Bangkok Dangerous
Un tueur à gages à Bangkok pour une série d'emplois enfreint son code personnel lorsqu'il tombe amoureux d'une femme du coin et se lie avec son garçon de courses.Un tueur à gages à Bangkok pour une série d'emplois enfreint son code personnel lorsqu'il tombe amoureux d'une femme du coin et se lie avec son garçon de courses.Un tueur à gages à Bangkok pour une série d'emplois enfreint son code personnel lorsqu'il tombe amoureux d'une femme du coin et se lie avec son garçon de courses.
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
- Fon
- (as Charlie Young)
- Surat
- (as Nirattisai Kaljaruek)
- Michigan
- (as Steve Baldocchi)
- Tuk Tuk Driver
- (as Sakol Palvanichkul)
- Fon's grandmother
- (as Namngen Boonnark)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesNicolas Cage had committed to several pictures after the completion of his work on this film. To accommodate his limited schedule, some sets were recreated and built in different locations so no shooting time would be wasted.
- GaffesJoe twice declares that he lives by the rules, leave no traces. Yet throughout the movie, he handles his guns and ammo with bare hands - leaving fingerprints and DNA all over them.
- Citations
Joe: I was taught four rules...
Joe: One: Don't ask questions. There is no such thing as right and wrong.
Joe: Two: Don't take an interest in people outside of work. There is no such thing as trust.
Joe: Three: Erase every trace. Come anonymous and leave nothing behind.
Joe: Four: Know when to get out. Just thinking about it means it's time. Before you lose your edge, before you become a target.
- ConnexionsFeatured in CollegeHumor Originals: The Nicolas Cage Awards (2013)
- Bandes originalesL-L-Love
Written by Bruce Driscoll & Erica Driscoll
Performed by Blondfire
Published by Peermusic III, Ltd. o/b/o itself & Tender Tender Rush Music
It also surprised me with a few things, and it actually made me take the movie seriously as an actual piece of work as opposed to something to deride with teeth gnashed like Ghost Rider. Nicolas Cage is trying for something a little different here. At first, yes, it may look like he's bored, or wooden, or both in the character of "Joe" the hit-man who has his four rules and, naturally, breaks at least a few of them during the run time of the movie in Bangkok (i.e. be anonymous, don't make connections with people you don't know, and know when to quit), but this gives way to something else. He's trying for nuance and observation, of being subtle in a role that should call for it (albeit Joe isn't a terribly interesting person save for his detachment). While he's definitely no Alain Delon when it comes to playing cold killer who may have a couple of portions of humanity in him, I actually did find myself being drawn into the character just based on Cage's projection of this detachment as a means to hide himself away from people. And for good reason, since he's not a "people person" really.
That is until Joe meets 'Kong', who is a guy he hires for work but then takes on as his pupil (as the narration dutifully and unnecessarily tells us, because he sees something in Kong), and then also a romantic interest in a deaf-mute girl who works at a pharmacy. The latter scenes especially were touching because of it becoming a kind of silent movie, perhaps by default, when the two of them were together, and there's a rather sad, painful scene later on in the film between the two that is shockingly good and believable. I even liked the actors who played Kong and the girl, and how their characters unfolded in the story, limited as they might be... and yet, that old bastard cliché and convention kept coming back, more-so into the action scenes and set-pieces; whenever a chase happens in the film (save for one moment involving an arm dismemberment) you can zone out and not miss much. The editing is that kind of fast- kinetic style where you can barely take in a shot before it goes whizzing by. There's also some scenes that are ludicrous that are taken dead-serious, such as when Cage's Joe practically has gills and drowns a man underwater without any trouble.
It's really a matter of the plot just not giving anything much for the characters or actors to do. And yet there is a misconception that becomes apparent; this is much more about the characters than the plot, at least for a while, and when it sticks to that the Pang brothers sense of cinematic style, of the love of dirty Bangkok and elephants, works and is enjoyable. When the story comes back though, particularly in the last twenty minutes when Joe makes a fatal choice, it turns into something else - something frustratingly forgettable. For a short while there is hope, which is nice, until it reverts to what the expectation foretold. It's truly a mixed-bag, but far from the failure that was projected by the reviews and audience reaction... Oh, and of course, try not to look at Cage's hair. The bad jokes would never end. 5.5/10
- Quinoa1984
- 4 juin 2010
- Permalien
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 45 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 15 298 133 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 7 783 266 $US
- 7 sept. 2008
- Montant brut mondial
- 42 487 390 $US
- Durée1 heure 39 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1