Hanté par les patients qu'il n'a pas pu sauver, un ambulancier de Manhattan ravagé par son burn-out se bat pour ne pas perdre la tête au cours de trois nuits angoissantes et agitées.Hanté par les patients qu'il n'a pas pu sauver, un ambulancier de Manhattan ravagé par son burn-out se bat pour ne pas perdre la tête au cours de trois nuits angoissantes et agitées.Hanté par les patients qu'il n'a pas pu sauver, un ambulancier de Manhattan ravagé par son burn-out se bat pour ne pas perdre la tête au cours de trois nuits angoissantes et agitées.
- Prix
- 2 victoires et 5 nominations au total
- Mr. Burke
- (as Cullen Oliver Johnson)
- Captain Barney
- (as Arthur Nascarella)
- Dispatcher
- (voice)
What Scorsese Film Ranks Highest on IMDb?
What Scorsese Film Ranks Highest on IMDb?
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAccording to Tom Sizemore, he and Marc Anthony did not get along and almost had a physical altercation on the set.
- GaffesWhen Marcus and Frank are responding to I.B. Bangin's over-dose, they are first shown responding in a van-type ambulance, then the next shot shows them in a box-type, then back to the van-type on arrival.
- Citations
Frank Pierce: Saving someone's life is like falling in love. The best drug in the world. For days, sometimes weeks afterwards, you walk the streets, making infinite whatever you see. Once, for a few weeks, I couldn't feel the earth - everything I touched became lighter. Horns played in my shoes. Flowers fell from my pockets. You wonder if you've become immortal, as if you've saved your own life as well. God has passed through you. Why deny it, that for a moment there - why deny that for a moment there, God was you?
- Bandes originalesT.B. Sheets
Written and Performed by Van Morrison
Courtesy of Columbia Records
By Arrangement with Sony Music Licensing
Scorsese creates a very real New York (before the gentrification of the Giuliani era) that is rarely seen in films. This is not the flashy and glitzy New York that is often shown in most movies. He goes deep into the psyche of a city that is crammed with 9 million people, some who are struggling just to stay afloat. As the character Mary says, "You have to be strong to survive in this city." Some of the scenes in the movie are so memorable and haunting such as Frank's hallucination of actually pulling people literally from the steam shrouded pavement and bringing them back to life and the harrowing, almost Christ-like sequence where Frank is saving a drug dealer from death as he dangles from a balcony.
Nicholas Cage, one of our finest actors working today, gives a brilliant performance of great emotional range that is draining to watch. You literally see him coming unglued piece by piece. This is his best performance since "Leaving Las Vegas". Patricia Arquette (Cage's wife) gives a very moving and subtle performance of a person who has been to hell and back while struggling to maintain some balance in the jungle. Goodman, Rhames and Sizemore turn out good performances as always playing Cage's co-pilots in the nightly journeys. Also standing out are Latin singer, Marc Anthony as a homeless crazy and Cliff Curtis as a drug dealer who provides an "oasis" for the stressed-out individuals of the city. An excellent director and a great script are a perfect formula for producing top-notch performances by actors and Scorsese and Shrader bring out the best in theirs.
With it's story of the lead character Frank cruising the streets making narrative comments about life in the city, comparisons will be made naturally to Scorsese's other brilliant work "Taxi Driver" with it's main character Travis Bickle, but those comparisons are normal and stop right there. Where Travis Bickle wanted to save people who did not need saving, Frank Pierce reaches out to people who desperately need saving, but does not always have the power to save as in the case of the homeless girl Maria, who haunts him constantly. Also Scorsese is too highly intelligent, creative and the ultimate professional to retread the same waters, he never takes the easy road. A Scorsese film is like any great film, it takes time to take it in and digest, because there are so many different layers added that need to be looked at long after the last reel finishes. This is a powerful piece of filmmaking proving once again that Martin Scorsese is one of the all-time great directors of this century. Highly Recommended. × × ××
- Joe Moretti
- 30 nov. 1999
- Lien permanent
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Bringing Out the Dead?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Bringing Out the Dead
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 55 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 16 797 191 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 6 193 052 $ US
- 24 oct. 1999
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 16 798 496 $ US
- Durée2 heures 1 minute
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1