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Quelle affaire!

Titre original : Risky Business
  • 1983
  • 18A
  • 1h 39m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,8/10
107 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
3 290
536
Tom Cruise and Rebecca De Mornay in Quelle affaire! (1983)
Trailer, post
Liretrailer1:54
2 vidéos
99+ photos
Comédie pour adolescentsComédie raunchyComédie romantiqueComédieCriminalitéDrameRomance

Un adolescent de Chicago a envie de s'amuser chez lui pendant l'absence de ses parents, mais la situation lui échappe très rapidement.Un adolescent de Chicago a envie de s'amuser chez lui pendant l'absence de ses parents, mais la situation lui échappe très rapidement.Un adolescent de Chicago a envie de s'amuser chez lui pendant l'absence de ses parents, mais la situation lui échappe très rapidement.

  • Réalisation
    • Paul Brickman
  • Scénariste
    • Paul Brickman
  • Vedettes
    • Tom Cruise
    • Rebecca De Mornay
    • Joe Pantoliano
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,8/10
    107 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    3 290
    536
    • Réalisation
      • Paul Brickman
    • Scénariste
      • Paul Brickman
    • Vedettes
      • Tom Cruise
      • Rebecca De Mornay
      • Joe Pantoliano
    • 241Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 85Commentaires de critiques
    • 75Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 3 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Risky Business
    Trailer 1:54
    Risky Business
    Risky Business: If You Are Smart
    Clip 2:02
    Risky Business: If You Are Smart
    Risky Business: If You Are Smart
    Clip 2:02
    Risky Business: If You Are Smart

    Photos242

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    Distribution principale55

    Modifier
    Tom Cruise
    Tom Cruise
    • Joel
    Rebecca De Mornay
    Rebecca De Mornay
    • Lana
    Joe Pantoliano
    Joe Pantoliano
    • Guido
    Richard Masur
    Richard Masur
    • Rutherford
    Bronson Pinchot
    Bronson Pinchot
    • Barry
    Curtis Armstrong
    Curtis Armstrong
    • Miles Dalby
    Nicholas Pryor
    Nicholas Pryor
    • Joel's Father
    Janet Carroll
    Janet Carroll
    • Joel's Mother
    Shera Danese
    Shera Danese
    • Vicki
    Raphael Sbarge
    Raphael Sbarge
    • Glenn
    Bruce A. Young
    Bruce A. Young
    • Jackie
    Kevin Anderson
    Kevin Anderson
    • Chuck
    • (as Kevin C. Anderson)
    Sarah Partridge
    • Kessler
    Nathan Davis
    Nathan Davis
    • Business Teacher
    Scott Harlan
    • Stan Licata
    Sheila Keenan
    • Nurse Bolik
    Lucy Harrington
    • Glenn's Girlfriend
    Jerry Tullos
    • Derelict on Train
    • Réalisation
      • Paul Brickman
    • Scénariste
      • Paul Brickman
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs241

    6,8106.6K
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    Avis en vedette

    djexplorer

    Coming of age and male fantasy call girl flick.

    Rebecca De Mornay at 21 is fabulous as the savvy call girl for any teen boy to die for -- or for that matter any red blooded male of any age. She enters the film gliding silently into the back yard entrance of his parent's off-the-lake Chicago house, and after speaking only a few words, something like "are you ready for me Joel", artistically slips off her demure little slip of a dress, back arched to him, one leg kneeled in the window seat, presses her bottom into him, silently invites him to take her, and then turns, melts into him, kissing him in apparent yielding passion. This is immediately followed by cut scenes to multiple positions in multiple locations around the house. It's a perfect male fantasy of what paid for wild but romantic sex might be like (however unrealistic). It's also undoubtedly Joel's (Cruse's) first time. What an initiation.

    The movie never gets that hot again (although the scene enacting Lana's "thing about trains" gets close). But it does become increasingly interesting as a first rate coming of age flick. Actually, it's a bit more than that. It explores the tension between the self disciplined deferred gratification he and has friends have all been taught they need for upper middle class success, versus the let loose sexual and other risk taking he knows is out there, some other people are doing, and wishes he could get away with. How far can a nice upper middle class boy go without throwing it all away? That risky business is what the film is all about.

    Tom Cruz is perfect as the dutiful but less than gifted "future enterpriser" high school senior who's always had to work a little harder and stick more to the straight and narrow to try to live up to his parents' expectations -- without quite getting there. Although he was about the same age as De Mornay when they made the film, Cruz looks and acts a thoroughly convincing boyish 16 or 17. De Mornay's Lana is an iconic bad girl hooker of the naturally toney and perhaps feeling variety -- although about the last we're never entirely sure. She remains ultimately an enigma, beyond Cruz's and our full grasp, but not beyond his connecting with. Sadly, her first major role was probably her best -- although certainly not her only good one.

    Cruz may be "on the right track", but it's De Mornay's Lana who knows everything about sex, life, taking risks, and living on the edge. She seduces Cruz into turning his parents' home into a bordello, to tap the money to be made by mingling his kind of friends with her kind of friends for a night, while she is hiding out from her "manager", and he has been left to "act responsibly" while his parents are away on a business trip. The scene where the Princeton alumnus interviewer, whom his dad has contacted to try to help finesse his "not quite Ivy League transcript", comes to the house to interview Cruz on the night the bordello party is in full swing, is deliciously funny and at the same time full of nervous tension. Cruz's character is on the brink of disaster, and then in fact clearly has thrown away a good part of his future opportunities -- or has he?

    It's a delicious movie -- especially for males raised in seriously high academic achievement oriented families. Every good boy would love to call a Lana sometime -- and get away with it.
    pompaj

    fun, funny, and smart

    Most funny comedies aren't very smart. They're funny because of individual jokes that play by themselves, without relying on the overall plot. Risky Business is an exception and the reason why it works so well, is because it tells a simple story that could really happen and would also be a lot of fun. Youre a high school kid, your parents go on vacation for a week, leaving you the whole house to yourself. That's the setup. A friend calls up a call girl, she shows up, and the entertainment begins. This movie is smart enough to know what kids think about at that age, sex, and it holds nothing back. It is very clever at times and has a strong character in Joel, played by a young, energetic Tom Cruise. Another thing that this movie understands is mood and tempo. Everything hits the right beat. Smart and funny is an ideal combination and this movie achieves it.
    7bkoganbing

    She's In Product, He's In Sales

    Risky Business and All The Right Moves are the two films that launched Tom Cruise's career as brat pack film star. Unlike so many of his contemporaries from the Eighties, he's proved to have staying power and will no doubt continue to do so.

    All The Right Moves established Cruise as a dramatic actor, but Risky Business is a fun comedy about a hormone driven teenager who when the folks go away from his Chicago suburban home and he's left to play, he gets himself in all kinds of problems. First dialing up call girl, Rebecca DeMornay and then not having enough coin of the realm to pay her. Then getting mom's treasured glass egg stolen. And then getting the family car driven into Lake Michigan.

    But Cruise and DeMornay, who is having trouble with her pimp Joe Pantoliano, hit on the brilliant idea that there's a market out there for his group of eager overachievers. And Tom's house becomes quite the swinging brothel.

    Risky Business turns out to be pretty funny business. Best scene in the film involves Tom with Princeton interviewer Richard Mazur. You've got to love the way this boy gets into the Ivy League. Second best scene involves Tom and the family car as it plunges into the lake and then gets hoisted out.

    Tom's definitely proved to have staying power in show business. I can see his character in Risky Business growing up to be Jerry Maguire.
    Sargebri

    Not Just Another Teen Sex Comedy

    When this film was released, it was during the time of the "teen sex comedy" craze. Films like Class and Porky's were all about seeing scores of horny teens in the most raunchy escapades possible. However, this film and Fast Times at Ridgemont High can be seen as more being a little more serious than the others. Risky Business is definitely a commentary on how greed can corrupt an individual and what the consequences can be. Also, the acting in this film, as well as Fast Times, is light years away from Porky's and all films like it and it will always be a classic parable.
    mercuryix-1

    "Money may not buy happiness, but it will buy the things that will Make you happy"

    There are too many reviews of Risky Business for mine to have any relevance as a movie review. However, this movie is for me a time capsule of the era I saw it in, and a photograph of the future to come in American culture.

    I saw this movie when I was 22 in a tiny college theater with a date. I remember several disconnected things about it: The movie was much more interesting than my date was, the music by Tangerine Dream was hypnotic and fit the tone of the film, which struck me as being more depressing in places than funny (although there are some funny moments in it), and it gave me a glimpse into a world that I thought was fictional. It turned out I hadn't experienced the world it was presenting yet. When Cruise asks his friends what they plan to do with their lives, one's answer is very simple and focused: "Make money". Another friend adds: "Make a LOT of money".

    It turns out the movie was precognizant of the next ten to twenty years of American culture; the absolute obsession with making money through any means necessary, legally or illegally, regardless of consequences to yourself or others. Then taking that money and buying the things that will make you happy: a porsche, a big house, and most importantly, a hot babe in your bed, that will only be there as long as the money is. Internally discovered happiness? A quaint notion created by the poor who can't afford the toys that validate your existence.

    I am sure that the filmmaker would be the first to say that the movie parodies the hollowness of the "American Dream" of acquiring wealth to buy creature comforts, but too much of the time it feels like it celebrates them. At the end, the hooker stays Cruise's girlfriend only as long as he continues to make her money; she even says "I'll be your girlfriend...for a while". Real loyalty there. But then, she is a hooker, and is being honest. She in fact is presented as the only person in the film that is not a hypocrite. She has no illusions that money & sex make the American world go 'round, and doesn't pretend herself to be otherwise; unlike Cruise and the rest of his friends. In the end however, she is still hollow, the values the kids pursue are hollow (they are only after sex, not love), and the movie feels as deep and solid as a glossy magazine ad for a Lexus.

    Even over the obsession of greed, however, the film illustrates the complete alienation of the modern American teenage male: alone, isolated, judged by his peers with the kind of car his dad lets him drive, his clothes, and whether he can get laid or not. The emphasis is on sex, not relationship. There is no rite of passage into adulthood, no guidance from parents who more often than not are as distant from their children as the cardboard cutout parents in this film.

    In short, as depressing as this film is when you step back from it, it paints a frighteningly accurate portrait of how superficial and narrow a world, yet directionless (except for accumulating superficial wealth) a young boy's world can be. There are no values taught in this film, because there are none available as examples. And that is the environment too many kids are subject to. That is what was so disturbing to me about the film at the time I saw it, yet it took 20 years to understand why (as I was, like most kids my age, in the same vacuous and bankrupt culture this kid was in at the time).

    There are 300% more suicides committed by 14 year old boys in America than any other age group or category. This movie explains why.

    Seven stars, not for humor, but for photographing the beginning of an era that lasts until this day. The message from Enron, WorldCom, Martha Stewart and others for American kids will be: Don't get caught. A message which is slowly becoming the only "moral direction" left in American culture.

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    Romance

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      In an effort for Tom Cruise (who was 20 during filming) to look more "teenage" in appearance, the producers put him though an unusual bit of physical training. Cruise worked out seven days a week, in order to lose ten pounds. Once that had been accomplished, he immediately ceased working out and ate extremely fatty foods in order to add a layer of baby fat. This is how he achieved that "fresh-faced" teenage look.
    • Gaffes
      When Joel is the den talking to the college admissions guy Lana walks into the room and closes the door behind her. Her long, blond hair is swinging around in the upper right of the screen. But an instant later all her hair is tucked up into a black hat.
    • Citations

      [last lines]

      Joel Goodson: My name is Joel Goodson. I deal in human fulfillment. I grossed over eight thousand dollars in one night. Time of your life, huh kid?

    • Autres versions
      CBS edited 2 minutes from this film for its 1985 network television premiere.
    • Connexions
      Featured in At the Movies: Movies That Changed the Movies (1984)
    • Bandes originales
      Every Breath You Take
      Written by Sting (uncredited)

      Performed by The Police

      Courtesy of A&M Records

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Risky Business?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 août 1983 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langues
      • English
      • German
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Risky Business
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Niles East High School - 7700 Lincoln Avenue, Skokie, Illinois, États-Unis
    • société de production
      • The Geffen Company
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 6 200 000 $ US (estimation)
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 63 541 777 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 4 275 327 $ US
      • 7 août 1983
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 63 542 350 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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