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IMDbPro

Nombre clave: Esmeralda

Título original: Code Name: Emerald
  • 1985
  • PG
  • 1h 35min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
5,9/10
1,2 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Nombre clave: Esmeralda (1985)
SpyActionDramaWar

Con la "ayuda" de Esmeralda, los alemanes atrapan a Wheeler, de quien se cree que sabe el cuándo y el dónde del Día D. Esmeralda es enviada como compañera de celda de Wheeler.Con la "ayuda" de Esmeralda, los alemanes atrapan a Wheeler, de quien se cree que sabe el cuándo y el dónde del Día D. Esmeralda es enviada como compañera de celda de Wheeler.Con la "ayuda" de Esmeralda, los alemanes atrapan a Wheeler, de quien se cree que sabe el cuándo y el dónde del Día D. Esmeralda es enviada como compañera de celda de Wheeler.

  • Dirección
    • Jonathan Sanger
  • Guión
    • Ron Bass
  • Reparto principal
    • Ed Harris
    • Max von Sydow
    • Horst Buchholz
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    5,9/10
    1,2 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Jonathan Sanger
    • Guión
      • Ron Bass
    • Reparto principal
      • Ed Harris
      • Max von Sydow
      • Horst Buchholz
    • 11Reseñas de usuarios
    • 3Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Imágenes19

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    + 14
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    Reparto principal29

    Editar
    Ed Harris
    Ed Harris
    • Gus Lang
    Max von Sydow
    Max von Sydow
    • Jurgen Brausch
    Horst Buchholz
    Horst Buchholz
    • Walter Hoffman
    Helmut Berger
    Helmut Berger
    • Ernst Ritter
    Cyrielle Clair
    Cyrielle Clair
    • Claire Jouvet
    Eric Stoltz
    Eric Stoltz
    • Andy Wheeler
    Patrick Stewart
    Patrick Stewart
    • Col. Peters
    Graham Crowden
    Graham Crowden
    • Sir Geoffrey Macklin
    George Mikell
    • Maj. Seltz
    Gabriel Barylli
    • Dieter Träger
    Peter Bonke
    • Johann
    Tony Rohr
    Tony Rohr
    • Patrick Callaghan
    Henri Lambert
    • Andre
    Ray Armstrong
    • Willoughby
    Julie Jézéquel
    • Jasmine
    • (as Julie Jezequel)
    Oscar Quitak
    • Army Doctor
    Katia Tchenko
    Katia Tchenko
    • Marie Claude
    Didier Sandre
    • Duchelle
    • Dirección
      • Jonathan Sanger
    • Guión
      • Ron Bass
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios11

    5,91.2K
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    10

    Reseñas destacadas

    6blanche-2

    From 1985

    Ed Harris is double agent Gus Lang in Code Name: Emerald, from 1985, directed by Jonathan Sanger.

    This is another, let's lie to the Axis about where the Allies will land on D-Day and when D-Day will actually happen.

    The Germans want an "Overlord," an officer with details of D-Day. The Germans capture one, Wheeler (Eric Stolz), so Gus is sent to Paris to keep tabs on him, and also plant a false story about his health. He has a secret liaison among the German upper crust.

    This is an okay film with a fantastic cast: besides Harris and Stolz, Max von Sydow, Helmet Berger, Horst Buchholz, and Patrick Stewart.

    The ending is tense, but I felt parts of the film were slow. Worth seeing for the actors.
    4boblipton

    Misfire

    As the Allied prepare to hit the Normandy beaches, the Germans try to find out where they will strike. In a complicated gambit, spy Ed Harris helps the Germans capture Eric Stoltz, who is supposed to know where the attack will take place. Then Harris shows up in occupied Paris to help get the information from him. However, he is actually a double agent.

    One of the problems with making a fictional movie about a settled and familiar piece of history is that the audience knows how it all came out. There is thus no dramatic tension on the larger issues. Instead, we need to care about what happens to the individuals we see on the screen. And while they are all fine actors, their characters are mere sketches, and their dialogue not particularly interesting. While Max von Sydow and Horst Buchholz try their hardest, they are merely nasty Nazis here.

    There is an attempt to liven things up with some good scenery shots around Paris. With Freddie Francis in charge of the camera, this succeeds. However, we are supposed to focus on Harris and liaison/love interest Cyrielle Clair, and they're shot in the distance and medium-long shots in these sequences.
    9clanciai

    Spy game with high stakes showing Paris off at her best

    The problem of this film, like of many others of the same kind, is, that the further away in time you get from the second world war, the more the plot and the film must be almost painfully discernible as contrived and artificial. Reconstructing reality must be more difficult and appear less convincing the further in time from the reality exhibited you get.

    This is a very good story and very intelligent plot, the actors are all superb, especially Ed Harris, here young and fresh with many great roles ahead of him, and Max von Sydow as the honest German officer. Also Horst Bucholz is doing well like all the others, and of course Eric Stoltz as the prisoner. Helmut Berger adds an appropriate portion of nastiness as a very convincing fanatical German Nazi, in some ways he makes the deepest impression in his radiance of constant extreme but well controlled menace, and Cyrielle Clair provides the necessary female bit.

    In spite of the obvious artificial construction of the plot and story, it is well worth seeing and rewarding indeed for those in chase of excitement, and for those who love Paris. It is all filmed in Paris and France.
    7JamesHitchcock

    Enjoyable Wartime Espionage Drama

    Like certain other film genres, such as the Western, the musical and the historical epic, the Second World War film was out of favour in the eighties. There were occasional exceptions, but apart from John Boorman's "Hope and Glory", which concentrated on the British Home Front rather than military action, I cannot think of any really great examples from the decade. There were to be no eighties equivalents of "The Dambusters" or "The Great Escape".

    The central idea of "Code Name: Emerald" owes something to "Where Eagles Dare". An American officer with knowledge of the invasion plan for the D-Day landings has been captured by the Nazis. (In "Where Eagles Dare" the captured man was a general; here he is a lieutenant. Were such junior officers in fact entrusted with such vitally important secret knowledge?) In the earlier film, a group of commandos were sent to rescue the general from a redoubt in the Bavarian mountains. In "Code Name: Emerald", however, the Allies have a more subtle plan. Gus Lang, an American officer in Britain, is acting as a double agent, pretending to be a traitor working for German intelligence, whereas in reality he is being used by the Americans to feed the Germans with false information. ("Emerald" is the code name given to him by his German handlers). Lang is sent to Paris, supposedly to defect to the German side, but with secret instructions to find out whether the captured officer, Lieutenant Andrew Wheeler, has revealed anything under German interrogation.

    Like "Hope and Glory", "Code Name: Emerald" has little in the way of military action. It is essentially an espionage drama of the sort popular throughout the Cold War, but transferred to a wartime setting and with the Germans rather than the Russians as the villains. Like most such dramas, it has a complicated plot where the heroes never know whom they can trust and which of the other characters might turn out to be a double, or even a triple, agent. An added complication is that the villains do not know whom they can trust either. One of the Germans is secretly working for the British- but which one? What lifts the film above the level of the average war film, or for that matter the average spy drama, is the depth of characterisation. Unusually, the German characters are not all stereotyped as one-dimensional villains. Admittedly, Helmut Berger's Ritter is a Nazi fanatic, but Horst Buchholz's Hoffman seems charming and urbane and Max von Sydow's Brausch is a Prussian officer of the old school, who loves the Fatherland but has little time for its rulers. That fine actor Ed Harris makes Lang a believable individual rather than a mere plot device. (Harris has been able to perform a similar service for other otherwise mundane thrillers, such as "The Rock", in which he not only makes the villain, General Hummel, believable, but also makes his motives, in part, understandable).

    There is nothing particularly deep or original about "Code Name: Emerald", but it is professionally produced and acted and makes for enjoyable watching. 7/10
    5SnoopyStyle

    espionage B story

    It's April 1944. The Nazis are desperate to capture an "Overlord", the code name for the few Allies who knew the time and location of the planned D-Day invasion. The Nazis have a plant inside British intelligence. His code name is Emerald. It's Gus Lang (Ed Harris) who was recruited back in 1934. The British already know this and has him as their man. He gives the Nazis a boat transporting fake Overlords. Col. Peters (Patrick Stewart) gives them a boat full of sacrificial lambs and the Nazis narrow the focus on young American Lt. Andy Wheeler (Eric Stoltz).

    I am not sure why Gus would return back to Paris. The movie gives the excuse that the British had tasked him to tracking down Emerald. It seems very unlikely that the spy hunter would go behind the lines to do it. The Brits would have different spy hunters for the two sides of the line. It would be more reasonable for a new character to do the interrogation trap. Ok! Forget all that. This is a rather static drama inside the prison. Outside the prison, he wouldn't make contact with the resistance. That would be too risky with little to gain. A lot of this feels wrong. No matter which way Gus Lang goes. There is some flaw in the logic.

    Más del estilo

    Hermanos ante el peligro
    6,3
    Hermanos ante el peligro
    Overlord
    7,1
    Overlord
    No Questions Asked
    6,7
    No Questions Asked
    Adiós al rey
    6,2
    Adiós al rey
    Lobos marinos
    6,3
    Lobos marinos
    El triunfo del espíritu
    6,8
    El triunfo del espíritu
    Cuarenta pistolas
    6,9
    Cuarenta pistolas
    Mujer sin pasaporte
    6,1
    Mujer sin pasaporte
    Luz roja
    6,4
    Luz roja
    Ven tras de mí
    6,5
    Ven tras de mí
    Ansiedad trágica
    6,4
    Ansiedad trágica
    El asesinato de Mary Phagan
    7,4
    El asesinato de Mary Phagan

    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Ed Harris and Max von Sydow collaborated again in La tienda (1993).
    • Pifias
      When Ed Harris' character jumps out of the plane, he's wearing a green uniform. The camera cuts to a long shot of him descending with his parachute open. In that shot, the parachutist is wearing a white winter uniform.
    • Citas

      Gus Lang: We didn't tell them about the decoy run? You mean to tell me we never told Allied Command what we were doing?

      Colonel Peters: This was the one that we couldn't leak, not even to Allied Command.

      Gus Lang: Hell, Hitler doesn't even need an army with Allied Intelligence on the job!

      Colonel Peters: Well,there's a little bit more. Survivors reported that some of the men in the water were picked up by the Germans, and THAT'S why we're in this bloody Jeep driving out to bloody Devon, and we're going to pray every inch of the way that Himmler hasn't landed himself an Overlord; the boats that went down were crawling with them.

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    Preguntas frecuentes15

    • How long is Code Name: Emerald?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 27 de septiembre de 1985 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Código: Esmeralda
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(shot of Tower Bridge at the beginning)
    • Empresas productoras
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • NBC Productions
      • National Broadcasting Company (NBC)
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 561.548 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 241.108 US$
      • 29 sept 1985
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 561.548 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      1 hora 35 minutos
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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