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USS Alabama

Titre original : Crimson Tide
  • 1995
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 56min
NOTE IMDb
7,4/10
134 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
2 900
171
Denzel Washington and Gene Hackman in USS Alabama (1995)
CT#2
Lire trailer2:37
3 Videos
99+ photos
CatastropheThriller conspirationnisteActionDrameGuerreThriller

À bord d'un sous-marin nucléaire américain, un jeune officier en second organise une mutinerie pour empêcher son capitaine à la gâchette facile de lancer ses missiles avant de confirmer ses ... Tout lireÀ bord d'un sous-marin nucléaire américain, un jeune officier en second organise une mutinerie pour empêcher son capitaine à la gâchette facile de lancer ses missiles avant de confirmer ses ordres.À bord d'un sous-marin nucléaire américain, un jeune officier en second organise une mutinerie pour empêcher son capitaine à la gâchette facile de lancer ses missiles avant de confirmer ses ordres.

  • Réalisation
    • Tony Scott
  • Scénaristes
    • Michael Schiffer
    • Richard P. Henrick
  • Stars
    • Gene Hackman
    • Denzel Washington
    • Matt Craven
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,4/10
    134 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    2 900
    171
    • Réalisation
      • Tony Scott
    • Scénaristes
      • Michael Schiffer
      • Richard P. Henrick
    • Stars
      • Gene Hackman
      • Denzel Washington
      • Matt Craven
    • 301avis d'utilisateurs
    • 66avis des critiques
    • 66Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 3 Oscars
      • 5 victoires et 9 nominations au total

    Vidéos3

    Crimson Tide
    Trailer 2:37
    Crimson Tide
    Crimson Tide
    Trailer 2:32
    Crimson Tide
    Crimson Tide
    Trailer 2:32
    Crimson Tide
    Crimson Tide
    Trailer 2:35
    Crimson Tide

    Photos117

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    + 111
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    Casting principal62

    Modifier
    Gene Hackman
    Gene Hackman
    • Ramsey
    Denzel Washington
    Denzel Washington
    • Hunter
    Matt Craven
    Matt Craven
    • Zimmer
    George Dzundza
    George Dzundza
    • Cob
    Viggo Mortensen
    Viggo Mortensen
    • Weps
    James Gandolfini
    James Gandolfini
    • Lt. Bobby Dougherty
    Rocky Carroll
    Rocky Carroll
    • Lt. Westergaurd
    Jaime Gomez
    Jaime Gomez
    • Ood Mahoney
    • (as Jaime P. Gomez)
    Michael Milhoan
    Michael Milhoan
    • Hunsicker
    Scott Burkholder
    Scott Burkholder
    • TSO Billy Linkletter
    Danny Nucci
    Danny Nucci
    • Danny Rivetti
    Lillo Brancato
    Lillo Brancato
    • Russell Vossler
    • (as Lillo Brancato Jr.)
    Eric Bruskotter
    Eric Bruskotter
    • Bennefield
    Ricky Schroder
    Ricky Schroder
    • Lt. Paul Hellerman
    • (as Rick Schroder)
    Steve Zahn
    Steve Zahn
    • William Barnes
    Marcello Thedford
    Marcello Thedford
    • Lawson
    R.J. Knoll
    • Marty Sotille
    Billy Devlin
    • Navigator
    • Réalisation
      • Tony Scott
    • Scénaristes
      • Michael Schiffer
      • Richard P. Henrick
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs301

    7,4134.3K
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    Avis à la une

    8mstomaso

    Very well made military drama

    The suspense is relentless in this believable, tense and superbly acted war drama. One of the best modern war movies I have seen, Crimson Tide is a story about strained loyalty, respect, command, discipline, power, and military practice. Hackman and Washington are perfectly cast as an older battle-hardened nuclear submarine captain and his younger, less experienced but highly educated executive officer, caught in a crisis of potentially world-threatening proportions. Pursued by an enemy submarine, the USS Alabama has nuclear warheads aimed and ready to fire as a pre-emptive strike against a Russian rebel commanding his own nuclear arsenal. The Alabama is commanded to launch, and begins preparations, but the enemy sub attacks, knocking out all communications just as a second command is being received. The nature of that second command and what to do about then becomes the key problem that the Captain and XO have to deal with. Suffice to say, they do not agree on how to proceed, and the remainder of the film is a struggle between the two men and those who support each, in a crippled but still lethal sub, with the fate of the world hanging in the balance.

    What's is amazing about Michael Schiffer's story is its plausibility. The basic scenario upon which the script is based could happen. The cast - all of them - are spectacular, and the directing is masterful. Although some of the behavior of the men aboard the Alabama seems improbable at times, given the military realities of chain of command and discipline, the sheer performance power of this film's cast and production team make it all seem very real and extremely compelling. the characters are HUGE, complex, and real. More than just a cautionary tale, this is a very human drama about who people become under extreme conditions, and how they work out problems to reach solutions, or fail to do so. If that final sentence sounds cryptic, then let it entice you to see the film so you can figure out what I mean for yourself.
    7davidmvining

    Solid, but kind of nonsensical

    Going into this run of Tony Scott films, I wanted Crimson Tide to be my favorite. I don't really know why beyond a certain affection for submarine movies in general. I'd seen it once before, remembered little about it, but felt like it could be the Tony Scott film that I got the most out of. Well, I did enjoy the film. It's slick and fun and tense, but it's also kind of inherently silly in a way that undermines it at key points all while it's pretty obvious that Don Simpson was looking at this as a way to legitimize himself after he'd been knocked back with the less than stellar box office returns of Days of Thunder. It's a weighty thriller unmade at its highest ambitions by the fact that it just doesn't quite feel real. Still, fun as it plays out.

    Russia is going through turmoil as a separatist leader is leading an insurgency against the sitting federal government, rekindling the hot potential of war with the United States from the Cold War. In the middle of this is the US submarine, the Alabama, captained by Frank Ramsey (Gene Hackman), an old seadog who has actually seen combat. Into his family of a crew he invites a new Executive Officer, Lt. Commander Hunter (Denzel Washington), after his previous XO is sidelined with appendicitis. It's obvious from the start that the two will butt heads, Ramsey dismissively noting Hunter's year at Harvard, a divide that becomes apparent in an early conversation on ship about the use of nuclear weapons in WWII.

    You see, this conversation is kind of ground zero for why I can't actually take this film seriously. There's a talk about how there is a debate about the use of nuclear weapons to end WWII, but the talk is razor-thin and never actually goes into the pros or cons of the use in that specific case. It's just sitting there as this gauzy cautionary tale, with no specifics, about how the use of nuclear weapons can be world-ending. It's like it was written by someone who knows that there is a debate about the use of nuclear weapons but can't remember what either side actually says. In a film that's nominally about the use of nuclear weapons and the moral weight that such a decision carries, it's an odd way to try and ground your tale with a moral foundation.

    But, it's obvious that Scott and his writer, Michael Schiffer, are mostly just interested in the situation as a great way to set up the pressure cooker that is dozens of men trapped in a metal tube in the middle of the ocean with death pressing up against the hull in every direction. Patrolling waters near the Eastern edges of Russia, namely a point near the Chinese and North Korean borders where a dispute over Russian nuclear silos is heating up, the Alabama, gets into conflict with a Russian sub that leaves its radio broken having received on message telling it to launch its ICBMs at the silos while a second message had been cut off in the middle of transmission that could say anything.

    So, this is the source of the conflict. New XO and established Captain get into a head butting match about whether to follow the first order or to try and reestablish contact with their command to see what the second order is. On the surface, this is a great source of tension that drives everything, and what might be the film's saving grace is Tony Scott's slick, propulsive style that keeps things moving with new events (two sub attacks) along with the quality performances from everyone involved, most notably our two leads. However, it's ultimately kind of silly, especially considering the ticking clock, which takes what would be this great conflict of personalities like Run Silent, Run Deep, and instead leaves it as a facile piece of drama. I don't mind the facile drama on display. It's fun, but it's still facile.

    You see, the problem is how the ticking clock works out. They have sixty minutes until the Russian separatists supposedly launch, but they're launch capable more than twenty minutes before that. Even if there is this conflict between the orders, why does Ramsey act like there's no way to wait a few minutes while the radio is being fixed until the last possible moment? It's obvious, from Hackman's performance, that he takes the idea of launching nuclear weapons as to be something of great weight and responsibility, but his actions are so gung-ho on the other hand. It's a contrast that the film doesn't seem to understand is there, especially late in the film when Ramsey does exactly that, making all of the dramatics of the previous forty minutes or so feel pointless.

    However, as I said, those dramatics are fun. They're just thin. Ramsey desperately wants to follow the first order, so when Hunter declines, he tries to have Hunter removed. Hunter uses that as an excuse to remove Ramsey from his command. There's the second appearance of the enemy sub, torpedoes exchanged, pressure on the hull, a mutiny to the supposed mutiny as the officers split their loyalties. It really is helped by the fact that it's all cut so fast together while the actors give it their all (Scott really was good at getting performances from his actors).

    And yet, I just wanted more. I wanted these professional sailors to act more professional, to find the tension through adults facing a terrible situation in the limits of their own experience. However, the film trends more towards irrational shouting from people who don't really feel like they belong in command at all. I mean, when Ramsey points a gun at Lieutenant Ince's (Viggo Mortenson) head, it's just too far, you know?

    So, it's fun, but its one foot in realism betrays the rest of the film which isn't terribly realistic. I have a real soft-spot for submarine movies, pressure cookers for drama, and this does deliver that all on the backs of two high quality actors while the director speeds through everything in his own high-octane style. It's a good time at the movies, but it's just no The Hunt for Red October.
    tfrizzell

    Red Alert, Red Alert, Red Alert, Red Alert....

    Tense little action thriller on par with "The Hunt for Red October" has a nuclear submarine commander (Gene Hackman) and his new second-in-command (Denzel Washington) getting in a chess match of words and wits ala "Mutiny on the Bounty". Russian rebels may be about to launch nuclear missiles at any moment. Commands come through for Hackman to detonate the weapons from their ship, but then another message after that one which is incomplete splits the entire crew. Hackman thinks it is time to take control with aggression while Washington believes that this is way too important without knowing everything there is to know. A wide range of characters on the submarine (which includes Viggo Mortensen, Steve Zahn, James Gandolfini, Rick Schroeder, George Dzundza) must decide which of the all-world performers they are going to side with. The screenplay is mediocre really, but Hackman and Washington know how to overcome that and director Tony Scott keeps the pulse of his audience in high over-drive. Definitely an acceptable piece from the genre. 4 stars out of 5.
    Ricardo_Aparicio

    Good, but...

    Enjoyable, good tension, good dilemma, good cast. But:

    You have a movie like this where either Washington's or Hackman's character side could be right about their course of action. The aim of the movie, ostensibly, is to present both sides and let the viewer figure out which is the correct course.

    But you can't possibly side with Hackman, can you?

    After all, his character goes nuts when everything starts happening. His character is possibly racist. And his character is prepared to launch nukes. Washington's character is, quite nobly, none of those things.

    Ho hum. Hollywood audience manipulation at its finest.

    Would it kill these writers and producers to present a dilemma movie in an intelligent fashion for once? I'd like to struggle with "who's right and who's wrong?" just once in my moviegoing life.
    7fikamugg

    1.45 hours training in submarine command language.

    Denzel and Gene are the perfect choices for the leads. The score is simply amazing and deserves the Oscar. But anyway during the after texts i felt relief. 1.45 h of submarine command language can take its toll and be pretty indigestible.

    The only thing that prevents me from putting a solid 8 out of 10 for this effort from Tony Scott are the totally unnecessary racial remarks made by Hackmans character captain Ramsey at the end of the movie. The Lipizzaner dialog could easily have been replaced with something else. It was very irritating and ridiculous simply because if Ramsey had preferences in skin color, he wouldn't have chosen a black man as an X.O. in the first place, right?

    The served purpose was of course to help the viewer to take sides in the conflict but the audience had already done that. The audience had already understood that Ramsey associated Hunter with Harvard and military school theory and that he thought of him as a softy. The moment Hunter takes control of the conn, the sympathies lies with him.

    Ramsey with his happy trigger-finger and "shoot first ask questions later" attitude was the stereotype perhaps needed to push some moral points about the problems with blind obedience and the ever recurring need of critical thought (especially amongst men in control of nukes). The audience got it, but to make sure the viewers didn't have any sympathies for the old commie-hater he must be throwing some racial epithets too. The choice in making characters over explicitly bad is quite common in Hollywood though, but more often than not the drama itself suffers from this practice. Characters made more shallow and one-dimensional, who wants that except the studio bosses? If they dumb it down and keep it within the stereotypes maybe they think it's easier to go break even, who knows? But in the same way as the US military can be saved from personnel like Ramsey maybe a well educated middle class one day can save the world from risk reducing studio bosses by demanding a dismantling of the stereotypes we all cherished and consumed for too long.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The scene in which the U.S.S. Alabama is diving for the first time is footage of the real submarine submerging. Tony Scott was following along in a helicopter and a separate camera unit on boats obtaining shots of the ship. When the Captain of the Alabama requested that the helicopter cease filming, they submerged, which is what director Tony Scott was hoping for anyway.
    • Gaffes
      Boomers have two requirements while out on patrol: remain undetected and maintain communications. They carry as many radios as they do missiles. There is always a backup should one fail.
    • Citations

      Hunter: In my humble opinion, in the nuclear world, the true enemy is war itself.

    • Versions alternatives
      The English language version includes a scene where Lt. Cmdr. Hunter (Denzel Washington) breaks up a fight between two sailors. One of the two men tells Hunter that they were arguing over which version of the character Silver Surfer was best, the one drawn by Jack Kirby or the one by Moebius. In the Italian version the comic book character over which the two men are fighting have been changed to Betty Boop and Felix the Cat.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Time Under Fire (1997)
    • Bandes originales
      Piano Sonata No.14 Op.27 No.2
      Written by Ludwig van Beethoven

      Performed by Tatiana Nikolayeva

      Courtesy of Olympia Compact Discs, Ltd.

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    FAQ24

    • How long is Crimson Tide?Alimenté par Alexa
    • What does "condition 1SQ" mean?
    • There's a lot of talk about a city called Vladivostok in Russia. Where is it?
    • Why does Ramsey chastise Hunter for questioning his authority during the readiness test when all Hunter did was quietly mention that the fire may flare back up?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 6 septembre 1995 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Marea roja
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Île Longue, Lanvéoc, Finistère, France
    • Sociétés de production
      • Hollywood Pictures
      • Don Simpson/Jerry Bruckheimer Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 53 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 91 387 195 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 18 612 190 $US
      • 14 mai 1995
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 157 387 195 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 56min(116 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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