Après l'explosion d'un ferry à la Nouvelle-Orléans, un agent de l'A.T.F. se joint à l'enquête utilisant une technologie expérimentale capable de retrouver les auteurs de l'attentat. Il tombe... Tout lireAprès l'explosion d'un ferry à la Nouvelle-Orléans, un agent de l'A.T.F. se joint à l'enquête utilisant une technologie expérimentale capable de retrouver les auteurs de l'attentat. Il tombe rapidement amoureux de l'une des victimes.Après l'explosion d'un ferry à la Nouvelle-Orléans, un agent de l'A.T.F. se joint à l'enquête utilisant une technologie expérimentale capable de retrouver les auteurs de l'attentat. Il tombe rapidement amoureux de l'une des victimes.
- Réalisation
- Scénaristes
- Vedettes
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 6 nominations au total
- Beth
- (as Donna Scott)
Avis en vedette
U can save her Déjà Vu
Déjà Vu could have easily reduced itself to timetravel farce, going by the books to show a time warp in order to solve a crime. The far-fetched premise of being able to see the past as it happens four and a half days later should seem crazy and by watching the previews you are given the idea that it will be just a series of do-overs. Fortunately the trailers these days show a totally different movie than what has been crafted. Scott and his screenwriters have not only developed a sci-fi tale seeped in enough reality to at least be looked upon as plausible for the sake of the story, but they nicely tidy up any chance of their being a plothole. Our story begins with a devastating domestic terrorist act upon a ferry carrying over 500 people, Navy and family. Washington's ATF agent is brought in and discovers that it was no accident. Intrigued by the efficiency he displays, an FBI agent, played with nicely effective restraint by Val Kilmer, calls him in to check out a new toy they have to find who the perpetrator is. During the use of this screen of the past, Denzel acquires a feeling of obligation to do all he can to prevent what he sees from occurring in the present, no matter what consequences that might entail for the future. The quest to stop the violence begins with an attractive young woman who unknowingly has become an integral part in what will ultimately transpire.
The beauty of this film is that with multiple timelines being shown parallel to each other, there are many questions that desperately need answering. To credit all involved, they appear to have put themselves in the audience's shoes and piece-by-piece wrote in a reason for everything. Anything that is seen either in the past, present, or future has a reason for being there and will be intelligently explained. Also, the performances are stellar, Denzel and Kilmer as well as a quietly maniacal Jim Caviezel and the emotionally exasperated Paula Patton, and the visuals unique. While Scott has toned down the ultra-kinetic cuts and filters for the main action, his style is still stamped on the graphics of their screen showing the past. The motion trails and speed scans lend a stylized digital editing program feel and are gorgeous to watch. Déjà Vu's best sequence, however, is the crazy car chase during the present in pursuit of a vehicle in the past, definitely a rush and orchestrated almost flawlessly. Even though Ridley gets the accolades and Tony gets the hack/overproduced label, I must say, while they are the best directing duo in Hollywood, I might have to give the edge on pure cinematic entertainment to the younger Tony. He is on a roll and doesn't seem to be stopping anytime soon.
It Really Got Me
Illogical But Entertaining Enough
If you can get on board with a lot of the technology (the ability to watch the past, through walls with audio) and time travel aspects, a lot of fun can be had with Deja Vu.
It's totally illogical, with incomprehensible definitions of how things work, and I still don't know how many time lines there were, but I recommend turning your brain off and just going with it, as it is entertaining, enough.'
Deja Vu grossed $64 million at the domestic box office and was the 42nd highest grossing movie of 2006.
Tremendously enjoyable
As has been said before, this is definitely a Sci Fi/ Film Noir/Action/Romance. How many of those have you come across? Highly recommended. Big fun and smart besides.
Delightfully intricate
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe movie went through pre-production in New Orleans. Just a few weeks before production was to begin, Hurricane Katrina devastated the city. With the location in ruins, the movie made the decision to find a new location to shoot. A few weeks after the decision, canceling the movie altogether was in talks. Finally, three months after the hurricane, the film returned to New Orleans, Louisiana and began pre-production once again.
- GaffesWhen Doug is angered about knowing the truth about what they were actually doing to view everywhere other than "satellites", he tries to make a point clear about something being present and past by taking a chair and breaking a computer monitor. Yet in later scenes the monitor seems to be working again, unless they replaced a monitor in a matter of minutes.
- Citations
Doug Carlin: What if you had to tell someone the most important thing in the world, but you knew they'd never believe you?
Claire Kuchever: I'd try.
- Générique farfeluThe opening production logos stop in mid-sequence, reverse for a moment, then stop again and continue forward.
- Bandes originalesWhen The Saints Go Marching In
Traditional
Performed by the US Navy Southwest Regional Band
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Deja Vu?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 75 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 64 038 616 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 20 574 802 $ US
- 26 nov. 2006
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 180 557 550 $ US
- Durée
- 2h 6m(126 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1






