Kompromat
- 2022
- 2h 7m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
A French diplomat must escape an FSB plot in Siberia.A French diplomat must escape an FSB plot in Siberia.A French diplomat must escape an FSB plot in Siberia.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Michael Gor
- Rostov
- (as Mikhail Gorevoy)
Daniil Vorobyov
- Sasha
- (as Danila Vorobyev)
Igor Zhizhikin
- Sagarine
- (as Igor Jijikine)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Jerome Salle seems to be specialized in adventure thrillers: LARGO WINCH 1 and 2, ZULU, only THE ODYSSEY was not a thriller. But this movie definitely is. And the Russian element in this film released just during the war in Ukraine sounds very strange, what a coincidence. Well this is a classical international thriller with no great surprise, except an excellent directing and acting, but where nothing is done to attract tourists to visit Russia and its tolerance, his friendly behavior towards foreigners; I mean the authorities, not the common folk. Gilles Lelouche is awesome, as usual. A bit long, though and I repeat, unfortunately predictable.
This is kind of exactly what I have against French movies. The story is good, the actors are good, the images are good, but the way it is filmed is way too long. It's as if there are 2 different kinds of movies, the comedies and the artsy ones. This one tries to be artsy, with pan shots, and repeating itself so that we understand how much the poor guy waited. I love movies, and I love movies that are a piece of art, because it's gorgeous, and yet it keeps you interested throughout, without needong to take a nap. But this one fails at it. It felt very long, which transpired with me looking at my watch around the 1 hour mark to see how long I was supposed to stay there still. I think the real story of Yoann Barbereau would have been better, rather than VERY loosely basing the movie on it. So much questions remain in the end. Too bad...
I have seen most of the films that won Oscars this year, 2025. I will not mention them, because they are so bad that they do not deserve to be mentioned. I almost lose faith in the art of cinema and even in human being, because of the banality of these films. Meanwhile, high-quality films like this french one are forgotten in some streaming system and few people watch them. This is a suspense film that has all the requirements of a great film, everything about it is top notch: Acting, photography, editing, soundtrack, script. In short, it is a film that shows that the art of cinema still has a lot of breath and will not die any time soon. Thank you to the producers who made this gem, it is really good.
This is the kind of movie that everyone living in civilised and comfortable prosperous calm world must see. Everyone just living his own life, enjoying moments with friends and family. But if you live in Russia, it is like if Alice on the other side of the mirror. As soon as in nowadays Russia, you will easily learn that the rule of law doesn't exist. That anyone with even smallest grasp of power uses it to his own benefit. That human life is worthless - own citizens, and foreigners - even less. That there are no logical explanation nor motives for prosecuting or jailing an innocent man. Everything runs on an almost medieval barbaric logic. All that is Russia nowadays.
"It's too long", someone wrote. Well, I disagree. First of all, French directors don't generally hew to the mad pacing American filmgoers are used to. This is quite obvious - you have to go into the theater with a different notion of what an action film should look like.
The film is extremely tight all the way through. Extraordinary attention to detail, and the cinematography is outstanding. Just beautiful. Yes, the plot is somewhat convoluted - but it's based on an incredible true story. It's also timely in that it informs the audience of the true terror people are living in, in the totalitarian state of Russia. G-d knows how many people are wrongfully imprisoned. This is the story of a man who, incredibly, was able to escape the clutches of the Russian state. It's worth watching for that reason alone.
The film is extremely tight all the way through. Extraordinary attention to detail, and the cinematography is outstanding. Just beautiful. Yes, the plot is somewhat convoluted - but it's based on an incredible true story. It's also timely in that it informs the audience of the true terror people are living in, in the totalitarian state of Russia. G-d knows how many people are wrongfully imprisoned. This is the story of a man who, incredibly, was able to escape the clutches of the Russian state. It's worth watching for that reason alone.
Did you know
- TriviaThis movie is inspired by a true story, in which a French citizen in Siberia, Yoann Barbereau, director of the local branch of the Alliance française, was accused of pedophilia, based on very flimsy evidence. However, the writer/director did not acquire the rights of Barbereau's book and decided to write an action thriller instead of the very Kafkaesque original story. This was heavily criticized, both by Barbereau and by several critics during its release, as they felt the characters are very cliche and some story beats quite unbelievable.
- Crazy creditsThe title appears on screen in cyrillic script.
- ConnectionsReferences The Young Girls of Rochefort (1967)
- Soundtracks39th Parallel North (for Electronics)
Written by Julius Aglinskas
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Kompromat, el expediente ruso
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $4,314,029
- Runtime
- 2h 7m(127 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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