Lorsqu'un père protecteur rencontre un ancien criminel, les deux hommes se retrouvent bientôt empêtrés dans une spirale de mensonges et de violence tout en confrontant leur propre psyché int... Tout lireLorsqu'un père protecteur rencontre un ancien criminel, les deux hommes se retrouvent bientôt empêtrés dans une spirale de mensonges et de violence tout en confrontant leur propre psyché intérieure.Lorsqu'un père protecteur rencontre un ancien criminel, les deux hommes se retrouvent bientôt empêtrés dans une spirale de mensonges et de violence tout en confrontant leur propre psyché intérieure.
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 8 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesJoe R. Lansdale: The author of the novel plays the priest at the graveside.
- GaffesThere is a CSX train. CSX operates on the east coast, where the movie was filmed, but has never operated in Texas, where the movie is set.
- Citations
Russel: [On his son being a serial murderer] What are you going to do when a dog goes bad on you... bites somebody or hurts somebody? There's only two things you can do, right? You either chain him up... or put him down. But which do you think is more cruel? Huh?
Richard Dane: [Shocked] You're talking about killing your own son? That's crazy.
Russel: Well... I can't very well chain him up... can I?
- ConnexionsFeatures La Nuit des morts-vivants (1968)
- Bandes originalesForgetting You
Written by Osbie McClinton
Performed by James Carr
Courtesy of Ace Records Ltd.
Start with Cape Fear, then merge into Killer Joe with a side Touch of Evil, and you will have an inkling of how macabre and comical Cold In July can be. It touches most of the familiar neo-noir bases including being set in East Texas and in the '80's. Revenge is the name of this game--director Jim Mickle paces the suspense and blood just about right.
Richard Dane (Michael C. Hall) and his family experience a home invasion, for which Richard kills the intruder point blank. The murder is reasonable until the corpse's dad, Ben Russel (Sam Shepard, more laconic and bad than ever), shows up just out of prison to menace the Danes for the death of his son. Yet as usual in pulpy noir, not all is as it seems including the motives of the local law enforcers and the identity of the dead "son."
Add to the grimy mix the Dixie mafia, who produce snuff videos using young girls. Russel is affected because it involves his son (even bad guys have the blues.)
The revenge formula ramps up considerably and the film becomes gleefully unglued with the advent of Don Johnson's swaggering detective, Jim Bob. His red Caddy convertible with the steer horn on the grille and his florid outfits signal an out-sized noir character channeling Matthew McConaughey from Killer Joe with a touch of Orson Welles' evil south of the border. A serious pig farmer, Jim Bob is hilarious as the swashbuckling, cheesy hunter. But make no mistake—he can give physically as good as he gets with some impressive sleuth work to boot.
The center of the darkness is Richard, a seemingly solid citizen who has the ambiguous demons usually reserved for the noir hero (think of Bogey's characters). His strong revulsion at the murder passes into something less than that but more than just vigilantism. Anyway, the blood bath at the end is worth seeing for its noir excess and dark humor.
Very few characters in this delightful summer indie get out unscathed, and some indeed find July very cold.
- JohnDeSando
- 27 mai 2014
- Permalien
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Cold in July?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 427 418 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 40 317 $US
- 25 mai 2014
- Montant brut mondial
- 1 547 630 $US
- Durée1 heure 49 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1