Résumés(1)

Une adolescente est kidnappée par un tueur en série. Pour la sauver, une opératrice d'un centre d'appel d'urgences va affronter ses propres peurs liées à une tragédie de son passé. Leur seul lien : un téléphone portable. Une course contre la montre commence... Chaque appel pourrait bien être le dernier. (UGC Distribution)

Vidéo (9)

Bande-annonce 1

Critiques (7)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Ce film nous introduit à l’environnement inexploré du travail fastidieux des opérateurs de la ligne 911 et s’appuie sur le côté émotionnel du jeu de l’acteur oscarisé Halle Berry, pour qui « son cas » est devenu très personnel. Ce thriller démarre en force en annonçant le ton dur et tendu. La scène avec la victime dans le coffre de la voiture nous offre de l’inédit. Mais le final, supposé couronner l’ensemble, laisse le soufflé retomber avec zéro inventivité et des clichés en veux-tu en voilà, résultant sur un dénouement fade et aucune catharsis. En somme, un film de routine qui se perd dans la masse d’autres productions où l’on poursuit les meurtriers et secourt les victimes séquestrées. Rien à voir avec Le Silence des agneaux et Seven, qui ont des années-lumière d’avance en comparaison. ()

claudel 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français De la même façon que Colin Farrell avait réussi à nous captiver autrefois en restant enfermé pendant tout le métrage dans une cabine téléphonique, Halle Berry est capable de mettre le public sous tension en passant la majeure partie du film dans un centre d’appel d’urgence et Abigail Breslin, dans un coffre de voiture. Il n’en faut pas plus pour faire un thriller de qualité et un bon moment de divertissement au cinéma ! ()

Annonces

Matty 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A pure, fast-paced genre thriller with a wonderfully straightforward plot that goes too deep (into the killer’s mind) in the climax. Information about the protagonist is limited to what we need to know for the work storyline. The remaining clues leading to identification with the protagonist are provided by Halle Berry’s convincing portrayal of a fragile yet determined woman. The personal storyline is then skilfully integrated into the work storyline (thanks to which the film is also an ode to the work of both emergency call operators and police officers) without being needlessly pushed into the foreground. I wouldn’t see the reason that the film is only slightly above average in the screenplay, which requires the characters to act more or less reasonably, of course with respect to the requirements of the genre, i.e. so that the film can offer us the expected viewing pleasure, the protagonist has to do something stupid at least once. I would blame the director for the film being “only” satisfactory. Though Brad Anderson manages to build a suspenseful scene with its own gradation, he has difficulties with the continuous escalation of tension throughout the film, which as a result functions in the manner of several related episodes of a television series. It has multiple dramatic peaks and seems to start anew several times, which is definitely to the film’s detriment given its modest runtime and high-concept premise. This also involves the impossibility of emotionally connecting with the victim, about whom we know terribly little. In any given slasher movie, she would merely be a warm-up for the killer before the final girl (the question of who the final girl actually is, and how the film uses the slasher formula, is perhaps the most inspiring aspect of The Call). We can sympathise with Jordan and feel the same powerlessness that she feels, but we don’t have to fear for her life through most of the film, because there is no real threat to her. The Call is thus reminiscent of Rear Window, whose protagonist had to rely on what he saw, just as Jordan has to make do with what she hears. Unfortunately, no imaginative work is done with the soundtrack (as in The Interview or Blow Out), but I would be wanting too much from a low-budget genre flick. 70% ()

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais An extremely undemanding thriller that doesn’t deliver anything we haven’t seen elsewhere. An insane psychopath, an abducted victim, and the heroine who tries to find her. But I still enjoyed The Call. The actors are good in their roles, Brad Anderson knows how to generate tension in some scenes, even though the viewer already knows how everything will turn out. It’s nothing exceptional, but falling in love every now and again with a simple thriller and enjoy it without much complaint… why not. However, the fact that Anderson, who began with the excellent indie horror Session 9, has ended up in such classic Hollywood commercial schlock is objectively a bit sad. ()

Malarkey 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais After I saw this film, I thought I was going to give it a four-star review. But it was enough for the user emma53 to write a single sentence to me and I realized that even though this thriller is good, the ending ruins the movie. You see, the whole thing is trying to look quite realistic. The 991 hotline, where emergency calls are answered by Halle Berry, was quite tense. But later, where Halle switches from providing help through a headset to actually helping specific people, the movie gets quite schematic, and it wasn’t very realistic. And the ending crowned everything. Anyways, when it comes to good thrillers, this one is still definitely worth watching. ()

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