Un ancien agent de la CIA utilise les talents d'une jeune voyante pour l'aider à récupérer son fils doué de pouvoirs télékinésiques des mains de terroristes qui souhaitent utiliser ses aptit... Tout lireUn ancien agent de la CIA utilise les talents d'une jeune voyante pour l'aider à récupérer son fils doué de pouvoirs télékinésiques des mains de terroristes qui souhaitent utiliser ses aptitudes paranormales à de mauvaises fins.Un ancien agent de la CIA utilise les talents d'une jeune voyante pour l'aider à récupérer son fils doué de pouvoirs télékinésiques des mains de terroristes qui souhaitent utiliser ses aptitudes paranormales à de mauvaises fins.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
- Dr. Ellen Lindstrom
- (as Carol Rossen)
- LaRue
- (as Melody Thomas)
- Cheryl
- (as Hilary Thompson)
Avis à la une
Young Andrew Stevens has those abilities already, they just need to be focused and developed. Stevens is being raised by his widowed father Kirk Douglas who's a government agent. A raid while they're on vacation in the Mediterranean by some Arab terrorist types allows a ruthless bureaucrat played by John Cassavetes to separate father from son. Stevens believes Dad has died, but Kirk doesn't swallow that so easy.
Kirk's on the hunt for his son and the quest takes him to Chicago where people like Stevens with paranormal abilities are being studied and tested so the USA can have them as a weapon. Carrie Snodgrass and Charles Durning are working there as well. And so is Fiona Lewis who's been given personal charge of Stevens and develops the kid's libido as well as his telekinesis.
Brian DePalma directed this film and it's a good one with outstanding performances by all the cast. Look for a good performance from Amy Irving as another young person with such abilities who literally makes Cassavetes fall apart at the end. And there's a memorable bit from a younger and thinner Dennis Franz before the gain of weight and loss of hair that we all know as Detective Andrew Sipowicz. Franz plays a Chicago police officer who's something of a doofus.
Fans of Brian DePalma in particular and horror films in general will very much like The Fury.
When I saw this on video back in the 1980s I loved it. Seeing it now I hate it. The story is very confusing with way too many characters and plot holes galore. The dialogue is terrible (I kept playing back scenes on the DVD because I couldn't believe what I had just heard) and this moves VERY slowly (it runs two solid hours).
The acting doesn't help. Irving is too weepy and whiny (but she IS great in the final scene). Stevens has never been a good actor. Douglas walks through his role and John Cassavates (playing the bad guy) gives a one-note performance. The only good acting comes from Carrie Snodgrass, Charles Durning, Carol Eve Rossen and (especially) Fiona Lewis.
It has some good things--the direction from Brian DePalma is excellent (especially Irving's slow motion run from the Institute) and there's a good score by John Williams. Also it does have a few incredibly bloody deaths. These were considered extreme back in 1978 but they aren't anymore (and look incredibly fake). There's also a great final scene and I got a good laugh over the incredibly dated video games Snodgrass and Irving play at one point. Also Daryl Hannah's first film.
So it DOES have some good things but the slow pace, confusing story and lousy dialogue sinks it. I can only give it a 5.
My favorite two scenes happen to be two of the most violent scenes in the movie. The first is where the alluring Fiona Lewis playing Dr. Charles is elevated into the air by Stevens and is set to spinning until she bleeds to death. The second scene that gets to me is in the final moments when Cassavetes gets his just desert.
Douglas is showing his age in this role as the business tycoon, who himself was left for dead. He still proves to pack a punch and hold his own as the lead. Carrie Snodgrass is ho-hum in her role as Douglas' lover and friend of Irving. Her character's demise is also quite violent. Miss Irving is perfection in her young and charming way. Look for Gordon Jump(of WKRP fame)in a small role and yes that is Dennis Franz(of NYPD Blue) early on as the young cop with the brand new car.
Sometimes a little bit slow, but this is your part in earning the big bangs for your bucks. John Williams provides a very haunting score that keeps this thriller thrilling.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe amusement park scenes were filmed inside Old Chicago, the world's first indoor theme park and shopping mall. Built in 1975, closed in 1980, and finally razed in 1986, it was located in Bolingbrook, a southwest suburb of Chicago, Illinois.
- GaffesAt the construction site after the car chase, Peter has tricked a pair of government agents into driving off a sheer drop. Their car drops offscreen and a moment later a giant fireball rises into frame, implying that the car struck something solid and exploded.
Soon after, Peter drives a stolen Cadillac off the same precipice and his car lands in a body of water with no sign of the exploded car or what it might have hit to make it blow up.
- Citations
Peter Sandza: Ask Childress if all this was worth his arm.
Bob: What? Did you do something to his arm, Peter?
Peter Sandza: I killed it. With a machine gun.
- Crédits fousThe 20th Century Fox logo appears without the fanfare.
- Versions alternativesThe film was cut in Argentina and Sweden.
- ConnexionsEdited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Fatale beauté (1994)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Fury?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 5 500 000 $US (estimé)