Un récit de la vie de Domino Harvey. La fille de l'acteur Laurence Harvey s'est détournée de sa carrière de mannequin Ford pour devenir chasseuse de primes.Un récit de la vie de Domino Harvey. La fille de l'acteur Laurence Harvey s'est détournée de sa carrière de mannequin Ford pour devenir chasseuse de primes.Un récit de la vie de Domino Harvey. La fille de l'acteur Laurence Harvey s'est détournée de sa carrière de mannequin Ford pour devenir chasseuse de primes.
- Prix
- 2 victoires au total
Edgar Ramírez
- Choco
- (as Edgar Ramirez)
Rizz Abbasi
- Alf
- (as Rizwan Abbasi)
Joe Nunez
- Raul Chavez
- (as Joseph Nunez)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesTony Scott claimed that the frenetic filming and editing style of the picture is reflective of the high usage of cocaine amongst real bounty hunters he consulted while researching the film.
- GaffesWhen Domino and her dad are at the beach in England in 1993 (really filmed at Santa Monica Pier, Los Angeles), stuffed animals prizes from Trouver Némo (2003) are at the carnival game.
- Citations
Domino Harvey: I saved her... And when she is older, a woman named Domino will tell her that there is only one conclusion to every story... We all fall down.
- Générique farfeluThe credits for the principal cast are shown by first name only in the closing credits, ending with the real Domino Harvey, followed by an "In Loving Memory" title card for Domino.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Bounty Hunting on Acid: Tony Scott's Visual Style (2006)
- Bandes originalesAm I Really That Bad
Written by Domino Harvey, Jan Pomerans and Solomon Mansoor
Performed by Domino Harvey (as Domino) and the Dagger Baileys
Commentaire en vedette
Domino is that special kind of movie that goes for broke. Every scene is filled with the loudest, most boisterous possible film-making, screaming with life. Is it a very good movie per se? No. It is way too self-indulgent and silly. It makes the real-life Domino Harvey look like an almost impossibly improbable bad-ass, showing her in impractical, John Wayne fantasy-oriented scenes wherein she coolly punches or tells off a snobby Beverly Hills brat and other such pride-centered presentations of her. But the amount of license it takes is used to the advantage of just how outlandish a movie can possibly be. The only true events in the film are the early things we learn of Domino being the daughter of deceased actor Lawrence Harvey, who was in the original Manchurian Candidate, and the switch from supermodel to bounty hunter. Aside from that, the movie lets itself go. It's written by Richard Kelly, who wrote the famously weird Donnie Darko, and Steve Barancik, who wrote The Last Seduction, another movie about a woman who lives by her own rules and will go to great lengths to secure that lifestyle. That volatile combination of styles runs amok in this grenade of a script, which has a plot with more strands and subplots than two or three movies altogether. This script doesn't make very much sense more than half the time, but it's got more life than most movies that can actually be considered good. That's because Tony Scott, whose visual style has been rapidly developing into the most advanced form of post-modern VH1/MTV-flavored editing and cinematography for his entire career, and the two screenwriters, who had more fun than a week's worth of orgies writing the overbearingly passionate script, totally went for a record-setting amount of excess with Domino.
Just because of all of that, Domino is one of the most riveting and guiltily entertaining movies I've ever seen. It has glaring problems with it and is shamelessly exploitative, even without counting the faults I mentioned at the beginning of this review. Why? Because that rare kind of film, blazing, expressive, no-holds-barred, over-the-top with more scope than it really needs? The most engaging films are so often these kinds of movies, these movies that are in love with themselves. They do more than they need to and the filmmakers pour every bit of heart and soul into it. That's why Domino weighs on your mind afterwards and makes you forget about the outside world when you're in the theater seeing it.
Just because of all of that, Domino is one of the most riveting and guiltily entertaining movies I've ever seen. It has glaring problems with it and is shamelessly exploitative, even without counting the faults I mentioned at the beginning of this review. Why? Because that rare kind of film, blazing, expressive, no-holds-barred, over-the-top with more scope than it really needs? The most engaging films are so often these kinds of movies, these movies that are in love with themselves. They do more than they need to and the filmmakers pour every bit of heart and soul into it. That's why Domino weighs on your mind afterwards and makes you forget about the outside world when you're in the theater seeing it.
- jzappa
- 26 sept. 2006
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- How long is Domino?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Domino: Thợ Săn Tiền Thưởng
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 50 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 10 169 202 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 4 675 000 $ US
- 16 oct. 2005
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 22 984 628 $ US
- Durée2 heures 7 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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