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Dans un futur proche, les nouvelles technologies ont fait évoluer le jeu vidéo. Le principe créé pour le jeu « Les Sims » est appliqué à des êtres humains qui sont manipulés par des joueurs en ligne. Le milliardaire Ken Castle a créé le divertissement ultime: « Slayers », un jeu vidéo dans lequel des condamnés à mort, guidés à distance par des joueurs en ligne, s'entretuent lors de combats diffusés sur les écrans du monde entier. S'ils survivent à 30 épreuves, ils retrouveront leur liberté. Kable, téléguidé par Simon, un ado fan de réalités virtuelles est aujourd'hui la star du jeu. Mais Kable ne s'appartient pas : arraché à sa famille, emprisonné et forcé à combattre contre sa volonté, ce gladiateur des temps modernes doit survivre assez longtemps pour s'échapper du jeu et regagner sa liberté... (Le Pacte)

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Critiques (8)

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Un film frénétique dans tous les sens possibles du terme. On regrettera juste que le dernier tiers soit si barbant et américanisant. Un film non marquant avec un Dexter qui a dû prendre plaisir à jouer quelqu’un d’autre que Dexter. ()

Isherwood 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais This was a nice surprise. Neveldine and Taylor keep on making the same films, but they’ve finally put their frenzied audiovisual style into the world where it belongs. I take back what I said earlier because this wacky aesthetic fits the game plot very well, and from my point of view, it projects more than I counted in both Crank films. True, the "society game" gives vent to their fetishistic perversions (I can't help but wonder how well they’d do at porn), but "Slayers" gets some positives. Butler's undeniable charisma and Hall's wacky sleaziness contribute to this. The ending makes you think. On the one hand, the filmmakers are filming in an exaggerated style that demands the audience’s brain to be in "stand by" mode, but at the same time, they have inserted criticism of the system and social attitudes towards games, the death penalty, etc. So when these two directors stop moralizing next time, maybe they’ll even get 4 stars. 3 ½. ()

Annonces

D.Moore 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Yes, this is how I imagine an action-packed ride that is not afraid to show blood spurting in all directions, doesn't let up and doesn't get boring for the whole 90 minutes. Especially compared to the yawn-inducing Crank, Gamer is almost a masterpiece. Three and a half stars - one for Butler, one for Michael C. Hall, the third for the perfectly (although the editor was probably the devil himself) staged battles conceived in a precise video game style... Half a star for the fact that the filmmakers tried to squeeze in some criticism of society. P.S. The final "dance number" is really a must see. ()

Marigold 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A demented film about demented things, which tries to be relevant and to be above things, until it becomes completely tangled up in all-encompassing dementia... the only thing worth seeing in it is the musculature of Gerard Butler and the slow-motion off-road flying. Other than that, I'd rather see the Taylor - Neveldine directing duo in a soulless action film again, because this dystopian satire is ridiculous. It belongs somewhere in the preserve of Casper Van Dien and Canadian D productions. ()

3DD!3 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais So this was a bit of a disappointment. They could’ve gotten much more out of Gamer and you can clearly see that in some scenes. Neveldine and Taylor are literally bursting with ideas, sadly not all of them are good and some crossed the line of good taste (I get it with the Crank franchise, but this was meant to be a movie for the wider public, dammit). The whole part where they’re playing “Society" came across as unnecessary and very, very over the top. On the other hand, Hall’s puppeteering finale (amazing dance scene “I’ve Got You Under My Skin") is perfect and so fresh. It’s a shame the movie is so self-contradictory. It’s a wasted opportunity. ()

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