movie psycho, but a real narcissistic psychopath, whose background (meaning backstory hehe hoho) remains for the most part a mystery to us. He comes across as uncomfortably familiar, like a coked-up marketer guy who talks for four hours about how he's going to write a book that will change the world one day and can't be gotten rid of. 2) The protagonists are intelligent and capable. They don't panic and are constantly adapting to situations as they arise, both the guy and the girl, where no one is waiting to rescue anyone, but each actively building a plan to get rid of the unwanted passenger themselves. 3) It wasn't just the presence of Sam Neil that got the Orpheus reminding me of Event Horizon in some ways. The crumpled, dark hold with a pile of corpses playing in the background, with an unpleasant amateur video suggesting the events leading up to the crew's deaths, is a subtle but just perfectly effective hint that there's some kind of crack in the wall concealing absolute madness behind the story we're watching. And the film doesn't allow us to touch it, only feel it. ()