ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,3/10
9,8 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn LAPD detective and his rookie partner are on the trail of a psychopathic young man who is murdering young women.An LAPD detective and his rookie partner are on the trail of a psychopathic young man who is murdering young women.An LAPD detective and his rookie partner are on the trail of a psychopathic young man who is murdering young women.
Robert F. Lyons
- Nathan Zager
- (as Robert Lyons)
Kelly Preston
- Doreen
- (as Kelly Palzis)
Jeana Keough
- Karen
- (as Jeana Tomasina)
Sam Chew Jr.
- Minister
- (as Sam Chew)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe original script called for Leo Kessler to wrestle Warren Stacy to the ground in their final confrontation but Charles Bronson wasn't getting that "up close and personal" with a naked man.
- GaffesNear the beginning of the movie while the two detectives are driving down the road there is a white Dodge van behind them. In a moment it passes them. A moment later the same van is again behind them.
- Citations
Leo Kessler: [referring to a masturbatory device found in Warren's apartment] You know what this is for, Warren? It's for JACKING OFF!
- Autres versionsWarren's killings are done with him nude. In television broadcasts these scenes have Warren with flesh-colored briefs. Later scenes in the movie have inconsistencies in the color of briefs he wears. The wearing of any clothing is inconsistent with his alibis throughout the movie, as well.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Electric Boogaloo: The Wild, Untold Story of Cannon Films (2014)
Commentaire en vedette
Compared with the ridiculously shoddy "Death Wish" sequels, most of Charles Bronson's 1980s collaborations with J. Lee Thompson are masterpieces. In fact, even with the high ratio of bad actors and technical shortcomings, films like "Evil That Men Do" and this one, "10 to Midnight," kick modern hardboilers right in the balls.
In any case, I've read some comments by folks who don't understand the title "10 to Midnight." Here's what it means: the killer's alibi is that he was seen at a theater watching a movie that ran between 10 pm and midnight, the same time the murder took place. 10 to Midnight--get it? Oddly enough, even the marketing department of the movie's original distributor, Cannon, didn't get the title. Hence the tag line, "A Cop, a Killer, a Deadline." There's no deadline in the film.
Here's where I think the confusion lies: During this period, director Thompson convinced Canon heads Golan and Globus, and Bronson's producer, Pancho Kohner, to hire his son, Peter Lee Thompson, to edit his films. While most of the younger Thompson's editing was pretty good visually, he was a bit sloppy when it came to points of continuity. For instance, in "Evil" a character passes Bronson a photo of the villain, The Doctor, mentioning him by name. But we can plainly see that the photo is not of the Doctor at all. In "Murphy's Law" we see an over the shoulder shot of a gangster laid out on a sofa, stark naked, being administered to by a hooker. When we see him face-on in the reverse shot he is wearing a robe. The scene continues to bop back and forth--robe, no robe, robe, no robe, etc.
So Thompson the younger didn't really get that whole "reality" concept.
Anyway, back to "10." I'm sure that J. Lee shot footage establishing a very specific reference to the timeframe of the first murder. And I'm just as sure that his son just didn't think it was all that important to keep in. After all, it wasn't a naked woman being stabbed to death--it was only the title of the movie.
In any case, I've read some comments by folks who don't understand the title "10 to Midnight." Here's what it means: the killer's alibi is that he was seen at a theater watching a movie that ran between 10 pm and midnight, the same time the murder took place. 10 to Midnight--get it? Oddly enough, even the marketing department of the movie's original distributor, Cannon, didn't get the title. Hence the tag line, "A Cop, a Killer, a Deadline." There's no deadline in the film.
Here's where I think the confusion lies: During this period, director Thompson convinced Canon heads Golan and Globus, and Bronson's producer, Pancho Kohner, to hire his son, Peter Lee Thompson, to edit his films. While most of the younger Thompson's editing was pretty good visually, he was a bit sloppy when it came to points of continuity. For instance, in "Evil" a character passes Bronson a photo of the villain, The Doctor, mentioning him by name. But we can plainly see that the photo is not of the Doctor at all. In "Murphy's Law" we see an over the shoulder shot of a gangster laid out on a sofa, stark naked, being administered to by a hooker. When we see him face-on in the reverse shot he is wearing a robe. The scene continues to bop back and forth--robe, no robe, robe, no robe, etc.
So Thompson the younger didn't really get that whole "reality" concept.
Anyway, back to "10." I'm sure that J. Lee shot footage establishing a very specific reference to the timeframe of the first murder. And I'm just as sure that his son just didn't think it was all that important to keep in. After all, it wasn't a naked woman being stabbed to death--it was only the title of the movie.
- curtis-8
- 6 mai 2003
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- How long is 10 to Midnight?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- 10 to Midnight
- Lieux de tournage
- 120 Westminster Ave. & Innes Place, Venice, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Warren Stacy's apartment)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 4 520 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 7 175 592 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 3 050 225 $ US
- 13 mars 1983
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 7 175 592 $ US
- Durée1 heure 41 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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What is the French language plot outline for Le Justicier de minuit (1983)?
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