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Miami Vice

  • 2006
  • 16
  • 2 Std. 12 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,1/10
127.843
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
3.896
1.097
Jamie Foxx and Colin Farrell in Miami Vice (2006)
Official Trailer ansehen
trailer wiedergeben0:57
14 Videos
99+ Fotos
Drug CrimeActionCrimeDramaThriller

Basierend auf der TV-Serie der 1980er Jahre konzentriert sich dieses Remake auf die Miami Vice Detektive Crockett und Tubbs, deren persönliches und berufliches Leben gefährlich miteinander v... Alles lesenBasierend auf der TV-Serie der 1980er Jahre konzentriert sich dieses Remake auf die Miami Vice Detektive Crockett und Tubbs, deren persönliches und berufliches Leben gefährlich miteinander verflochten sind.Basierend auf der TV-Serie der 1980er Jahre konzentriert sich dieses Remake auf die Miami Vice Detektive Crockett und Tubbs, deren persönliches und berufliches Leben gefährlich miteinander verflochten sind.

  • Regie
    • Michael Mann
  • Drehbuch
    • Michael Mann
    • Anthony Yerkovich
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Colin Farrell
    • Jamie Foxx
    • Gong Li
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,1/10
    127.843
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    3.896
    1.097
    • Regie
      • Michael Mann
    • Drehbuch
      • Michael Mann
      • Anthony Yerkovich
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Colin Farrell
      • Jamie Foxx
      • Gong Li
    • 1KBenutzerrezensionen
    • 251Kritische Rezensionen
    • 66Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Gewinn & 9 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos14

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 0:57
    Official Trailer
    What Roles Has Colin Farrell Been Considered For?
    Clip 3:40
    What Roles Has Colin Farrell Been Considered For?
    What Roles Has Colin Farrell Been Considered For?
    Clip 3:40
    What Roles Has Colin Farrell Been Considered For?
    Miami Vice (2006)
    Clip 0:53
    Miami Vice (2006)
    Miami Vice (2006)
    Clip 0:55
    Miami Vice (2006)
    Miami Vice (2006)
    Clip 0:31
    Miami Vice (2006)
    Miami Vice Scene: Crockett Asks Isabella To Go Get A Drink
    Clip 0:57
    Miami Vice Scene: Crockett Asks Isabella To Go Get A Drink

    Fotos179

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    Topbesetzung99+

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    Colin Farrell
    Colin Farrell
    • Sonny Crockett
    Jamie Foxx
    Jamie Foxx
    • Ricardo Tubbs
    Gong Li
    Gong Li
    • Isabella
    Naomie Harris
    Naomie Harris
    • Trudy Joplin
    Ciarán Hinds
    Ciarán Hinds
    • FBI Agent Fujima
    Justin Theroux
    Justin Theroux
    • Detective Larry Zito
    Barry Shabaka Henley
    Barry Shabaka Henley
    • Castillo
    Luis Tosar
    Luis Tosar
    • Montoya
    John Ortiz
    John Ortiz
    • Jose Yero
    Elizabeth Rodriguez
    Elizabeth Rodriguez
    • Gina Calabrese
    Domenick Lombardozzi
    Domenick Lombardozzi
    • Detective Stan Switek
    Eddie Marsan
    Eddie Marsan
    • Nicholas
    Isaach De Bankolé
    Isaach De Bankolé
    • Neptune
    • (as Isaach De Bankole)
    John Hawkes
    John Hawkes
    • Alonzo Stevens
    Tom Towles
    Tom Towles
    • Coleman
    Mario Ernesto Sánchez
    Mario Ernesto Sánchez
    • El Tiburon
    • (as Mario Ernesto Sanchez)
    Frankie J. Allison
    Frankie J. Allison
    • Deep-Chested Aryan Brother
    • (as Frankie Jay Allison)
    Tony Curran
    Tony Curran
    • Aryan Brother
    • (as Anthony Curran)
    • Regie
      • Michael Mann
    • Drehbuch
      • Michael Mann
      • Anthony Yerkovich
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen1K

    6,1127.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7gav_mcf

    Miami Vice emerges as a very good grown-up thriller despite it's flaws.

    I'm a huge fan of Michael Mann, Collateral and Heat are brilliant and this unfortunately doesn't live up to those two. Having said that it's a tense and scarily realistic film. I mean, there's no way cop life is like how it's portrayed in films like Bad Boys and the Rush Hour series.

    Foxx and Farrell are solid as the focused partners, although it would have better to see more interaction between the two, they barely say two words to each other the whole film. The acting overall is very good, with Gong Li and Naomie Harris being the stand-outs.

    There's no doubt the main feature of Mann's movies is his visual style. The night time atmosphere of Collateral is brilliant and he makes no exception here, providing plenty of great cityscapes and night shots. The soundtrack is also brilliant and bonds with the movie well, the highlight being the excellent "Auto Rock" by Mogwai thumping in the emotional finale.

    I think the storyline is a weak point in Miami Vice and could have been stronger. I didn't have too much of an idea of what was going on half the time, but this again is part of the realistic cop scenario and avoids having an elaborate plot. I like the opening sequence when you're thrown straight into a heavy-hitting club scene, not sure whats happening and given no clues.

    I admit Mann's thriller will not be for everyone and like most of his films, it may take multiple viewings to take everything in. It is clear though if you are looking for a non-stop action movie definitely avoid this. However, if you want a grown-up, intelligent, realistic thriller I would be happy to recommend it.
    7noizyme

    Highly interactive drug-ring movie plays well on DVD

    When I first commented on this movie, I was furious. First, I couldn't tell why this was being adapted into a movie from the 80's TV show, but with that aside, secondly, I couldn't figure out how I felt about Colin Farrell (with his gruff voice throughout the whole movie trying to replace Don Johnson as Crockett) and Jamie Foxx playing Tubbs (especially because I always loved Foxx's more comedic acting over his serious roles). I saw it in the theater the first time around, and everything just felt completely off-putting for me, even little things like not including the trademark theme song from the TV show to hype up the movie.

    So I lost that initial impression altogether with a second viewing. I forgot that they never used the original theme music. I overlooked Farrell's acting like Don Johnson. And I had time (and subtitles for most of the overly specific commands and subtle name changes that the characters used throughout the film) to sit back and figure everything out without being uncomfortably squirming around in a theater chair to view it. Although I felt that some music changes would've gotten this film a higher score with my taste in soundtracks (or maybe a loss of the random sex scenes between the two vice partners and the included music in those changed around), ultimately the DVD proved a lot of my primary opinion were false.

    The camera-work was awesome (each scene being shot with a photograph included in place of a traditional storyboard layout). Time was put into the detail-oriented script almost to the point of confusion, for the audience at points, but in the long-run, the totally expanding life of a vice agent and the takeovers that are possible in the real world might be this sky-bound. Michael Mann deserves a lot of the credit for the entire film for its look and continuous feel throughout; this adaptation definitely could not have been made as complete without him as the director. And his tests for simple things (such as .50 caliber gun impact tests on a car) really show through in the final draft of the film.

    All in all, the film deserves at least 7 stars as its rating. I don't know about seeing it again and again (mostly due to its heady-script and elongated duration of the film), but there are moments of the film that have you laughing to yourself abut how this drug-trade stuff goes on within vice squads. Very informative, very stylish and functional camera-work, and very worth seeing.
    6tcarnam

    A few problems, yes, but on the whole solid entertainment

    Not gonna get too much into it, will just say that it was pretty good, though with a little work to the script (dialogue, yes, but also how it evoked Crockett's and Tubbs's lives and identities outside of their lives/identities undercover), it could have neared excellent.

    Visually, it was beautiful, though this should come as no surprise given who directed it. I was also satisfied stylistically; an updated remake, yes, but for the most part it held true (to the original series) in terms of pattern and theme (i.e., cars, boats, guns, clothes, clubs).

    The acting was, given the limitations of a script that didn't really demand all too much of players, pretty good.

    The script was, as I wrote above, adequate, but not something I would lavish with any significant praise. There were two scenes where the dialogue ventured well into the territory of trite, but only two scenes, and, more problematically, I wanted to be made more aware of the lines that were being blurred (by their going deep, deep undercover).

    On the whole, though, this was good entertainment. The music was good, the action sequences were well-wrought, the tension was kept in-line with a narrative arc that did basically had no missteps. And like I said, it's a beautiful movie.
    7maxwellsmart

    Solid but underwhelming

    Due to Michael Mann's track record it was hard to go into this movie without very high expectations. After all, we are talking about the creator of arguably the greatest crime drama/thriller ever made with "Heat", as well as the highly entertaining "Collateral". But "Miami Vice" fails to live up to Mann's past success in the crime genre.

    The plot is completely ordinary and doesn't offer up any unexpected twists and turns along the way. Because of this, the movie lacks intensity through much of the first and second acts, when everything that's happening is completely predictable.

    However, pedestrian plot aside, the biggest disappointment was the manner in which the characters were developed. Both "Collateral" and "Heat" were notable for the way in which they delved deep into the psyche of the central characters, providing compelling personal drama to go along with the heists, hits and gunplay. But in "Miami Vice", we never really get to know the characters or their motivations beyond the surface level. And to make matters worse, Foxx and Farrell never develop the kind of rapport that's necessary to make a movie like this work on a high level. Compare Foxx and Farrell to Johnson and Thomas, or Gibson and Glover, and you'll see what I mean. Even though the "Miami Vice" movie aspires to be darker and grittier than "Lethal Weapon", which it is, it fails to be as dramatic because we never really come to care about the characters all that much. While there was clearly a conscious decision to downplay the "buddy" elements of the movie, the result is that Crockett and Tubbs seem so disconnected from each other on a personal level that it's hard to buy that they would die for each other, which we are expected to believe. The only relationship that is at all convincing or fleshed out is between Crockett and Isabella. The rest seem decidedly distant and undercooked.

    What saves the film from being a bust is the visual splendor and great action sets. Mann once again proves that when it comes to creating a gritty atmosphere and staging shootouts, he's among the best in the business. When it comes to style, visuals, and atmosphere, "Miami Vice" is top notch.

    In the end perhaps what hurt this movie most was studio deadlines and delays while shooting. It's been widely reported that Michael Mann had to feverishly edit this film just to get it into theaters on time, and in many ways that shows. There are multiple loose ends that are never tied up or explained, and several plot threads seem underdeveloped. I'm sure some day we will see a director's cut which approaches the 3 hour mark just like "Heat", and perhaps that version will overcome of the issues involving character development and plot holes in the theatrical version. Until then, "Miami Vice" is a movie that, while far from being a total failure, is none-the-less disappointing in that it had the potential to be a much more complete film than it is.
    Special-K88

    confusing and unsatisfactory

    From director Michael Mann and based on the 1980s television series comes this flashy, but overlong and unfocused Miami action flick about Vice detectives Sonny Crockett (Farrell) and Ricardo Tubbs (Foxx) who must go deep undercover and throw their personal lives into disarray in order to stop an international drug trafficking scheme. Pulls you in with its stylish direction and flamboyant visuals, but the two leads have poor chemistry, character development is almost nonexistent, and the film drags on from one convoluted plot twist to the next. Action scenes provide a spark every once in a while, but overall the film is frustrating and never provides one single reason to care about any of its characters! A disappointment considering the cast and crew involved. **

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Michael Mann had his actors train with real-life undercover law enforcement officers. Both Jamie Foxx and Colin Farrell observed undercover operations from a safe distance. Farrell was told he'd learned so much, he was welcome to participate in a real sting operation. During the operation (caught on video, excerpts of which are shown in the DVD extra), guns were drawn and the officers identities questioned. Farrell reports being scared for his life. He spontaneously ripped open his shirt to demonstrate he wasn't wearing a wire, an act the agent-in-charge later commended for being realistic, quick-witted improvisation. After suffering anxiety and insomnia that night, Farrell contacted the agent-in-charge and was told that the sting operation was staged, and he was never in any danger. He was to be told the next morning during a debrief.
    • Patzer
      During the last gunfight, the headlights on Sonny's car are shot out. They are working in the next scene.
    • Zitate

      Deep-Chested Aryan Brother: [Holding detonator] Shoot me, she dies. Shoot me, go ahead. Fuck it, we can all go. That's cool.

      Det. Gina Calabrese: That's not what happens. What will happen is... what will happen is I will put a round at twenty-seven hundred feet per second into the medulla at the base of your brain. And you will be dead from the neck down before your body knows it. Your finger won't even twitch. Only you get dead. So tell me, sport, do you believe that?

      Deep-Chested Aryan Brother: Hey, fu...

      [Calabrese shoots him through the head]

    • Crazy Credits
      Although there were no opening credits in the theatrical release, the Unrated Director's Cut contains credits over a new sequence that opens the film. Once the credits are done, the film begins in the nightclub scene that opened the theatrical version.
    • Alternative Versionen
      Released on Blu-ray in 2008, the Director's Cut features just over eleven minutes of additional material and has just under four minutes of content removed, running roughly seven minutes longer than the Theatrical Cut. In the Director's Cut,
      • There is a new opening scene showing Det. Sonny Crockett (Colin Farrell) and Det. Rico Tubbs (Jamie Foxx) in a go-fast race. This sequence also features opening credits, which are completely absent in any form in the Theatrical Cut. After the race is over, Crockett and Tubbs watch as an undercover Det. Stan Switek (Domenick Lombardozzi) makes arrangements with Neptune (Isaach De Bankolé) to bring some girls to the club for the purposes of solicitation. This sequence serves to contextualize the opening scene of the Theatrical Cut (03:56).
      • After Crockett, Tubbs, and Lt. Martin Castillo (Barry Shabaka Henley) meet with Agent John Fujima (Ciarán Hinds), they are discussing the FLIR images of the two go-fast boats speeding next to one another in pitch darkness. Crockett's line, "those are skill sets" has been removed (-00:03).
      • After the vice team go to see Nicholas (Eddie Marsan, there is a scene where he rings José Yero (John Ortiz) to arrange a meet and to vouch for Burnett and Cooper (00:38).
      • Immediately after the above, the shot of Rico in the shower is from a different and shorter take than that used in the Theatrical Cut (-00:05).
      • When the film first cuts to Ciudad Del Este, there is a shot of a USB drive being taken out of a computer. The film then cuts to the first courier carrying the drive (00:03).
      • After Crockett and Tubbs have met with Yero for the first time, they go back to their hotel room and wait for a call. After Tubbs says, "that was fast", the Director's Cut cuts straight to them heading for the meet with Arcángel Montoya (Luis Tosar). The scene from the Theatrical Cut where Crockett, Tubbs, and Larry Zito (Justin Theroux) go to a pier to await further instructions is absent, as is the following scene when they return to the hotel to find Isabella (Gong Li) and her men in their room (-01:36).
      • After the meeting with Montoya, as Crockett watches Isabella driving away, there are several additional shots of Tubbs trying to contact Trudy Joplin (Naomie Harris) before he can get a signal on his phone (00:14).
      • Immediately after the above, when Tubbs manages to get through to Trudy. He tentatively asks her if she is okay, and she says she is, she's just bored. She then thanks him for the flowers. He asks her what flowers she's talking about, and if there is a card with them. The card reads, "Salutations from your friends in the South". As Trudy realizes the flowers didn't come from Tubbs, she looks out the window and takes her service revolver out of its holster (01:54).
      • Immediately after the above, there is another additional scene in a diner. Tubbs meets with Trudy as she points out it took the FBI testers a week to get access to Burnett and Cooper's criminal history and personal details, whilst it took Montoya's people only three hours. She notes that the flowers mean they're saying, "we can reach out and touch you". Tubbs tells her to trust the layers of fabricated identities that she built and that everything is fine. She then realizes that he's worried about her. She points out that she's safe, can call 911, she has friends, etc whereas Crockett and Tubbs are operating off-grid. She says, "if your focus is on me, if your attention is distracted you will miss something coming at you. I'd die if anything happened to you on account of me. You worry about you. You and Sonny. And I'm fine. They sent us some flowers. Big deal. Thanks for the flowers" (01:45).
      • When Crockett and Isabella go to Havana, there is an additional scene the next morning. As they stand on the balcony, Isabella says this was the house she grew up in and mentions that her mother was a surgeon who moved to Angola. Crockett asks her if she's still there, but Isabella says she died in Angola when Isabella was 16 (01:08).
      • Right after the above addition, during the scene in the cafe, the Director's Cut cuts from Crockett asking Isabella if she looks like her mother, to her saying she will show him a photo. The line where she says that her mother died in Angola when Isabella was 16 has been removed (-00:06).
      • After Crockett and Isabella return from the cafe, she gets a picture of her mother and brings it upstairs to show him. A shot of her ascending the stairs has been removed (-00:05).
      • At the end of the scene on the pier when Crockett tells Isabella she should get out of the drug trade, the last few shots of her walking away are edited differently (-00:03).
      • After unloading the freighter, as Isabella gets into the car and sees Crockett on the boat, there is an additional shot of him waving at her. A few seconds later, there is another additional shot of him looking at her (00:05).
      • A very brief shot of Tubbs looking up from the laptop after receiving Yero's email has been removed (-00:01).
      • After sending Crockett and Tubbs the proof of life that Trudy is still alive, there is a scene where Coleman (Tom Towles) calls them and gives them instructions. This is followed by a scene where he calls Yero and tells him that everything is going according to plan. In the Director's Cut, these two phone calls have been reversed - Coleman calls Yero and then Crockett and Tubbs. There are also several additional close-up shots of him making the call, and the shot of him hanging up has been shortened slightly (00:04).
      • As they make their way to the trailer park to rescue Trudy, Crockett calls Isabella to ask her what's happening, and she says that Yero is behind the abduction. In the Theatrical Cut, she says, "It's Yero, not the buyer. He wants to kill you. I do not know what shit he's pulling." In the Director's Cut, she says, "It's Yero, not the buyer. Yero's acting alone. I do not know what shit he's pulling" (there is no time differentiation).
      • After Yero has Isabella's bodyguard killed, there is an alternate shot of him sitting at the table and looking at her (00:01).
      • At the opening of the scene where Crockett and Tubbs talk about their work, a line of dialogue that occurs off-camera in the Theatrical Cut ("arrests get made") occurs on camera in the Director's Cut (00:03).
      • Beginning during the montage before the final shootout, Nonpoint's 2004 cover of Phil Collins's "In the Air Tonight" plays across multiple scenes, starting when Crockett and Tubbs head out from the hanger and playing up until Castillo locates the two snipers and opens fire. This is an obvious homage to the pilot episode of the TV show, where Collins's original song was used as Crockett (Don Johnson) and Tubbs (Philip Michael Thomas) drove to a potentially fatal meeting with Calderone (Miguel Pinero). In the Theatrical Cut, these scenes are mainly quiet, with the occasional bit of John Murphy's score heard in the background (there is no time differentiation or visual alterations).
      • As the shootout winds down, and Isabella realizes that Crockett is an undercover cop, she walks towards him mumbling "who are you?" This walk has been extended, with an additional shot from behind her that is absent in the Theatrical Cut (00:04).
      • The sequence where Crockett drags Isabella over to her car, and he and Tubbs acknowledge one another has been edited differently, with the shots in a different order, the shot of Crockett approaching the car is longer, and the shot of Tubbs nodding has been removed. The music cues are also slightly different in this sequence (00:02).
      • The first part of the scene where Crockett drives Isabella away from the shootout has been edited differently, with the shots in a different order, and several of them trimmed (-00:03).
      • Immediately after the above, there is an additional scene where Isabella attacks Crockett as he drives. The car spins out of control and Crockett handcuffs her as she shouts at him. They then continue on their journey, each refusing to look at the other (01:14).
      • When they arrive at the safe house, there is an additional shot of Crockett taking off Isabella's cuffs (00:12).
      • The closing credits are shorter (due to the use of opening credits) and the music is different. In the Theatrical Cut, Nonpoint's "In the Air Tonight" plays over the first half of the credits; in the Director's Cut, "One of These Mornings" by Moby plays (-00:54).
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Going Deep Undercover with 'Miami Vice' (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      One of These Mornings
      Written and Produced by Moby

      Patti LaBelle vocal produced by Mark Batson

      Performed by Moby featuring Patti LaBelle

      Courtesy of V2 Records / Mute Ltd.

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    FAQ22

    • How long is Miami Vice?Powered by Alexa
    • A NOTE REGARDING SPOILERS
    • What are the differences between the theatrical version (R-Rated) and the unrated director's cut later released on dvd?

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 24. August 2006 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigte Staaten
      • Deutschland
      • Paraguay
      • Uruguay
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Chuyên Án Miami
    • Drehorte
      • Old City, Montevideo, Uruguay(as a bank in Geneva, Switzerland, only exterior)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Universal Pictures
      • Motion Picture ETA Produktionsgesellschaft
      • Forward Pass
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 135.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 63.450.470 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 25.723.815 $
      • 30. Juli 2006
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 163.794.509 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      2 Stunden 12 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.39 : 1

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