Résumés(1)

Ancien flic condamné à la prison pour un vol dont il se dit innocent, Nick Cassidy a réussi à s’évader. Dans un célèbre hôtel de New York, il monte jusqu’à l’un des derniers étages et enjambe la fenêtre. Le voilà dehors, sur la corniche, au bord du vide…Lydia Mercer, négociatrice de la police, est chargée d’essayer de le convaincre de ne pas sauter. Plus la jeune femme tente de dénouer cette situation périlleuse, plus elle prend conscience que Cassidy pourrait bien avoir un autre objectif…Son geste a peut-être un rapport avec le mystérieux projet sur lequel travaille son frère. Pendant que l’ex-flic est au bord du vide et attire l’attention de toute la ville, beaucoup de choses se trament et trop de gens semblent s’intéresser à son cas. Les pièces du puzzle vont se révéler peu à peu, au risque de faire tomber beaucoup plus qu’un seul homme… (StudioCanal)

(plus)

Vidéo (34)

Bande-annonce 1

Critiques (5)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Dos au mur est l’équivalent lobotomisé du film Inside Man de Spike Lee. C’est un thriller niais qui essaie de se montrer intelligent et de devancer le spectateur, mais qui fait l’effet inverse, à commencer par des manquements dans la logique, puis avec un déluge de clichés, et enfin, par sa culmination finale sans queue ni tête qui se fout de la g***le du spectateur. Soulignons que ce n’est pas censé être une parodie et qu’au contraire, ça se prend au sérieux et ça se veut cool. Techniquement, c’est très pro. Mais scénaristiquement, c’est décousu et le réalisateur échoue à diriger ses acteurs correctement (surtout Elizabeth Banks, qui semble complètement égarée et ne pas savoir ce qu’elle doit jouer ni dans quelle scène). ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Elizabeth Banks needed a little more for me to believe that she is truly a professional in negotiation. But let's start from the beginning. "Man on a Ledge" reveals everything to us right from the start. There is no secret left in the film, and that is a shame. The first quarter of an hour looks good, but then suddenly all the cards are revealed. What would poker look like if everyone laid their cards on the table and then decided how much to bet and who would fold? Everyone would give up on that kind of poker. Sam Worthington plays Nick Cassidy, who climbs out of his hotel room onto a ledge and seems like he wants to jump. He doesn't, and waits for the police so he can order the mentioned negotiation specialist, Elizabeth Banks, who is simply terrible. As if she doesn't know what she's playing at all. When they talk a little, the audience suddenly realizes, very soon, why Nick is on the roof. At that moment, the audience loses interest in the plot because everything is already told to them. From a fairly good thriller, it then becomes an ordinary heist film - simply a film about a robbery, which is not saved even by the witty Jamie Bell and his sexy colleague. The tense moments from the beginning are killed by pseudo-comedic elements, so nothing like King and his story about the ledge happens. The ending is already completely dumb in a Hollywood way, which Ed Harris, who is the biggest positive, does not deserve. Compared to this film, I would definitely prefer "The Master Plan" from recent times. More: http://www.filmovy-denik.cz/2012/07/mistrovsky-plan-nerdi-bel-ami-susi.html ()

Annonces

Kaka 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Ocean’s Eleven (slyness, elegance, a team, a main boss supervillain in an expensive suit), Phone Booth (attempt at thrilling pace and tense dialogues), Inside Man (nothing is as it seems). It's a mix of a number of films without any real balls. Without Genesis Rodriguez (for her looks) and Ed Harris, it would be significantly weaker than the standard in this genre. Fortunately, the chemistry between Sam Worthington and Elizabeth Banks works pretty well. Worth watching once and putting it on the shelf, so it can gather dust. ()

D.Moore 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I don't like it when stupid movies try to tell the viewer that they're not stupid, but they are not able to succeed in that... Man on a Ledge is one of those movies. The idea is not bad (for example, in one of those CSI TV series such an episode would be more than good, and I mean that without irony) and the cast is at least interesting. Well, what can you do? At least it didn't hurt too much. ()

3DD!3 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Fairly simple claptrap for omnivores. The story is the trailer and a couple of extra twists (+ cynical Ed Harris) that bring the movie up to three-star level. The screenplay is dumbly assembled and the whole plan in fact makes no sense. I liked the crowd’s realistic behavior at most times. A greedy flock of sheep shouting “Jump!" ()

Photos (86)