Cuando un escritor estadounidense desaparece durante el golpe de estado chileno en septiembre de 1973, su esposa y su padre intentan encontrarlo.Cuando un escritor estadounidense desaparece durante el golpe de estado chileno en septiembre de 1973, su esposa y su padre intentan encontrarlo.Cuando un escritor estadounidense desaparece durante el golpe de estado chileno en septiembre de 1973, su esposa y su padre intentan encontrarlo.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Ganó 1 premio Óscar
- 12 premios ganados y 23 nominaciones en total
- Paris
- (as Martin Lasalle)
Opiniones destacadas
Jack Lemmon gives another standout performance (in a career that had many) as the uptight father that learns to accept his son only after his suspected death. The emotional evolution from devout christian/disapproving dad to grieving father with 'opened eyes' is engaging to watch. Sissy Spacek shows the strength that should have won her a second oscar 2001 for "In The Bedroom" as the wife who never stops looking for her husband. But the clear winner in this politcal thriller is the director Costa Gravas, who constantly keeps the politcal tension high, without upstaging the performances of the leads.
A great drama that deal with life/death and the bond between parents and their children.
Govras chose as background for his film the actual diaries of Charles Horman, a lefty artist type who was living with his wife Beth in Chile. Horman had apparently picked up the unfortunate habit of inquiring into some dangerous affairs in a rather loud way. Isolated in every sense from any "live" political current, his disappearance and murder were relatively easy to accomplish, even though he was a United States citizen. The actor John Shea portrays Charles Horman as a naive sort, and there is no reason to assume this was an inaccurate depiction. Most citizens of the United States overseas are sheltered from the skulduggery of realpolitik, and most cling to some rather dangerous illusions about how far their rights as citizens actually extend. U.S. citizens in Lebanon who had to pay for their removal from that combat front last summer have learned this the hard way recently.
Jack Lemmon is stellar as Charles' father Ed Horman, who made the trip to Chile under the impression that he had rights his government felt bound to respect, and who discovered otherwise. And Cissy Spacek is never anything less than full marks as Beth Horman.
MISSING accomplishes what few political dramas do. It asks its viewer to consider the human dimensions and costs of an imperial political reality, and it portrays with a deadly earnestness what these ideas do to people caught up in the sway of such notions. There are no monsters in MISSING, just people who are doing their jobs and following orders. And therein lies the horror, one which all too many of our fellow citizens have yet to come to grips with. It is a rare feat among political films, an actual work of art. But don't be surprised if you need a stiff drink after viewing it. That's how I felt when I first saw this work after its release in 1982, and it still has that effect upon me today.
Adapted by Costa-Gavras and Donald Stewart from Thomas Hauser's non-fiction book documenting the true case, the plot focuses on American expatriate Charles Horman whose sudden disappearance in the days after the Pinochet coup brings together two familial adversaries, his wife Beth and his father Ed, who has flown in from New York. Charles and Beth had been leading a vagabond existence with his work in children's animation and their relatively passive support of Allende's reform measures. Charles' back story is revealed in carefully constructed flashback episodes that show him to be curious about the presence of U.S. military personnel in the area. Once he disappears, Ed and Beth seek help from the U.S. Consulate but face a seemingly insurmountable wall of bureaucracy. Frustrated, Ed, a highly conservative Christian Scientist, lashes out at Beth for what he considers her undesirable influence over his son. However, as they absorb the scope of the violence and the culpability of the U.S. government, they bond intractably toward their objective of finding Charles.
For once, Jack Lemmon, unafraid to convey his character's prejudices, is able to use his neurotically coiled energy in a suitable dramatic role as Ed. The result is a startlingly raw performance that ranks among his best. Sissy Spacek is terrific as Beth, though her character does not experience as big an arc of self-revelation. In the elliptical flashback role of Charles, John Shea provides solid support, as do Janice Rule as a political activist and a number of familiar TV faces - Melanie Mayron as friend Terry and David Clennon as U.S. consul Phil Putnam, both from "thirtysomething", and Joe Regalbuto, Frank from "Murphy Brown", playing another Frank, a possible victim of the coup. There are unfortunately no extras with the 2004 DVD.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaDuring the Pinochet dictatorship, which ran from 1973 to 1990, this picture was banned in Chile.
- ErroresWhen Ed Horman is at the State Department trying to get information about Charlie, there is the presidential portrait of Richard Nixon on the wall in the background and a more personal photo of him on Marine One on the credenza behind the desk. That photograph, with fingers in the V-peace sign, was taken upon his final departure from the White House in 1974 and could not have been on someone's desk in 1973.
- Citas
Consul Phil Putnam: Please try to understand. There are so many cases. They're all so important, and this isn't the only one we're working on.
Ed Horman: It's the only one I care about.
Consul Phil Putnam: You and a lot of other people. Listen, I've never seen so many cables from Washington. What kind of pull do you have up there anyway?
Ed Horman: I'm an American citizen.
- Bandas sonorasMy Ding a Ling
(1952)
Written by Chuck Berry (uncredited)
Performed by Chuck Berry
Courtesy of All Platinum Records, Inc.
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Missing
- Locaciones de filmación
- Acapulco, Guerrero, México(as Vina del Mar)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 9,500,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 14,000,000
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 14,000,000
- Tiempo de ejecución2 horas 2 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1