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IMDbPro

Los secretos del poder

Título original: State of Play
  • 2009
  • B
  • 2h 7min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.1/10
164 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
3,123
510
Russell Crowe, Ben Affleck, Helen Mirren, and Rachel McAdams in Los secretos del poder (2009)
Picture-perfect U.S. congressman Stephen Collins (Ben Affleck) seems to be the rising star in the world of politics -- until his research assistant, who was also his mistress, is murdered. And then the secrets start coming out...
Reproducir trailer2:30
9 videos
65 fotos
Conspiración y suspensoCrimenDramaDrama políticoMisterioPoliciaco procesalSuspenso políticoThriller

Cuando un trabajador del congreso muere asesinado, un periodista de Washington investiga el caso, que envuelve a un congresista con el que fue a la universidad.Cuando un trabajador del congreso muere asesinado, un periodista de Washington investiga el caso, que envuelve a un congresista con el que fue a la universidad.Cuando un trabajador del congreso muere asesinado, un periodista de Washington investiga el caso, que envuelve a un congresista con el que fue a la universidad.

  • Dirección
    • Kevin Macdonald
  • Guionistas
    • Matthew Michael Carnahan
    • Tony Gilroy
    • Billy Ray
  • Elenco
    • Russell Crowe
    • Rachel McAdams
    • Ben Affleck
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.1/10
    164 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    3,123
    510
    • Dirección
      • Kevin Macdonald
    • Guionistas
      • Matthew Michael Carnahan
      • Tony Gilroy
      • Billy Ray
    • Elenco
      • Russell Crowe
      • Rachel McAdams
      • Ben Affleck
    • 304Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 137Opiniones de los críticos
    • 64Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios ganados y 4 nominaciones en total

    Videos9

    State of Play: Trailer #2
    Trailer 2:30
    State of Play: Trailer #2
    State of Play: Trailer
    Trailer 2:28
    State of Play: Trailer
    State of Play: Trailer
    Trailer 2:28
    State of Play: Trailer
    State of Play (2009)
    Clip 0:31
    State of Play (2009)
    State Of Play: Della Fights Cameron To Stay
    Clip 1:03
    State Of Play: Della Fights Cameron To Stay
    State Of Play: Cal Starts Questioning Dominic
    Clip 0:55
    State Of Play: Cal Starts Questioning Dominic
    State Of Play: Collin Tells Cal To Bring Him The Evidence
    Clip 0:47
    State Of Play: Collin Tells Cal To Bring Him The Evidence

    Fotos65

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Russell Crowe
    Russell Crowe
    • Cal McAffrey
    Rachel McAdams
    Rachel McAdams
    • Della Frye
    Ben Affleck
    Ben Affleck
    • Stephen Collins
    Helen Mirren
    Helen Mirren
    • Cameron Lynne
    Robin Wright
    Robin Wright
    • Anne Collins
    • (as Robin Wright Penn)
    Jason Bateman
    Jason Bateman
    • Dominic Foy
    Jeff Daniels
    Jeff Daniels
    • George Fergus
    Michael Berresse
    Michael Berresse
    • Robert Bingham
    Harry Lennix
    Harry Lennix
    • Detective Bell
    Josh Mostel
    Josh Mostel
    • Pete
    Michael Weston
    Michael Weston
    • Hank
    Barry Shabaka Henley
    Barry Shabaka Henley
    • Gene Stavitz
    Viola Davis
    Viola Davis
    • Dr. Judith Franklin
    David Harbour
    David Harbour
    • PointCorp Insider
    Sarah Lord
    • Mandi
    Tuck Milligan
    Tuck Milligan
    • PointCorp Executive
    Steve Park
    Steve Park
    • Chris Kawai
    • (as Stephen Park)
    Brennan Brown
    Brennan Brown
    • Andrew Pell
    • Dirección
      • Kevin Macdonald
    • Guionistas
      • Matthew Michael Carnahan
      • Tony Gilroy
      • Billy Ray
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios304

    7.1164.4K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7levybob

    I Gotta Admit, I did not entirely get the ending

    In 'State of Play' the surprises keep coming. A politician's staff-member has been murdered and two journalists set out to discover the 'Who' (who killed her) and the 'Why'. We go down one alley, then another, all our beliefs challenged, then changed, but throughout it all our interest remains pretty high.

    But then ... then something happens. One of the characters says something that she could not possibly know about, and this re-arranges all the assumptions we have made about guilty parties. Which is fine. But for one thing. The character who made the telling statement all but disappears from the film. She is not guilty. And the someone who is guilty is not the person who made the statement. And so the question is, what really happened here? I don't know. And I should know, because that's what the film was leading up to. Who Done It? Easy. Yes?

    Russel Crowe is fine as one journalist, Rachel McAdam is superb as his younger associate. Ben Affleck is his usual stoic self, though it works in this role. Helen Mirren is shrill - too shrill - in her role as the newspaper's managing editor. For fans of Robin Wright - and there are many - she's fine as the wife of the Affleck character; thrown over for someone younger.

    Finally, the film is - how to say? - flabby. It's not as tight as it should be. It goes off on tangents that lead nowhere at times when we should be tightening up the script and the tension. Also, it's kind of 'old fashioned'; the sort of plucky-young-journalist film they don't make anymore.

    Anyway, it made for an entertaining evening. And that's more than merely O.k.
    8amarcordforever

    A Pleasant Throw Back to Early Pressburger/Powell Espionage and a Pakula Classic

    Whether you loved em' or hated em', espionage thrillers made up a generous portion of cinema from the 1940-50's. With fast paced, edge of your seat story lines, plot twists, political undertones and dramatic personal struggles with morality, nobody did it better than Emeric Pressburger and Michael Powell. Their attention to character detail and it's purpose in conjunction with the narrative gave heart and humanity to this new string of movies which could have fallen into similar (yet shallower) alpha male characters such as James Bond. Never the less, we cannot forget that ultimately if it weren't for their vision and invention of the genre, Hollywood may have never capitalized on the staggeringly profitable Bond franchise that's still going strong today.

    In the mid 70's, due to the heat of the political environment at that time, the genre decided to go in the same direction. All The Presidents Men, brought to light the investigative strategies of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein and tackled the Watergate scandal from the perspective of the Washington Post. As audiences, we shared in the thrill of being able to follow the case as it unfolded, interviewing witnesses and piecing together clues in order to make a 10 O'clock print deadline. We were part of the chase, the scandal and always privy to the evidence necessary to solve the mystery at hand...that is until a new piece of evidence arose and bashed in all of our original assumptions.

    State of Play may be the first film to pay homage to this Pakula classic while dually creating more poignant themes for today's political atmosphere. Crowe plays a reporter for the Washington Post and McAdams, an internet blogger, serving as our Woodward and Bernstein clones on the case of a Senator, Affleck, whose mistress succumbs to a rather untimely death VIA train tracks. To add insult to injury, it turns out that our reporter and senator are practically best friends. The plot unfolds, relationships falter and the real truth, to our pleasant surprise, blindsides us like a drunk driver on a narrow road.

    Director Kevin Macdonald clearly knows what he's doing here and along with a well written screenplay by Tony Gilroy, carefully crafts a neat, sharp and extremely entertaining thrill ride of a movie whose run time is 2 hours and 15 minutes, but feels like 30. State of Play never fails at keeping you guessing, does a fine job of throwing in a few curve balls, and leaves you with a clean taste in your mouth come end credits. What more do you want? Sure. It isn't the next Best Picture and Crowe won't take home an Oscar, but you'll enjoy some nail biting action scenes and there are much worse things to look at than Rachel McAdams on the big screen for a few hours.

    Helen Mirren is delightful in what little screen time she is given. Affleck is "good", although decided to play it completely safe in a role that even he really can't screw up. Lets face it, he needed to gain even a small amount of points since Hollywoodland and the flops that followed in his footsteps.

    Overall, you'll be as pleased and refreshed as I was to see a picture that has the finesse of an espionage thriller, the entertainment value of an All The Presidents Men political drama and the edginess that we should expect from a modern day piece of cinema that doesn't star Miley Cyrus.
    8DonFishies

    A solid and interesting old-fashioned political thriller

    Congressman Stephen Collins (Ben Affleck) is helping with the government investigation of a shady military-based company when he receives word that his mistress has committed suicide. Visually distraught, he leaves a hearing in tears and sets off a media circus. Seasoned reporter Cal McAffrey (Russell Crowe) was his roommate in college, and the two have remained friends. In a bid to quash the political blogging of junior reporter Della Frye (Rachel McAdams), McAffrey sets out to find the truth about the story.

    State of Play sets itself up early on to be a cookie-cutter, predictable thriller. But as the film progresses, it rather quickly becomes the twisty and conniving thriller it needs to be. Despite being heavily dialogue driven, the film is an intense ride that will keep people on edge throughout. Some scenes are downright terrifying in their amped up suspense and political intrigue. This film really set out to be tense, and succeeds wonderfully. It knows just what punches to pull, and when to pull them.

    The script, written by political scribes Matthew Michael Carnahan, Tony Gilory and Billy Ray, is insight and intriguing. It could have easily been made boring and inundated with rehashed politicalisms (like all of their last films), but this film revels in how interesting it becomes. It has laughs strung throughout (a genuine surprise), and lacks the nerve to become loaded to the brim with facts and innuendos. Instead, it expertly weaves between scenes, amping up the intensity of some scenes, and downplaying others.

    But this is mainly due to the incredible performances by the cast. Crowe (who I usually loathe) and Affleck are simply outstanding in their roles. Age issues aside, both play their character with finesse and charisma. Affleck looks and acts like a confused wet-behind-the-ears, gunning-for-higher-office political pawn from beginning to end. Some of the reactions on his face are downright devastating in how excellently they are conveyed. And this is a guy critics once said could not act. Coupled with one-two shot of acting in Hollywoodland and directing Gone Baby Gone, we may be seeing a renewed resonance and importance for the Oscar-winner. Crowe on the other hand, delivers his strongest performance in years. While he has been downplayed and underused in his last few films, he carries this film. He is stubborn and vaguely likable, but he makes his character work for all of his idiosyncrasies and ethically-questionable tactics. He makes a seasoned journalist look like an amateur.

    McAdams, all but a ghost recently, holds her own against the two heavy-hitters and delivers a performance that is both inspired and emotional. It gives her a lot of room to act, and she delivers in every instance. The rest of the cast is a bit mixed however, as so little of them is given that much to do. Harry Lennix, Robin Wright Penn, Jeff Daniels, the horrifying Michael Berresse and especially Jason Bateman, all deliver noteworthy performances, but never get to really shine in them. They all have their traits and motivations, but get little screen time to truly express them. They each are developed quite strongly, but they lack the movement afforded to Crowe, Affleck and McAdams. I simply loved Helen Mirren's scenery-gauging editor and all of her subtleties. But she too, is downplayed to the point of almost barely being in the film.

    Despite its intensity, the film is bogged down by its dialogue-heavy scenes and consistent character additions. It is easy to keep track of everyone, but so many people are introduced that the film loses its focus on more than one occasion. It makes for a few scenes that are merely filler between the scenes of useful heavy acting. It just feels so tiring. I understand now how daunting a task it must have been to convert six hours of British television into a 127-minute film, but there are scenes that are just too easy to not have been cut out (some entire mildly useful subplots may have helped). Adding characters in makes sense for a story about two journalists frantically searching to lift the lid on a story, but there needs to be more emphasis on what was needed and not needed. A brilliant montage in the middle of the film goes almost entirely to waste because the filmmakers lack the knowledge of what should be cut. Limiting the preposterous and silly climax could have also done wonders. The scenes that are left in the film (including the finale) are great, but they could have been stronger if they were as tightly wound as the film wants itself to be. A little less shaky hand camera movement could have also significantly benefited the film.

    Even with its problems, it is clear from the on-set of the first shot in the bullpen at the Washington Globe that the filmmakers are going for a very keen sense of homage to All the President's Men. While the on-going and very professional relationship between McAffrey and Frye is very similar to Woodward and Bernstein, the fabric of journalistic integrity and researching are the core of State of Play. The film is loaded with allusions to the Oscar-winning film, and even mimics shots right out of the film. While it is obvious for anyone who has seen Men, this film's nods are done in such a delicate and unique way that they never become distracting or blatant. The film is its own, and does not ever feel like it is living in its big-brother's shadow. It is a fresh take on old-fashioned reporting in a very digital age, and frequently walks the tight line of old versus new.

    State of Play looked interesting, and surprisingly delivers on almost every count. It is not a perfect film, but it is a solid example of great film-making. It wants to be more, but seems content at being a twisty and suspenseful modern thriller.

    8/10.
    7ccthemovieman-1

    Decent, If Unmemorable, Political Thriller

    I would label this a "decent-but-unmemorable political thriller," something you'd probably enjoy viewing but a few weeks later had forgotten much of it. Usually, movies which star Russell Crowe are more dynamic, although Crowe still mesmerizes as usual.

    I liked the twists and turns at the end, but one has to wait about two hours for those and that's a little too long a wait. As slick a production as it was, and with acceptable acting from actor, it was many of the characters here that seemed more like Hollywood stereotypes than real-life people.

    There was Crowe with the hippie looks from 30-40 years ago and who has the daring of James Bond; the Washington newspaper editor being a foul-mouthed Brit (crusty Helen Mirren) who uses profane expresses the Americans wouldn't know; the neophyte blogster (Rachel McAdams) being drop-dead gorgeous and getting her way despite tough bosses; the bad guys being anyone connected with the military (man, is that getting old, from Dr. Strangelove to today's films - it never changes), the professional sniper/assassin conveniently missing the good guy (Crowe) although he could kill anyone else......you get the picture - a few too many liberal film clichés. The most realistic character was probably "Rep. Stephen Collins (D-Pa)," played by the least of the actors, Ben Affleck.

    As for minor characters, I thought "Dominic Foy," played by Jason Bateman, was fascinating, as was Robin Wright.

    Overall, for entertainment purposes it was okay; not something you'd yawn and fall asleep watching, although you might be confused here and there. Through the gimmicks of hyped-up music and sound effects here and there, the suspense was evident throughout the two-plus hours. It's also an interesting look at today's battle between old and new "media," meaning newspapers and the Internet, respectively.

    Overall, it's enough to warrant as a purchase at the rental store but not as a blind buy despite the "name" cast.
    7WriterDave

    Yesterday's News Still Blog-Worthy

    A gruff old-school reporter (Russell Crowe playing his A-game) becomes personally entangled in a breaking news story surrounding his old college buddy turned congressman (Ben Affleck, not as bad as you would think) and a young female aid who died under mysterious circumstances in the surprisingly plausible political thriller "State of Play" from director Kevin MacDonald who was previously responsible for "The Last King of Scotland". Though designed as a throw-back to paranoid investigative thrillers from the 1970's, relevance is gained when the massive cover-up revealed becomes a vehicle for the filmmakers to explore the death of print news at the hand of digital mediums.

    The twisty and engaging screenplay is credited to three scribes: Matthew Michael Carnahan, Tony Gilroy and Billy Ray. But it's Gilroy's fingerprints that shape the story with all the overlapping dialogue and conspiracy talk that will remind many of his "Michael Clayton". Adapted from a sprawling BBC miniseries created by Paul Abbott, the trio is especially deft in their condensing of the story into a fully digestible two hours. Even as new characters and twists keep coming, the audience is never left out in the cold. They also give the cast plenty to chew on with some great throw-away lines amidst all the posturing between the cops, reporters, politicians and sleaze-bags.

    Though it's Crowe and Helen Mirren as his sparring and quick-witted boss who shine the most, this is essentially an ensemble piece, and it's especially clever when Jason Bateman arrives on screen for a few pivotal scenes as a smug public relations guru who's too dumb to realize he knows too much. The cast also includes Robin Wright Penn as Affleck's wife, Jeff Daniels as the arrogant majority whip and Harry Lennix, who as a D.C. detective makes a compelling case here for the lead role in the Barack Obama Story. The only miscalculation in the casting is poor Rachel McAdams, lovely but annoying in her high-pitch as Crowe's blogging tag-along looking to kick it old-school and get something in print.

    By the third act "State of Play" overplays its hand in its attempts to be timely with too much talk of the privatization of the military, Capitol Hill sex scandals and traditional newspapers losing out in the digital age to bloggers more concerned with gossip than real journalism. It could've also been more subtle in its preaching about the importance of serious investigative reporting. It should be commended, however, for an otherwise smart screenplay that doesn't spell out all its twists and turns too early and the well polished cast who give the film a slick sheen. Even though it might be reporting on yesterday's news, "State of Play" still makes for solid rainy day entertainment and is worthy of blogging about.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      The scene in which Cal (Russell Crowe) orders lunch, but is then interrupted by his bag getting stolen, was shot at Ben's Chili Bowl, a real Washington, D.C. lunch counter that has been open on U Street NW since 1958.
    • Errores
      In the final scene of the printing montage at the end, the sign on the side of the truck says "Washington Post".
    • Citas

      Cameron Lynne: I want you to do a complete rundown on this Sonia Baker: who she knew, who she blew, the color of her knickers.

    • Créditos curiosos
      The printing process of a newspaper is shown as the ending credits start to show up.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Screenwipe: Episode #5.3 (2008)
    • Bandas sonoras
      The Night Pat Murphy Died
      (Traditional)

      Arranged by Alan Doyle, Bob Hallett (as Robert Hallett), Séan McCann, Darrell Power

      Performed by Great Big Sea

      Courtesy of Sonic Entertainment Group and Warner Music Canada Co.

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is State of Play?
      Con tecnología de Alexa
    • What is "State of Play" about?
    • Is "State of Play" based on a book?
    • What does the title mean?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 5 de junio de 2009 (México)
    • Países de origen
      • Reino Unido
      • Francia
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official site (France)
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Cantonés
      • Gaélico irlandés
    • También se conoce como
      • State of Play
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Ben's Chili Bowl - 1213 U Street NW, Washington, Columbia, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • Universal Pictures
      • Working Title Films
      • StudioCanal
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 60,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 37,017,955
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 14,071,280
      • 19 abr 2009
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 87,812,371
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 7 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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