Un jeune policier doit empêcher une bombe d'exploser à bord d'un autobus en gardant une vitesse au-dessus de 80 km/h.Un jeune policier doit empêcher une bombe d'exploser à bord d'un autobus en gardant une vitesse au-dessus de 80 km/h.Un jeune policier doit empêcher une bombe d'exploser à bord d'un autobus en gardant une vitesse au-dessus de 80 km/h.
- Réalisation
- Scénariste
- Vedettes
- A remporté 2 oscars
- 20 victoires et 21 nominations au total
Loretta Jean
- Bus Passenger #2
- (as Loretta Jean Crudup)
Avis en vedette
This aged just a bit better than I'd remembered, although admittedly I didn't have the fondest recollections of it. In essence it's a nonstop barrage of action clichés that doesn't try to step out of its own way, choosing instead to embrace the stereotypes and come up with a few new ones along the way. Keanu Reeves appears at his most wooden while Sandra Bullock is still finding her sea legs as an actress, but the two still manage some level of incalculable chemistry that makes you pull for them through thick and thin. In many ways, their relationship is a great analogy for the film as a whole - generic and ham-fisted, you've seen it a thousand times before but for some inexplicable reason you're still perched on the edge of your seat for the duration. Dennis Hopper is noteworthy as the preposterously over-the-top mad bomber; he serves up several great lines that sent me backwards through decades' worth of pop culture nostalgia.
Updated thought after a 2024 re-watch: Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock mash pedals and dodge traffic jams in this bomb-on-board blockbuster; an action ride so derivative, it was semi-affectionately dubbed "Die Hard on a bus" during production. The comparison is apt, except Reeves lacks the conviction or credibility of a peak Bruce Willis and the ancient LA-area commuter vehicle isn't as versatile a setting as the winding hallways and narrow air ducts of Nakatomi Plaza. At least Dennis Hopper compares favorably in this analogy, serving as an appropriately composed, vindictive (and sound bitey) foil to rival Alan Rickman's performance of a few years prior.
While he may not meet the standards of old John McClane, Reeves's determined SWAT officer shows heart and toughness despite his lack of personality, and I guess two out of three isn't so bad in that regard. His rapport with Bullock is essential, a cozy piece of human warmth that pushes the finished film beyond the scope of its limited screenplay. Each actor was destined for greater things, and in Speed they show flashes of the intangible magnetism that would eventually make them household names while still cutting their teeth as inexperienced big-budget centerpieces. They're vanilla but likable, and Hopper's scenery-chewing madman act is good enough to push the audience straight into their arms.
The premise of a fifteen-ton bus, wired to blow if it drops below 50mph, is simple and effective: a classic method to crank tension without explaining new rules along the way. Although we fudge a few details (no way it maintained such a pace while blasting through stalled traffic on a freeway exit), this is all in the name of good fun and our disbelief isn't nudged beyond the point of no return. We flirt with the line, but don't cross it, and that's good enough for a silly, concept-driven slab of blooming fireballs and spiked adrenaline. Light and silly, but effectively gripping and well-paced, Speed has aged better than a majority of its fluffy mid '90s contemporaries.
Bumped my rating from a 6 to a 7.
Updated thought after a 2024 re-watch: Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock mash pedals and dodge traffic jams in this bomb-on-board blockbuster; an action ride so derivative, it was semi-affectionately dubbed "Die Hard on a bus" during production. The comparison is apt, except Reeves lacks the conviction or credibility of a peak Bruce Willis and the ancient LA-area commuter vehicle isn't as versatile a setting as the winding hallways and narrow air ducts of Nakatomi Plaza. At least Dennis Hopper compares favorably in this analogy, serving as an appropriately composed, vindictive (and sound bitey) foil to rival Alan Rickman's performance of a few years prior.
While he may not meet the standards of old John McClane, Reeves's determined SWAT officer shows heart and toughness despite his lack of personality, and I guess two out of three isn't so bad in that regard. His rapport with Bullock is essential, a cozy piece of human warmth that pushes the finished film beyond the scope of its limited screenplay. Each actor was destined for greater things, and in Speed they show flashes of the intangible magnetism that would eventually make them household names while still cutting their teeth as inexperienced big-budget centerpieces. They're vanilla but likable, and Hopper's scenery-chewing madman act is good enough to push the audience straight into their arms.
The premise of a fifteen-ton bus, wired to blow if it drops below 50mph, is simple and effective: a classic method to crank tension without explaining new rules along the way. Although we fudge a few details (no way it maintained such a pace while blasting through stalled traffic on a freeway exit), this is all in the name of good fun and our disbelief isn't nudged beyond the point of no return. We flirt with the line, but don't cross it, and that's good enough for a silly, concept-driven slab of blooming fireballs and spiked adrenaline. Light and silly, but effectively gripping and well-paced, Speed has aged better than a majority of its fluffy mid '90s contemporaries.
Bumped my rating from a 6 to a 7.
"Speed" was a runaway success in 1994. It was a block-buster in every sense of the word and critically speaking, it is an excellent motion picture. The film deals with an LAPD swat officer (Keanu Reeves) who is playing a deadly game of cat-and-mouse with crazed ex-cop Dennis Hopper. After Reeves stops Hopper from blowing up a high-rise building, the next obstacle is a city bus. Hopper has rigged the bus to explode if the "speed" ever drops below 50 miles per hour. Sandra Bullock, in her star-making role, plays an unlucky passenger who becomes the center of attention when she is forced to be the driver when the original navigator is accidently shot. The great thing about "Speed" is the fact that it never tries to be more than it is. It goes for non-stop action, thrills, chills, and spills. However, Dennis Hopper's character is somewhat complex and his performance probably should have garnered him an Oscar nomination. A great film in spite of the fact it is from the action genre. 5 stars out of 5.
Generic? Yup, Contrived? Of course, Fun? Absolutely! A brilliant first time Watch I can't lie, Fantastic all round performances and brilliantly tense action sequences there's not much wrong with this piece of film here and I can't recommend it enough, the original (and best) of over the top action ala 'The fast and the furious' franchise it's totally worth a watch, nothing but fun!
Speed is one of my favorite action movies of all time, just a notch below contemporaries like Terminator 2 and Die Hard. The premise is so simple that it's almost a parody of movie pitches (Homer Simpson's line was "I saw this movie about a bus that had to SPEED around a city, keeping its SPEED over fifty, and if its SPEED dropped, it would explode! I think it was called 'The Bus That Couldn't Slow Down'."). Fortunately this film came to be much better than the sum of its parts, and it's deservedly remembered as one of the most entertaining films of the 90s.
What distinguishes Speed is its humanity, due in no small part to the character of Annie (Sandra Bullock). The best example of this is the moment when Annie, while driving the bus, thinks she has struck a baby stroller. She becomes so distraught that she lets go of the steering wheel, never mind the fact that she is in charge of driving a bomb-laden bus through the L.A. suburbs. It's one of several moments that draw us into the film by helping us identify with the characters, and it's all the more elegant for its simplicity. This movie isn't complex, but it doesn't claim to be.
There is a certain irony that Speed succeeds so well on a human level, since Jan de Bont is not generally considered an "actor's director". He started as a cinematographer, and even when he talks about directing he discusses technical aspects and seldom mentions working with actors. Nowhere was this more evident than Speed 2, which pretty much killed his directorial career. Given that, it's all the more remarkable what he pulled off in the original Speed, as everything seemed to come together for him.
The overall performances really serve this picture well. Keanu is at his best (which is to say, mediocre), Sandra launched a career based on this movie, and Dennis Hopper did a wonderful job as the sardonic villain. Plus he has one of my favorite bad-guy lines of all time (Traven: "You're crazy." Payne: "Poor people are crazy, Jack. I'm eccentric.").
8/10
What distinguishes Speed is its humanity, due in no small part to the character of Annie (Sandra Bullock). The best example of this is the moment when Annie, while driving the bus, thinks she has struck a baby stroller. She becomes so distraught that she lets go of the steering wheel, never mind the fact that she is in charge of driving a bomb-laden bus through the L.A. suburbs. It's one of several moments that draw us into the film by helping us identify with the characters, and it's all the more elegant for its simplicity. This movie isn't complex, but it doesn't claim to be.
There is a certain irony that Speed succeeds so well on a human level, since Jan de Bont is not generally considered an "actor's director". He started as a cinematographer, and even when he talks about directing he discusses technical aspects and seldom mentions working with actors. Nowhere was this more evident than Speed 2, which pretty much killed his directorial career. Given that, it's all the more remarkable what he pulled off in the original Speed, as everything seemed to come together for him.
The overall performances really serve this picture well. Keanu is at his best (which is to say, mediocre), Sandra launched a career based on this movie, and Dennis Hopper did a wonderful job as the sardonic villain. Plus he has one of my favorite bad-guy lines of all time (Traven: "You're crazy." Payne: "Poor people are crazy, Jack. I'm eccentric.").
8/10
I rewatched Speed yesterday and still really enjoyed it even though quite a few things sounded dated or cheesy. At the time it came out it was a huge hit because the main leads had really good chemistry, so it didn't matter if the acting or dialogue was cheesy. Adding the civilians to it and getting them involved in the drama made it feel more suspenseful and the tension never wavers in this film, so it goes by surprisingly quick. Don't watch it if you're expecting Oscar worthy performances, just a good action flick to keep you entertained for rainy Sat.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSandra Bullock actually learned to drive a bus for the film, passing her test on her first attempt.
- GaffesOn the train, the console is malfunctioning but Jack speeds the train up by shifting the lever forward so why not pull the lever back which would slow the train down.
- Citations
Howard Payne: Pop quiz, hotshot. There's a bomb on a bus. Once the bus goes 50 miles an hour, the bomb is armed. If it drops below 50, it blows up. What do you do? What do you do?
- Autres versionsTheatrical version had the 1981 20th Century Fox logo at the opening. All VHS, Laserdisc and DVD versions plaster this with the 1994 CGI logo (with the 1981 fanfare) that was used until 2009. However, the Blu-ray release and streaming prints restore the original 1981 logo.
- ConnexionsEdited into The Making of 'Speed' (1994)
- Bandes originalesA Million Miles Away
Written by Peter Case, Joey Alkes, and Chris Fradkin (as Chris Fredkin)
Produced by Ralph Sall
Performed by The Plimsouls
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 30 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 121 248 145 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 14 456 194 $ US
- 12 juin 1994
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 350 448 145 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 56m(116 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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