Cliff et Cydney, un couple de jeunes mariés, se rendent à Hawaii afin d'y passer leur lune de miel. Ils y rencontrent d'autres couples en excursion, mais apprennent bientôt qu'un couple de t... Tout lireCliff et Cydney, un couple de jeunes mariés, se rendent à Hawaii afin d'y passer leur lune de miel. Ils y rencontrent d'autres couples en excursion, mais apprennent bientôt qu'un couple de tueurs sévit sur l'île. La paranoïa s'installe rapidement dans ce décor paradisiaque ...Cliff et Cydney, un couple de jeunes mariés, se rendent à Hawaii afin d'y passer leur lune de miel. Ils y rencontrent d'autres couples en excursion, mais apprennent bientôt qu'un couple de tueurs sévit sur l'île. La paranoïa s'installe rapidement dans ce décor paradisiaque ...
- Prix
- 1 nomination au total
- Camera Samaritan
- (as Carlos Alberto López)
Avis en vedette
While I was able to correctly guess the identity of the killer's just from watching the trailer, I still had a great time with this. The performances are really strong. I've heard others say that Zahn and Jovovich aren't a believable pairing. I've seen several instances of stunning women with less attractive guys, so that's nonsense. Aside from that, they're terrific together. This is a dialogue-heavy film with several amusing character moments thrown in, all of which the actors nail. Olyphant is the standout as Nick, a former marine with a bit of a screw loose. The humor actually works, the quirkiness adding to the picture. I also thought that the B&W exposition scene was well-done, better than most of it's ilk. These types of scenes are generally frowned upon, but here it winds up being a highlight.
The Puerto Rican locations (subbing for Hawaii) are quite lovely, though the dangers of the trail aren't played up as much as I'd expected. It isn't an element that's necessarily needed, however, as I found the film to be plenty suspenseful as is. The killers were obvious to me, yes, but the I was more caught up in the situations than the reveal. For instance, the situation of the reveal made for a terrific moment. It's all in how it's done. While I could have done without the annoying screenwriter in-jokes, they don't ruin the suspense either.
I'd say that director David Twohy has more hits than misses, and this clever slice of pulpy entertainment continues that trend.
**½/****
A solid, fast paced B-thriller with winking (and surprising) sense of humor, A Perfect Getaway is not as much of a stiff genre exercise as the ads may make it seem. It is true, there is a final twist, but it falls in line with the rest of the film: a slightly off-kilter, audacious, but entertaining endnote. As an exercise of set up and payoff, both halves of the film work fairly well on their own terms, but I cannot help but wish that the first half had a bit more palpable Hitchcockian tension and suspense instead of "Scream"-like rib nudging . Nevertheless, this is involving enough and thrilling enough to be worth at least the price of a matinée, providing that your willing to suspend your proverbial disbelief.
A Perfect Getaway features a simple premise. Cliff and Sydney (played convincingly by Zahn and Jovovich) are having their honeymoon in Hawaii, while serial murders of young couples in the area are reported. The viewers are in for a thrill ride as the duo meet other tourists along the way, many of which appear alarmingly suspect.
For a major part of the film, these two hook up with Nick and Gina and the relationship between all four is fascinating to watch. Actors Olyphant and Sanchez are wonderful playing these parts and the chemistry between all four actors makes the movie work.
The cinematography and pacing of this film is as effective as what was seen in Pitch Black, although both movies obviously go for a slightly different feel. Twohy effectively makes Hawaii look like a paradise but also a remote, isolated and potentially menacing area. This makes the film both eye candy and a great thriller.
If anything, the movie could have been an instant classic but is ruined by a final confrontation that lets the viewers down and seems to take the easy road. It is almost anti- climactic in the way it unfolds.
Much like Pitch Black, the movie is still pleasant in that it mixes light humour with the drama and tension. Twohy firmly intends to entertain first and foremost without pretension and this is what makes the movie work. The film also makes for a pleasant repeat viewing, which is why it deserves a solid 7.
Get the popcorn out and enjoy the ride!
Hawaiian born, Timothy Olyphant was just superb, believable and constant, and convincingly teamed with Kiele Sanchez who was feisty and super-cool. I've liked everything I've seen Steve Zahn do and this was no exception, I think it showed him as a brilliant actor to be so varied, chameleon-like and in such an action role where he is usually associated with geeky characters (love him in Reality Bites). Mila Jovovich was also great - in fact all the actors were well formed, interesting and generally believable making for a good ensemble cast in a gripping action thriller. I'd have liked to have seen more of the Chris Hemsworth and Marley Shelton couple.
The SFX people did a good job with all the bloody wounds, mutilations and injuries, they were very impressive and I became quite squeamish at a few. I thought it was wonderful to see the calm, beauty and grandeur of Hawaii as a backdrop for quite an ugly story. Whilst I didn't quite get a motivation for all the misdeeds that went on, it was still a very good watch and the script was clever, witty (making fun of typical action film blunders, I just thought something like "he'd have run out of bullets" and the guy goes and says, "I should have been counting my bullets" etc) and intelligent. A film is always getting an extra point for referencing Cool Hand Luke!!
As such, it's a rather artificial exercise in filmmaking. There's a distinct tongue-in-cheek approach to the material, a slightly deliberate cheesiness at what's going on. Certainly, once the killers have been uncovered there's a huge misstep in the way in which the filmmakers pause their movie and take ten minutes out, in excruciating detail, to reveal how their twist came out. And from that point in, the predictable survival antics ring slightly hollow.
Until that point, your enjoyment of the movie depends on how caught up you are in the mystery and how much you like the actors. I found Steve Zahn to be out of his depth in a non-comedy, and Milla Jovovich to be as shrill and annoying as ever. But Timothy Olyphant more than makes up for that with a truly great turn as a charismatic ex-forces guy with a metal plate in his head. Olyphant's kooky performance bests sums up this movie's quirky atmosphere and his presence alone is worth an extra star.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhen asked if the production team made her train for the part, Kiele Sanchez said she was already training for a marathon when she got the part of Gina Scruggs, but that she didn't do any fight training because she didn't think it was befitting of the character.
- GaffesAs seen in flashback, Cliff threw the tape from the digital camera into the sea but Gina was able to see the photos on it. When Gina first looks at the camera, it clearly shows her pushing in the SD card all the way, which revealed the photos on the SD card to her. Cliff even says in an earlier scene that he should read the camera's manual, so it's clear he did not know it also had an SD card in it.
- Autres versionsThe Director's Cut available on the Blu Ray release contains an additional 10 minutes of footage.
- ConnexionsEdited into A Perfect Getaway: The Shocking Original Scripted Ending (2009)
Meilleurs choix
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 14 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 15 515 460 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 5 948 555 $ US
- 9 août 2009
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 22 955 544 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 38m(98 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1