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Double arnaque

Titre original : Bullseye!
  • 1990
  • PG-13
  • 1h 35min
NOTE IMDb
4,5/10
1,6 k
MA NOTE
Michael Caine, Sally Kirkland, and Roger Moore in Double arnaque (1990)
Two scientists working for UK and USA invent cold fusion. They decide to auction it off to foreign nations. Two look-alike crooks decide to steal their deposits but end working for CIA and MI5.
Lire trailer1:43
1 Video
19 photos
CaperSlapstickComedyCrime

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTwo scientists working for UK and USA invent cold fusion. They decide to auction it off to foreign nations. Two look-alike crooks decide to steal their deposits but end working for CIA and M... Tout lireTwo scientists working for UK and USA invent cold fusion. They decide to auction it off to foreign nations. Two look-alike crooks decide to steal their deposits but end working for CIA and MI5.Two scientists working for UK and USA invent cold fusion. They decide to auction it off to foreign nations. Two look-alike crooks decide to steal their deposits but end working for CIA and MI5.

  • Réalisation
    • Michael Winner
  • Scénario
    • Leslie Bricusse
    • Michael Winner
    • Nick Mead
  • Casting principal
    • Michael Caine
    • Roger Moore
    • Sally Kirkland
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    4,5/10
    1,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Winner
    • Scénario
      • Leslie Bricusse
      • Michael Winner
      • Nick Mead
    • Casting principal
      • Michael Caine
      • Roger Moore
      • Sally Kirkland
    • 29avis d'utilisateurs
    • 7avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:43
    Trailer

    Photos19

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 12
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    Rôles principaux83

    Modifier
    Michael Caine
    Michael Caine
    • Sidney Lipton…
    Roger Moore
    Roger Moore
    • Gerald Bradley-Smith…
    Sally Kirkland
    Sally Kirkland
    • Willie
    Deborah Moore
    Deborah Moore
    • Flo Fleming
    • (as Deborah Barrymore)
    Lee Patterson
    Lee Patterson
    • Darrell Hyde
    Mark Burns
    Mark Burns
    • Nigel Holden
    Derren Nesbitt
    Derren Nesbitt
    • Inspector Grosse
    Deborah Leng
    • Francesca
    Christopher Adamson
    Christopher Adamson
    • Death's Head
    Steffanie Pitt
    Steffanie Pitt
    • Donna Dutch
    Eddie Yeoh
    • Korean Bidder
    Raymond Johnson
    • Nigerian Bidder
    Nadio Fortune
    • Italian Bidder
    Amir M. Korangy
    Amir M. Korangy
    • Iranian Bidder
    Angus MacKay
    Angus MacKay
    • Rev. Simkin
    Robert McBain
    Robert McBain
    • Lawyer
    John Woodnutt
    John Woodnutt
    • Bank Manager
    Billy J. Mitchell
    • Elmer - Tourist
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Winner
    • Scénario
      • Leslie Bricusse
      • Michael Winner
      • Nick Mead
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs29

    4,51.6K
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    Avis à la une

    TheBrothersCarruthers

    So awful it's fantastic. 1 or 10 out of ten, depending on how you look at it.

    One evening,while channel surfing, my friend and I came upon this film on TV. In its own way, it was more astonishing than anything by Kurosawa, David Fincher or Takeshi Kitano. We simply couldn't believe what we were watching. We sat there as dumbstruck and as open mouthed as if we were watching Elvis doing his shopping in the local Sainsburys store. How could any film be such a complete failure? Even awful films usually have some saving grace, some ray of light, that stops your viewing being a completely worthless experience - one good performance or one funny line or even just some good scenery. 'Bullseye!', however, exists entirely in a vacuum; in a cinematic black hole. The script: No good. The acting: No good. The direction: No good. The editing: No good. Even the music: No good. Yet, later, I realised that the ray of light that I'd been looking for was actually in the fact that the film was such a total, glorious misfire and, if one watches it from that perspective, it's a wonderful film. The next time it came on TV I made sure to tape it and every so often I watch it again, in awe at its uselessness. It's nothing against Michael Winner personally. I'm sure he's a lovely bloke but, as a film maker, he makes a magnificent restaurant critic.
    4Prismark10

    Missed target

    Apparently Michael Caine and Roger Moore are good friends but never worked together so they teamed up in this 1990 film. Unfortunately they ended up with Michael Winner as the director.

    Winner who might had once been a decent director was on a downward spiral. He ultimately ended up being better known as a food critic and fronting car insurance adverts.

    Here the duo play dodgy nuclear physicists that have invented a form of nuclear fusion but plan to sell their formula to the highest bidder and make themselves rich and double cross their backers.

    However at the same time there are a couple of con men who look exactly the same as these nuclear scientists. They get hired to retrieve the formula by CIA and MI5 not before they and a former partner played by Sally Kirkland try to steal some diamonds.

    Somewhere along the line Moore's real life daughter pops up now and again. Moore disguises himself as a piano tuner as well as other disguises and there are some poor jokes and some funny ones.

    It is all a bit of a mish mash as if the actors were enjoying themselves too much but forgot about the audience.

    The critics slated this upon release, it failed at the box office. It is amusing enough and I liked some of the humour but then again I might be easily pleased.
    5lost-in-limbo

    "At last luck has come our way".

    Not quite the bullseye, but nonetheless director Michael Winner would get enough amusement out of the pairing of English actors Michael Caine and Roger Moore in this riotously goof-ball and crude comedy caper that sees the pair playing dual roles. Two small time conman take on a job which sees them impersonating two look-alike nuclear scientists to use their identities to get into the scientific safety deposit box which is filled with millions of dollars worth of diamonds. However they are found out by the authorities, where they learn that these scientists happen to be crooked and they get caught up in the country's national security ("We're thieves, not spies").

    Bumbling, cartoon-like slapstick of the lowest dominator, but I liked it a little more than its monstrous reputation. The performances are all over the shop, as an animated Caine shamelessly bellows out his lines while Moore goes about things in a dry manner. Sally Kirkland is a bright spark and Deborah Moore is a complete delight. The cast look like they are having a good time together. Then there's a clever little cameo by John Cleese along with Jenny Seagrove. The episodic plot is filled with twists and turns, as the characters bicker, find themselves being outsmarted, double-crossed and in some sort of dangerous predicament. While the board script is wittily madcap, if downright low-brow. Director Winner's arrant handling (odd camera angles) perfectly paints a local flavour to the surroundings, but the snappy comic timing can be messy and tiredly relying on the on-going gags ("What did they say?"). "Bullseye!" maybe lame, but joyfully crazy and loud comedy hokum.

    "They say everybody in the world has someone somewhere who looks like they do".
    lor_

    Misfire

    My review was written in July 1991 after watching the movie on RCA/Columbia video cassette.

    Michael Winner's attempt at a rollicking caper comedy falls flat in "Bullseye!". Film opened in London last November but is just a direct-to-video title with big name stars for domestic consumption.

    Inspiration was evidently the smash "A Fish Called Wanda", whose star and creator John Cleese makes a cameo here. Unfortunately that film was probably a fluke since the caper format seems tired indeed this time. It' a pity, since Winner made one of the best '60s pics in the genre, "The Jokers".

    Here, Michael Caine and Roger Moore front for a preposterous story line. Both are criminals, whose exact look-alikes happen to be government scientists who've devised a nuclear fusion energy process that promises cheap electrical power.

    With their old partner Sally Kirkland as instigator they set about to steal the corrupt scientists' cache of diamonds (taken as bribes from foreign powers) from a safety deposit box.. This feat accomplished, the second half of the film chases around Scotland as the criminals are supposedly working for UK and USA government agencies to get the scientists' formula and thwart the baddies' attempt to sell it to the enemy.

    Winner delivers his usual sprightly pace, but the frequent sight gags and dumb jokes aren't funny. Both Caine and Moore strain for laughs, the former made up like W. C. Fields with a false nose and latter bugging his eyes out in frequent astonishment. Moore's real-life daughter, pouty Deborah Barrymore, is cast as an unlikely 22-year-old CIA agent.

    Kirkland, who wears gaudy outfits for no reason in the later reels like she did in "Cold Feet", is okay in a strictly functional role. In addition to Cleese, Jenny Seagrove and Patsy Kensit make pointless cameos.

    Shot in 1989, pic has dated rapidly, especially a final gag involving a lookalike of then-prime minister Margaret Thatcher. John Du Prez, who scored "A Fish Called Wanda", punches up the film with catchy music, but his jaunty main theme is way too close to John Dankworth's classic "Morgan!".
    Rakesh Kumar

    Missed the bullseye!

    Pairing Roger Moore and Michael Caine must have thought to be a great Idea. Probably inspired by The Man Who Would be King, where Caine was paired with another ex-Bond, Sean Connery. Bullseye didn't have benefit of larger scale epic-like canvass of TMWWBK, as it didn't want itself to be taken seriously. Did Bullseye work?

    Yes and No (God, we all hate this kind of answer). No, because most of the time, the jokes fall flat on the face. Yes, because Caine and Moore (as usual) are always great to watch. They play a pair of conmen and a pair of treacherous scientists. Keep an eye on Moore, always known as a great ad-libber. Unfortunately only this two guys are the only reasons to watch the movie.

    Bullseye takes the premise of impersonating (this time two of them) and adds twist and turn, moving from a caper flick to espionage. While it tries hard to be a comedy, most of the time you see some humourless farce in an inconsistent progress. I quickly lost interest in the story during the first half an hour and just sat through the rest watching the dynamic duo of England. Being a Bond fan, I was especially delighted to see Moore playing off his Bond persona, even throwing lines like, `For England'. Ring a bell, Bond-fans?

    There is Sally Kirkland, who provides some personal agenda to the ageing conmen, while also providing a bit of flesh here and there. She looks positively old and attractive at the same time. But her character does nothing much but to be in between Moore and Caine, and helping them with their con. That's all.

    I checked out Michael Winner's (the director) past record, and was surprised to note that he directed the more seroius films like the Death Wish films and The Big Sleep (a supposedly sequel of Farewell, My Lovely). While the former was successful in its own way, the latter killed nostalgic-noir delight began by Farewell, My lovely. He later went on to direct many bombs, and regarded generally as a horrible director. Wonder how he managed to find job for so long. It is so evident in this film. Whether it's him, the script or his crew, the movie failed to amuse many at that time; it will still fail to amuse many now. Bullseye is something the film couldn't achieve.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The final scenes had the smallest ever crew on a major movie. Writer and director Michael Winner operated the camera, cameraman David Wynn-Jones held the reflector. John Cleese moonlighted as sound man, but as he was performing at the same time (the sound recorder was concealed in a book he carried), he did not count as crew.
    • Gaffes
      When the train worker is shot you can clearly see that it was a dummy.
    • Citations

      [Lipton knocks his door and the entire front of the house collapses around him; the hole where the door was saves him from certain death. He wanders away dazed. Willie pulls up in her car]

      Willie: What's wrong?

      Lipton: I come from a broken home.

    • Crédits fous
      Appearing without the permission of his mother: John Cleese as the man on the beach in Barbados who looks like John Cleese.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Premio Donostia a Michael Caine (2000)

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Bullseye!?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 25 décembre 1991 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Bullseye!
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Inveraray Castle, Inveraray, Argyll and Bute, Écosse, Royaume-Uni
    • Société de production
      • 21st Century Film Corporation
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 15 000 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 35 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Michael Caine, Sally Kirkland, and Roger Moore in Double arnaque (1990)
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    By what name was Double arnaque (1990) officially released in Canada in English?
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