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Salvador

  • 1986
  • R
  • 2h 2m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,3/10
24 k
MA NOTE
James Woods in Salvador (1986)
An American photojournalist gets caught in a political struggle at El Salvador in 1980.
Liretrailer1 min 58 s
1 vidéo
99+ photos
DrameGuerreHistoriqueThriller

Le journaliste Richard Boyle est accablé de problèmes privés et professionnels. Il s'exile alors en République du Salvador avec son ami Rock Dock où ils cherchent un scoop dans un pays en pl... Tout lireLe journaliste Richard Boyle est accablé de problèmes privés et professionnels. Il s'exile alors en République du Salvador avec son ami Rock Dock où ils cherchent un scoop dans un pays en pleine guerre civile.Le journaliste Richard Boyle est accablé de problèmes privés et professionnels. Il s'exile alors en République du Salvador avec son ami Rock Dock où ils cherchent un scoop dans un pays en pleine guerre civile.

  • Director
    • Oliver Stone
  • Writers
    • Oliver Stone
    • Richard Boyle
  • Stars
    • James Woods
    • Jim Belushi
    • Michael Murphy
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,3/10
    24 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Oliver Stone
    • Writers
      • Oliver Stone
      • Richard Boyle
    • Stars
      • James Woods
      • Jim Belushi
      • Michael Murphy
    • 114Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 57Commentaires de critiques
    • 69Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 2 oscars
      • 4 victoires et 9 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    Official Trailer

    Photos140

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    + 134
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    Rôles principaux68

    Modifier
    James Woods
    James Woods
    • Richard Boyle
    Jim Belushi
    Jim Belushi
    • Dr. Rock
    • (as James Belushi)
    Michael Murphy
    Michael Murphy
    • Ambassador Thomas Kelly
    John Savage
    John Savage
    • John Cassady
    Elpidia Carrillo
    Elpidia Carrillo
    • María
    • (as Elpedia Carrillo)
    Tony Plana
    Tony Plana
    • Major Max
    Colby Chester
    Colby Chester
    • Jack Morgan
    Cynthia Gibb
    Cynthia Gibb
    • Cathy Moore
    • (as Cindy Gibb)
    Will MacMillan
    Will MacMillan
    • Col. Hyde
    Valerie Wildman
    Valerie Wildman
    • Pauline Axelrod
    José Carlos Ruiz
    José Carlos Ruiz
    • Archbishop Romero
    • (as Jose Carlos Ruiz)
    Jorge Luke
    Jorge Luke
    • Col. Julio Figueroa
    Juan Fernández
    Juan Fernández
    • Army Lieutenant
    Salvador Sánchez
    Salvador Sánchez
    • Human Rights Leader
    Rosario Zúñiga
    • HIS Assistant
    • (as Rosario Zuniga)
    Martín Fuentes
    • Maria's Brother
    • (as Martin Fuentes)
    Gary Farr
    • Australian Reporter
    Gilles Millinaire
    • French Reporter
    • (as Gilles Milinaire)
    • Director
      • Oliver Stone
    • Writers
      • Oliver Stone
      • Richard Boyle
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs114

    7,324.2K
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    10

    Avis en vedette

    8kosmasp

    Now watch the doc on the DVD!

    This movie was overshadowed by Platoon. The connection being that both are from the genius Oliver Stone! And both being released in 1986! Salvador at least as engaging as Platoon, but looking and feeling a lot more raw.

    You get the feeling it's a documentary. The camera is in your face! Which is exactly what Oliver Stone wanted you to feel! And who better to represent the audience than a journalist (James Woods)?

    Although if you watch the document about making this movie, which is as exciting as the future film itself, you'll appreciate the film a lot more! You will love it a lot more! Watch the movie for it's gritty content and for the fact it's a no holds barred look at a war zone and the depiction of that situation through media and politics!
    d_fienberg

    Compelling Film About the Intersection Between Journalistic Ethics and Politics

    Going back and watching Salvador makes me realize how long it's been since Oliver Stone has been on his game. How long has it been since he made a film that actually required the audience to think. It's not that he's suddenly become loud and bombastic, it's that he's suddenly stopped doing anything genuinely provocative. Natural Born Killers, for example, is *not* a provocative film. It's a loud and angry and aggressive film. However, the film produced only attacks on the filmmaker (or rather excessive adulation for Stone) and never really stimulated an intelligent national debate. But Salvador, based on the true experiences of photojournalist Rick Boyle, is Stone at his best. It's complicated and full of the mixture of regret, guilt, nostalgia, and outrage that fill the director's landmarks (JFK or Platoon, for example). After all of the violence and horror, it becomes a film about representations of reality and the different reasons for distorting truth.

    Rick Boyle (James Woods) is at the end of his rope. He's unemployed, his wife just left him. And he's just been thrown in jail for a litany of driving violations. After getting bailed out by his tubby friend Doctor Rock (James Belushi in the role he was probably born to play), he hops in his unregistered car that he isn't licensed to drive, and he heads south to El Salvador. His only companions are Doctor Jack, his alcohol, and his drugs on a journey that can't help but be likened to the drive to Vegas in Hunter S. Thompson's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. When he arrives in El Salvador, he finds the country torn apart with leftist rebels fleeing to the hills and a country braced for a bloody "democratic" election in which a murderous American puppet general will likely be elected. Boyle tries to use his connections to get a press pass and get one last shot to become a success. This is made easier by the Salvadorian woman who loves him and the ace photographer who lends him a hand (John Savage).

    But not everybody in El Salvador is supportive of the loose cannon journalist. There's the colonel who thinks he's a communist, the military attache who's using him for information, and the local military forces who resent the way Boyle depicted them in a previous campaign. The audience is supposed to be disgusted by the way that Boyle treats himself and those he loves, but there's one important fact that's repeated over and over: Boyle was the last journalist out of Cambodia. We know that he stayed to help save people. And it's just a matter of time before he becomes even more personally invested in what's happening in Central America. And that's when things go really crazy.

    The world of photojournalism depicted in the film is one step from public relations and sometimes not even that. Boyle's major supported among the military leaders is a general about whom Boyle had written a glowing profile. Boyle is also able to curry favor by showing his pictures to American military leaders before trying to publish them. The question that comes up, of course, is why are the pictures being taken at all and how can anybody ever know the truth of any war. Journalists, like everybody else, get caught up in their surroundings. Boyle may be supporting the right side in El Salvador, but he admits to having favored Pol Pot for a brief period years earlier. The difference between canonizing a truly noble leader (like the assassinated Archbishop Romero) and elevating a genocidal lunatic is a small one. Salvador calls into question how American audiences can ever know who to trust in a media covered war. On one hand we have Pauline Axelrod (Valerie Wildman) appearing on air because she's pretty and blond even though she just accepts the official statements as truth. Then there's also Savage's journalist who's willing to do anything to get the perfect shot, to create an image that shows both the conflict and the reasons behind it in a single frame. Idealism and self preservation are competing instincts.

    The film is pure Stone. The battle sequences are tense and tightly edited and the dialogue (which Stone cowrote with Rick Boyle) is rippingly good, for the most part. Then again, its misogyny is almost worn as a gold star, female characters are, as always, Madonnas or whores, and a rape scene is fairly exploitative. Also in a conversation between Boyle and a conservative US Colonel, Stone unpacks entirely too much of his personal ideology in a series of monologues. The message of the film, about not wanted to create another Vietnam and liberalism not being the same as Communism is much too literally articulated.

    The film basically hinges on Woods's wonderful performance. His typical manic energy perfectly fits his character's earliest incarnation, but as Boyle becomes more troubled by what he sees around him, Woods's performance becomes deeper, richer, and more internalized. The rest of the cast has less to do and thus can't really be blamed for not standing out. Belushi's Doctor Jack has "Fictitious Composite Character" written all over him. Basically we watch as his story arc goes in opposite directions from Woods's at all times.

    Salvador is perhaps the only film to ever express nostalgia for Jimmy Carter. I like that. I like that it's challenging, dogmatic, but rarely insults my intelligence by saying things that I already know. This is a very fine 8/10 film.
    7CharltonBoy

    Heavy Stuff

    Before i watched this movie i knew nothing about the troubles in El Salvador.This opened my eyes to the rein of terror that went on there ( And still does as far as i know). Salvador is a very Graphic movie that does not shirk on showing the bloodshed and trauma suffered. It is a superb debut movie by Oliver Stone which only became a taster of things to come.I enjoyed this film even though the subject matter was fairly heavy not to mention politically complex. 7 out of 10
    8ill_behavior

    Fear and Loathing in El Salvador

    With a touch of the Hunter Thompsons, Oliver Stone created a quality film about reporter Richard Boyle and his troubles in El Salvador during a civil war that breaks out around him.

    Compared to other Stone films, I think this is his best, he has managed to take the true story of Boyle and craft it into a film in which you actually care about the on-screen characters, something he lost later on.

    The performances are classic; James Woods, he was clearly on edge and it shows, he produces one of his finest to date. Doc would really have been only a fringe character if it wasn't for the fact he was played by James Belushie in fine form, he fits into the role of the degenerate with ease, he begins as somewhat uptight, but slowly dissolves into the seedy culture of Salvador in contrast to Boyle being ostracised by everyone he deals with.

    As with most Stone biopics, there is an element of "you weren't there man!" anger as he unleashed another tirade against the US government and military through this film. You can take that as you like, what I found most fascinating about this film is the similarity to Fear and Loathing, right down to the battered red car they make most of the journey in. I found it fascinating that Boyle could live the kind of story that Thompson made his name creating, the two would make a cracking team, should they not die getting the story, just make it up.

    If you're undecided on Olly Stone, but haven't seen this film, give it a try before you decide whether he is an overrated paranoid madman or an impassioned filmmaker with a message in there somewhere if you can get past all the shouting.
    withnail-1

    Incredible movie ... but a bit preachy

    Salvador is a revelation. incredible movie about the horrors of US intervention in the third world.

    however, stone would have been better off simply showing the situation instead of subjecting the viewer to long drawn out monologues. i think most viewers groaned when michael douglas launched into his "So Bud, do you think we're living in a democracy" speech in WALLSTREET, and there are a few such sermons here.

    stone should watch THREE KINGS to see how it's done. let the viewer make his own conclusions instead of pounding him over the head with pre-fab ones.

    for those who think the interventions in salvador, Vietnam, cambodia, laos, philippines, etc were justified, they probably have not been to any of these places. granted it was the cold war... which is the excuse that is generally used... but the cold war is over and US policy has not changed in the slightest. the US is always at war, the cold war, the war on drugs, the war on terror, it goes on and on.

    anyone with a conscience should see SALVADOR, the world's first (and last?) political roadtrip movie. this is belushi's and woods' finest hour.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      According to James Woods, he went to watch the film at a local theatre and while he was leaving, a refugee from El Salvador knelt before him and kissed his hand, thanking him for telling the story of her family's massacre.
    • Gaffes
      Archbishop Romero is killed at point-blank range by a handgun. However, the real Romero was shot by a sniper. Also, while he was shot while saying Mass, it was in a small hospital chapel, not in a large church as depicted in the film.
    • Citations

      John Cassady: You gotta get close to get the truth. You get too close, you die.

    • Autres versions
      According to the Oliver Stone biography "Stone: The Controversies, Excesses, and Exploits of a Radical Filmmaker" by James Riordan, the film was originally meant to be a two and a half hour release from a 150 page script, and much extra footage was cut due to box office concerns and by the original studio, Orion, who saw that a lot of the footage was too excessive or violent (one such scene described in the book was of an orgy scene with Rick Boyle and Dr. Rock and a bag of ears casually tossed on to a table). Stone regrets this decision as the film ended up, and was criticized for being, choppy in some of its editing. Some of this deleted footage is included on the Special Edition DVD.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Salvador: Deleted Scenes (2001)
    • Bandes originales
      Running On Empty
      Written & Performed by Jackson Browne

      Swallow Music (ASCAP)

      Courtesy of Elektra-Asylum Records

      by arrangement with Warner Special Products

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    FAQ

    • How long is Salvador?
      Propulsé par Alexa
    • How much of this film is true, and how much is false or inaccurate?
    • What does "ARANA" mean in the film?
    • Were all of the characters based on real-life people?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 23 avril 1986 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
      • Mexico
      • United Kingdom
    • Site officiel
      • HBOMAX (United States)
    • Langues
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Outpost: Salvador
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Morelos, Mexique
    • sociétés de production
      • Cinema '84
      • Estudios Churubusco Azteca S.A.
      • Hemdale
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 4 500 000 $ US (estimation)
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 1 500 000 $ US
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 1 500 000 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 2 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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