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Un Caïd

Titre original : King Rat
  • 1965
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 14min
NOTE IMDb
7,5/10
5,3 k
MA NOTE
Un Caïd (1965)
King Rat: You're Greedy
Lire clip1:05
Regarder King Rat: You're Greedy
1 Video
88 photos
DrameGuerre

Dans un camp de prisonniers de guerre en Birmanie pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, le rusé caporal King (George Segal), utilise la corruption et le vol pour prendre le contrôle du camp.Dans un camp de prisonniers de guerre en Birmanie pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, le rusé caporal King (George Segal), utilise la corruption et le vol pour prendre le contrôle du camp.Dans un camp de prisonniers de guerre en Birmanie pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, le rusé caporal King (George Segal), utilise la corruption et le vol pour prendre le contrôle du camp.

  • Réalisation
    • Bryan Forbes
  • Scénario
    • James Clavell
    • Bryan Forbes
  • Casting principal
    • George Segal
    • Tom Courtenay
    • Patrick O'Neal
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,5/10
    5,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Bryan Forbes
    • Scénario
      • James Clavell
      • Bryan Forbes
    • Casting principal
      • George Segal
      • Tom Courtenay
      • Patrick O'Neal
    • 63avis d'utilisateurs
    • 27avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 2 Oscars
      • 3 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    King Rat: You're Greedy
    Clip 1:05
    King Rat: You're Greedy

    Photos88

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    + 82
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    Rôles principaux47

    Modifier
    George Segal
    George Segal
    • Corporal King
    Tom Courtenay
    Tom Courtenay
    • Grey
    Patrick O'Neal
    Patrick O'Neal
    • Max
    Todd Armstrong
    Todd Armstrong
    • Tex
    Sam Reese
    Sam Reese
    • Kurt
    • (as Sammy Reese)
    Joe Turkel
    Joe Turkel
    • Dino
    • (as Joseph Turkel)
    Michael Stroka
    Michael Stroka
    • Miller
    • (as Mike Stroka)
    William Fawcett
    William Fawcett
    • Steinmetz
    Dick Johnson
    • Pop
    James Fox
    James Fox
    • Marlowe
    Denholm Elliott
    Denholm Elliott
    • Larkin
    Leonard Rossiter
    Leonard Rossiter
    • McCoy
    John Standing
    John Standing
    • Daven
    Hamilton Dyce
    • The Padre
    Wright King
    Wright King
    • Brough
    John Ronane
    John Ronane
    • Hawkins
    Geoffrey Bayldon
    Geoffrey Bayldon
    • Vexley
    John Levingston
    • Myner
    • Réalisation
      • Bryan Forbes
    • Scénario
      • James Clavell
      • Bryan Forbes
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs63

    7,55.3K
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    Avis à la une

    8JohnBunion

    A grimly humorous meditation on power, class, privilege and character difficult to ever forget.

    I saw this grainy black and white film sometime in 1967 one steamy evening in a tin hooch Army movie theatre at TSN airfield on the outskirts of Saigon. The movie was punctuated by the sounds of mortars on the perimeter and the occasional flash from an aerial flare. I never forgot it. It rang true there. So true that no-one could say a word after. We just got drunk -- as usual. I haven't talked to many others who saw this movie. It hit right in the middle of the rising tide of despair over Vietnam. And since it wasn't actually an anti-war movie, I think it went nowhere. I believe it's origin is a short novel, possibly autobiographical by J.B. Clavell, author of Tai Pan and other sagas set in the 19th C orient. No matter what George Segal has done since, I have known that he has the heart of a rat. His King was a natural ruler in a perverse state of nature -- and his fate the fate of all maverick rulers in the end. If you can find it and see it, it will take on the character of a lost dream.
    dowguest

    Not in the Top 1000 Films

    It has always bothered me that King Rat is so underrated. On one list of top the thousand films in history, it gets no mention. I think it's because George Segal's character, Corporal King wasn't a totally likable person. He is not the standard Hollywood hero. But he is a hero of mine. Were I in that prison camp, I guarantee you, I would have been Corporal King's best friend. One thing I learned in life was how to survive, and everyone around Corporal King survived. The movie misses a very important point that was in James Clavell's novel on which it is based. In case the war turned bad for the Japanese and they started taking revenge on the prisoners, King had planned an escape route. Not just for himself, for everyone close to him. Put that in the film and you've got a major American hero. The movie is totally cliché free. One never knows where it is going or how it is going to end. Winning the war, you see, will not guarantee the safety of the prisoners. How it ends is perfectly logical in retrospect, but difficult to predict. It is a near perfect motion picture.
    kevin-167

    Great POW Movie

    I had never heard of this movie. It came on late one night on cable and I watched it. I was very impressed. The performances in the movie are Oscar caliber. George Segal gave probably the best performance of his career. He plays an American stuck in a Japanese POW camp who manages to always make some dough on the side. He is manipulative and arrogant but his performance is credible and appealing. Also, the way the camp itself is projected as a miserable, fly-infested, hot and godawful hellhole is hard to forget.

    James Fox also gives an outstanding performance as Segal's British counterpart who come under Segal's spell and begins to do alot of his dirty work for him. This is a movie you will not soon forget. Now, keep in mind that since this movie was made in 1965, it is tame in terms of its depiction of violence but that does not take away from its overall message. Great movie!
    daleredford

    A slice of WWII Japanese Prison Camp

    We all wonder what happens when we die, this movie is about what happens when we live at any cost, put in the context of a Japanese prison of war camp in WWII. A serious film with enough action to keep it alive while delivering a message. You won't be bored.

    George Segal plays his greatest role, tough, smart, without shame. How he became a banjo player I don't know. (jmho)
    9evanston_dad

    Not What I Expected

    I don't know exactly what I expected from "King Rat," but what I got definitely wasn't it, and I liked what I got much more than whatever it was I thought I was going to get.

    I guess I thought "King Rat" was going to be something along the lines of "Stalag 17," a serious story in a serious setting, but with a buddy movie vibe and a lot of comedy thrown in. That is most certainly NOT what this movie is. "King Rat" is instead a bleak, haunting, and rather strange film about the simple act of survival in a Japanese prisoner camp during the last days of WWII. It's episodic in nature, detailing one grueling incident after another. It explores the degree to which imprisoned military men will impose a hierarchy one way or another, one that either does or doesn't always match the hierarchy of their military lives when free men. For example, at the top of the pecking order in this prison camp is George Segal, the eponymous king rat, who will stop at nothing to ensure his own comfort and who's an object of awe and even fear to those around him, even officers who outrank him. But then the war ends, the prisoners are set free, and everything goes back to the way it was. Where does that leave things like friendship, community, and just simple camaraderie, and where does that leave the conscience of men like King Rat, who exploited his brothers for all they were worth when times were tough.

    The movie is tremendous, the performances are all uniformly fine, and director Bryan Forbes gives everything a naturalistic tone that makes the film feel like a product from a later date.

    "King Rat" received Oscar nominations for its truly impressive art direction and cinematography, both in the black and white categories back in the days when distinctions were made between B&W and color films.

    Grade: A

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Due to the cast, director and setting, this is often assumed to be a British movie, but it was entirely filmed in California.
    • Gaffes
      The shoulder patch that Cpl. King (George Segal) is wearing is that of the 34th Infantry Division (Red Bull). The 34th ID served in the European Theater of Operations, not in the Pacific. The 34th ID patch is a black Mexican water jug called an "olla" with a red bull's skull superimposed. Almost all the POWs at Changi were British or Commonwealth soldiers captured at the surrender of Singapore on Feb. 15, 1942, but there also were POWs from the Netherlands East Indies, which surrendered in March. The only sizable U.S. unit at Changi was Co. E, 2nd Btn, 131st Field Artillery Regt., part of the Army's 36th ID (the "Texas Division"). The Second Battalion, which became known as the Texas National Guard's "Lost Battalion," was detached from the 36th ID in the States and shipped to the Pacific in November 1941, but when the Japanese attacked the Philippines in December, the battalion's convoy was diverted from Manila to Brisbane, Australia. In January the battalion was sent to Java, in the Netherlands East Indies. The battalion was the only U.S. ground unit in Java when the NEI surrendered to the Japanese on March 9, 1942. Most men in the battalion were transferred to Singapore later that year and, along with thousands of British and Commonwealth soldiers, were used by the Japanese as slave labor to build the infamous "Death Railway" connecting Bangkok to Rangoon. Company E of the 2nd Battalion, separated from the rest of the unit on Java, was at Changi briefly in October-November 1942 before being sent to Japan as slave laborers. It would be plausible that Cpl. King was a member of 2nd Battalion, 131st Field Artillery, and that the movie's costumers got the wrong division patch for his uniform.
    • Citations

      [last lines]

      Marlowe: [speaking about King] It wouldn't have occurred to you would it, Grey, that you're only alive because of what he gave you?

      Grey: What are you talking about? I never took anything from him. He never gave me anything.

      Marlowe: Only hate, Grey. Only hate.

    • Crédits fous
      [Prologue] This is not a story of escape. It is a story of survival.

      It is set in Changi Jail Singapore, in 1945

      The Japanese did not have to guard Changi as a normal prison of war camp. The inmates of Changi had no friendly Swiss border or any other neutral country within reach. They were held captive not so much by high walls, or barbed wire, or machine-gun posts, but by the land and sea around them - and the jungle was not neutral, nor was the ocean.

      They did not live in Changi. They existed. This is the story of that existence.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Le choix d'une vie (1999)
    • Bandes originales
      Adeste Fideles
      (uncredited)

      Written by Frederick Oakeley (1841)

      Variation sung in distant background by POWs

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    FAQ15

    • How long is King Rat?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 7 janvier 1966 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Malais
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • El caudillo de los desalmados
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Thousand Oaks, Californie, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Coleytown
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 14min(134 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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