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Guet-apens

Titre original : The Getaway
  • 1972
  • 13
  • 2h 3min
NOTE IMDb
7,3/10
38 k
MA NOTE
Steve McQueen and Ali MacGraw in Guet-apens (1972)
A recently released ex-con and his loyal wife go on the run after a heist goes awry.
Lire trailer2:14
1 Video
99+ photos
CâpreActionCriminalitéThriller

Un ancien détenu libéré depuis peu et sa fidèle épouse partent en cavale après un braquage qui tourne mal.Un ancien détenu libéré depuis peu et sa fidèle épouse partent en cavale après un braquage qui tourne mal.Un ancien détenu libéré depuis peu et sa fidèle épouse partent en cavale après un braquage qui tourne mal.

  • Réalisation
    • Sam Peckinpah
  • Scénario
    • Walter Hill
    • Jim Thompson
  • Casting principal
    • Steve McQueen
    • Ali MacGraw
    • Ben Johnson
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,3/10
    38 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Sam Peckinpah
    • Scénario
      • Walter Hill
      • Jim Thompson
    • Casting principal
      • Steve McQueen
      • Ali MacGraw
      • Ben Johnson
    • 195avis d'utilisateurs
    • 89avis des critiques
    • 55Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire et 2 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:14
    Trailer

    Photos213

    Voir l'affiche
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    Voir l'affiche
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    + 206
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    Rôles principaux38

    Modifier
    Steve McQueen
    Steve McQueen
    • Doc McCoy
    Ali MacGraw
    Ali MacGraw
    • Carol McCoy
    Ben Johnson
    Ben Johnson
    • Jack Beynon
    Sally Struthers
    Sally Struthers
    • Fran Clinton
    Al Lettieri
    Al Lettieri
    • Rudy Butler
    Slim Pickens
    Slim Pickens
    • Cowboy
    Richard Bright
    Richard Bright
    • The Thief
    Jack Dodson
    Jack Dodson
    • Harold Clinton
    Dub Taylor
    Dub Taylor
    • Laughlin
    Bo Hopkins
    Bo Hopkins
    • Frank Jackson
    Roy Jenson
    Roy Jenson
    • Cully
    John Bryson
    John Bryson
    • The Accountant
    Bill Hart
    Bill Hart
    • Swain
    Tom Runyon
    • Hayhoe
    Whitney Jones
    • The Soldier
    Raymond King
    • Boy on the Train
    Ivan Thomas
    • Boy on the Train
    C.W. White
    • Boy's Mother
    • Réalisation
      • Sam Peckinpah
    • Scénario
      • Walter Hill
      • Jim Thompson
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs195

    7,337.6K
    1
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    8
    9
    10

    Avis à la une

    9J-Bizzle

    Bloody, exciting, and amazing on all accounts

    Steve McQueen, the number one bad ass of his time (aside from Clint Eastwood of course). So what's wrong with rooting for the bad guy? This movie seems almost flawless with its excellently executed car chases, it's suspenseful and exciting shoot-outs, and its riveting emotional sequences. Both McGraw and McQueen make this movie well worth the experience. While it is a violent movie (especially for the year it was released!) its moments of comic relief and even serenity make this movie worthy of any moral person's eyes.

    Without spoiling the movie, just imagine Bonnie and Clyde with the greatest action/adventure experience ever. And to think it was over a measley $500,000... Of course, they were being chased for $750,000.

    9/10 for an adventure close to perfection.
    8latsblaster

    The Getaway: The last days of the pure Action-film

    Before Action became routine and Bruce Willis there was the 1970´s Action-film, which often had a lot of mood. "The Getaway" is one of those films, showing what range the Action-film could have - there is more than violence and wannabe-cool dialog here. This was before the Action-films became exaggerated, instead of having just explosions and being over-explicit there is booth plot and suspense in "The Getaway". It let Peckinpah use his well known style, in the way of Boorman´s "Point Blank". The result is pure. Ali McGraw is said to be limited and stiff, but Peckinpah made her solid here. I guess that Steve McQueen never was better than here, even if some wouldn't agree. Some of Peckinpah´s regular starred (such as Ben Johnson, Slim Pickens, Bo Hopkins and Dub Taylor) which makes it even better today - the impact of Peckinpah is powerful.

    Rating: 8 of 10.
    9bkoganbing

    Sam Peckinpah's Best Violence Ballet

    Steve McQueen and Sam Peckinpah teamed to do two straight films, probably some of the best work in both of their careers. But the difference in a nice character study like Junior Bonner and a tough crime drama like The Getaway shows the versatility of both these remarkable men. The Getaway seems to take its inspiration from John Huston's classic, The Asphalt Jungle.

    McQueen is a career criminal whose parole has once again been denied in the ten year stretch he's doing. Wife Ali McGraw submits to parole board chief Ben Johnson's sexual advances to spring McQueen.

    But the corrupt Johnson isn't just about sexual harassment. He wants McQueen to rob a bank that his brother is a director, to cover a nice case of embezzlement. He even recruits another pair of criminals, Bo Hopkins and Al Lettieri as part of the gang.

    Of course the plan goes wrong as a bank guard is killed and then Hopkins is killed in a double-cross by Lettieri who then fails to do the same to McQueen and McGraw. After that it's a three way race to the border between Johnson's men, Lettieri, and McQueen.

    Al Lettieri is a talent that was lost to us way too soon. He played some of the best villains in the early seventies and this one is one of them. He kidnaps veterinarian Jack Dodson and his slut of a wife Sally Struthers. Soon she's more than willing to go and be his girl. Struthers has a great part, so far from being Gloria Bunker Stivic on All in the Family.

    My favorite Sam Peckinpah moment in all of his films is that climax at Dub Taylor's flea bag hotel where all the forces meet and shoot up the place. It's Peckinpah's best violence ballet in all of his films, I never tire of seeing it.

    The whole film was shot in Texas and I'm not sure how residents of Texas might like this picture of their state. It seems to be one very violent place and a very corrupt one as well.

    But I like The Getaway very much, it's my favorite Sam Peckinpah film next to Ride the High Country.
    7secondtake

    Elegant amidst all the glorified violence...very 1972 and strong stuff

    The Getaway (1972)

    A striking, very characteristic period piece that owes something (a lot) to "Bonnie and Clyde" from five years earlier. Steve McQueen is strong, in his silently brooding, intense way. And he rules the movie. His counterpart (his wife, actually), is played by Ali MacGraw (of "Love Story" fame) who is predictably a bit drab, though she fits the mold of the times.

    So who makes the movie even slightly great? The photographer and editor, and therefore the director, Sam Pickinpaw, who had risen up with "The Wild Bunch" and "Straw Dogs," both better films than this one. The combination of natural, smart visuals (thanks to Lucian Ballard) and amazingly back and forth editing that would make Christopher Nolan proud (thanks to Robert Wolfe, who would go on to do a number of interesting films), the movie has punch and fresh energy.

    The plot is fairly straight up—Doc McCoy gets out of jail thanks to a "favor" by his wife with a crime king. The debt is paid with more crime, and so the movie follows the new heist. Parallel to this is the reunification of McCoy with his wife. And she is involved in the new job, so the interweaving continues.

    So in a way, the plot does its job keeping the other elements in place. The movie is fast, and has a lot of changes and interesting aspects. The settings are great—Texas in the early 1970s— and the feeling of small crime in the big world makes a great backdrop. McQueen is smart and wily, and a lot of the small parts are strong, especially Slim Pickens at the end.

    It also sums up the attempts in New Hollywood to be shocking and new. Worth seeing.
    7TheFearmakers

    Steve McQueen & Sam Peckinpah GETAWAY

    The machine-pounding prologue/montage of Sam Peckinpah's THE GETAWAY embodies caged hopelessness of prison life better than most entirely-set-in-prison prison flicks... plus it's the only sequence centered solely on Steve McQueen as career criminal Doc McCoy sans the uninspired acting of ingenue/partner Ali MacGraw...

    During a pivotal meeting -- what seems like her being tempted by Texas millionaire Ben Johnson after having sex to get Doc paroled and then tortured with envy -- she has a vacant expression as opposed to McQueen's sharpened countenance throughout...

    Meanwhile, GODFATHER villain Al Letteri (initially partnered with Bo Hopkins) would have perfectly contrasted against McQueen, only he too gets burdened by an annoying actress role as a screeching Sally Struthers plays Letteri's traveling gun moll...

    All the characters on a post bank-heist GETAWAY (including a posse of crooked Texas businessman) in a road movie that, despite the aforementioned flaws, is loaded with classic Peckinpah slow-motion gunfights, fistfights, slap-fights, car chases, cars exploding and a gritty aesthetic best described as classic 1950's Film Noir B&W soaked into 1970's brick-red, cash-green, burnt-brown, pallid-blue, dusk-yellow, faded-gray exploitation.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Under his contract with First Artists, Steve McQueen had final cut on the film and when Sam Peckinpah found out, he was upset. According to Richard Bright, McQueen chose takes that "made him look good" and Peckinpah felt that the actor played it safe: "He chose all these Playboy shots of himself. He's playing it safe with these pretty-boy shots."
    • Gaffes
      After the robbery, Doc and Carol's blue car plows through a neighboring porch. The windshield is clearly shattered by one of the broken porch columns. As soon as they are out of town, the blue car is immaculate.
    • Citations

      Rudy Butler: That's a walk-in bank. You don't have to be Dillinger for this one.

      Carter 'Doc' McCoy: Dillinger got killed.

      Rudy Butler: Not in a bank.

    • Versions alternatives
      To get permission to release the film in Spain, which at the time was ruled by Francisco Franco, an additional sequence was tacked onto the end in which McCoy is captured and returned to prison, because it's bad for the moral health of the people to show that criminals can escape from paying their debt to society.
    • Connexions
      Edited into The Kid Stays in the Picture (2002)
    • Bandes originales
      The Stars and Stripes Forever
      (uncredited)

      Music by John Philip Sousa

      Played during the parade

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    FAQ20

    • How long is The Getaway?Alimenté par Alexa
    • How close is this to the Jim Thompson novel it's based on?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • février 1973 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Espagnol
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Getaway
    • Lieux de tournage
      • El Paso, Texas, États-Unis(street scenes, Laughlin Hotel at 311 W Franklin Ave, and drive-in restaurant on Dyer St, both demolished)
    • Sociétés de production
      • First Artists
      • Foster-Brower Productions
      • Solar Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 3 352 254 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 9 588 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 3min(123 min)
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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