Résumés(1)

Professeur d'histoire à l'université George-Washington, Michael Faraday s'est spécialisé dans les mouvements terroristes d'extrême droite. Depuis que son épouse, une agente du FBI, a tragiquement trouvé la mort en service, il élève seul Grant, leur fils de 9 ans, et entretient depuis peu une liaison avec l'une de ses étudiantes. Un jour, en rentrant chez lui, il aperçoit un garçonnet titubant sur la route. L'enfant, grièvement blessé à la main, est le fils de ses nouveaux voisins, les Lang, dont il fait la connaissance à l'hôpital. Alors qu’il se lie d’amitié avec eux, Michael repère plusieurs incohérences dans le récit que lui fait Oliver Lang de son passé. De plus en plus suspicieux, il se met à enquêter… Le quartier résidentiel d'Arlington Road, dans la banlieue de Washington, a beau être coquet, ses habitants ne sont pas tous sans histoires. Éprouvé par la disparition de sa femme, dont il tient le FBI responsable, Michael (Jeff Bridges) ne sombre-t-il pas dans la paranoïa, tout à son obsession de démasquer un potentiel terroriste ? Ancien adolescent au passé délictuel, Oliver (Tim Robbins) n'a-t-il pas raison de réclamer le droit à l'oubli ? Entre le germe de la défiance qui s'immisce chez l'un et les cautions de bonne foi données par l'autre, lequel croire ? (Arte)

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Critiques (3)

gudaulin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Arlington Road is a conflicting film that is based on the highly traumatic events surrounding the bombing of the Federal Building in Oklahoma City in the mid-90s. It features a very decent cast and a typically Hollywood screenplay with several shocking revelations and plot twists. Herein lies the first hitch because the screenplay is somewhat overcomplicated. The initially very effective plot is, in fact, too dependent on the assumed actions of the victim, and a small hitch would be enough to foil the plan. Real conspiracies have simpler blueprints. The second problem lies in the core of the film - it speculatively assumes the existence of a deeply secretive and highly effective terrorist group that commits a horrifying attack. It is as if the film was made at the request of a police or secret service chief to increase their department's budget. It only creates psychosis, more surveillance cameras in the streets, greater powers in surveillance, and loss of privacy. The actual bombing in Oklahoma City was done by amateurs and succeeded due to the shameful underestimation of security measures and risks by far-right groups. Overall impression: 55%. The strongest scene of the film is the opening when a severely injured boy stumbles down an abandoned street... ()

Kaka 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais No excessive action or pathos, Jeff Bridges excels and artistically outshines everyone else. The screenwriter made an effort too, and although the plot sometimes has weaker and boring passages, it overall maintains a very solid pace and occasionally truly surprises with shocking events. The ending is excellently handled. ()

lamps 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais At first glance, one would probably say that Arlington Road is not a special or breathtaking film and that its greatest asset is only the performances of the Bridges-Robbins duo. But that would be the case if it didn’t have that unique and shocking ending, which actually gave the whole story a much more complete shape and, in my eyes, ranks among the strongest I have ever seen. This is by no means a trashing of the rest of the film, because that would be unfair. It's a very suspenseful movie with an interesting idea and sober direction, that perhaps doses all the more impressive moments and twists somewhat unevenly and the thickening atmosphere is often cut off by dull and chatty passages, but instead of the screenwriter resolving everything nicely in the American way and bringing the film to its knees for good at the end, there's this completely unprecedented and skilful knock-out that firmly convinced me of the high qualities of this little-known and seemingly ordinary film. B-movie my ass! 80% ()