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The Confession

  • 1999
  • R
  • 1h 54min
NOTE IMDb
6,0/10
2,9 k
MA NOTE
Alec Baldwin and Ben Kingsley in The Confession (1999)
DramaThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA NY litigator, hired to defend a murderer avenging his son's death, grapples with his own ambitions and the moral imperative of his client's truth-seeking.A NY litigator, hired to defend a murderer avenging his son's death, grapples with his own ambitions and the moral imperative of his client's truth-seeking.A NY litigator, hired to defend a murderer avenging his son's death, grapples with his own ambitions and the moral imperative of his client's truth-seeking.

  • Réalisation
    • David Hugh Jones
  • Scénario
    • Sol Yurick
    • David Black
  • Casting principal
    • Ben Kingsley
    • Amy Irving
    • Ryan Marsini
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,0/10
    2,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • David Hugh Jones
    • Scénario
      • Sol Yurick
      • David Black
    • Casting principal
      • Ben Kingsley
      • Amy Irving
      • Ryan Marsini
    • 27avis d'utilisateurs
    • 4avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire au total

    Vidéos1

    The Confession (1999)
    Trailer 2:03
    The Confession (1999)

    Photos4

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux46

    Modifier
    Ben Kingsley
    Ben Kingsley
    • Harry Fertig
    Amy Irving
    Amy Irving
    • Sarah Fertig
    Ryan Marsini
    Ryan Marsini
    • Stevie Fertig
    Alec Baldwin
    Alec Baldwin
    • Roy Bleakie
    Boyd Gaines
    Boyd Gaines
    • Liam Clarke
    Anne Twomey
    • Judge Judy Crossland
    Lázaro Pérez
    • Eric Malabar
    Becky Ann Baker
    Becky Ann Baker
    • Nurse Carrounbois
    Mike Hodge
    Mike Hodge
    • Security Guard
    Mark Ethan
    Mark Ethan
    • Dr. Mason Gillett
    Kevin Conway
    Kevin Conway
    • Mel Duden
    Richard Jenkins
    Richard Jenkins
    • Cass O'Donnell
    Joseph Mosso
    • Bartender
    • (as Joe Mosso)
    Kevin McClarnon
    • Sean (Limo Driver)
    Jay O. Sanders
    Jay O. Sanders
    • Jack Renoble
    Ken Marks
    • Kevin (Waiter)
    Laura Esterman
    • Sarah's Cousin
    Christopher Lawford
    Christopher Lawford
    • D.A. Cunningham
    • Réalisation
      • David Hugh Jones
    • Scénario
      • Sol Yurick
      • David Black
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs27

    6,02.9K
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    Avis à la une

    8brianoh2

    It's not difficult to do what's right, it's difficult to know what is right .....

    This is a movie about a moral man (Kingsley) trapped in an immoral world. When his son is ill and needing urgent medical attention, the actions of the medical staff lead to serious consequences for all, and Kingsley's character requires legal representation. Baldwin is appointed his lawyer and his experience with Kingsley changes his values. Baldwin had become corrupted by the legal system and was no longer interested in right or wrong, just winning. Kingsley's moral values of right and wrong and admitting our guilt and paying for our wrongs changes Baldwin for the "better". Baldwin's character now has a new set of moral values and this has disastrous consequences for other parties.

    I thought this was a movie with a strong moral message and it was well acted by Baldwin and Kingsley for the most part. At times it got a little too much listening to Kingsley's explanations of why we should be honest. He came across as a bit of a saint, and in reality this never happens, just in words. All in all, I thought it well worth watching. In my book an 8 (from 10).
    8thinker1691

    " Vengeance is reality with the volume turned up "

    Sol Yurick acquired a great deal of experience while working the streets of New York. His most famous story which received wide acclaim is called 'The Warriors.' Now director Daniel Hugh Jones initiates this fascinating Yurick novel entitled " The Confession. " It's an important story taken from the pages of todays headlines. Harry Fertig (Ben Kingsley) is a well respected, devoted and loving father who's six year old son is suffering from acute appendicitis. Upon rushing him to the Emergency ward of the hospital, he is told his son who needs immediate attention will have to sit, wait and fill out forms. The result; his son dies. Concluding someone has to be held responsible, the grieving father sets out to punish the hospital receiving attendant, (Eric Malabar), the admitting nurse (Becky Ann Baker) and Dr. Mason Gillett. (Mark Ethan) all for putting their own troubles ahead of an emergency patient. After his son's death, Fertig murders all three and then surprisingly enough, surrenders to the police. While awaiting trial for murder, Fertig is given a public defender whom he promptly fires. However, his new defense lawyer Roy Bleakie (Alec Baldwin) is a well connected, ambitious attorney who is instructed by his client to plead him Guilty! With many rich and powerful people concerned his client might be given the death penalty, Bleakie is ready to plead him Not Guilty by reason of insanity. However, Fertig insists, he knew what he did was wrong and is willing to accept punishment, even if it means being executed. The story is intriguing from it's onset and the collected cast does a marvelous job of imbuing understanding, sympathy and deep emotional drama to the characters. All one needs to do is live in our speedy, fast food, hectic style of life to realize what this case is all about. Anyone who has ever been run-over by the uncaring freeway of ambiguity we've created or have experienced the churning frustration we daily endure, know what this movie is all about. The result; this film has become a Classic and is easily recommended to anyone who cares. ****
    8bencharif

    A mystery of ideas

    I'm not a particularly avid follower of movie actors, or of movies as they're released, which probably explains why I found "The Confession"--and Alec Baldwin's performance in it--so surprising. I'd heard nothing about this film and saw it quite by accident.

    Movies like "The Confession"--that is, movies with moral dilemmas at their center ("It's not hard to do the right thing; it's hard to know what the right thing is" is the central dilemma of the film)--often bypass the ambiguities of complex moral questions in favor of a single answer everyone can love.

    In this film there are moral ambiguities aplenty, and the film deals honestly with the difficulty of facing those ambiguities head-on and taking a clear position. Alec Baldwin's performance was startling and complex--a beautiful thing to watch. The supporting cast, including Amy Irving, was top-notch, too.
    James-184

    Film Industry Vindicated

    Just when you tire of seeing seamy, disspiriting tales of outlawry and big-budget, small-brained extravaganzas, a film like The Confession comes along to, well, renew your faith that the medium of film can deliver something uplifting and thoughtful without getting smarmy and preachy.

    Kinglsey is simply a masterful actor no matter what he does. Watch his every gesture and expression, for each is intentional. Baldwin's social conscience tends to steer him to movies with messages, and this is no exception. Viewers should go in expecting actual morals to the story--such a rarity these days.

    Baldwin plays a hot-shot defense lawyer with chances at and aspirations to becoming district attorney. He's slime. Slick, sophisticated slime, but slime nonetheless. A much better portrayal of slime than we saw with Travolta's personal injury attorney in A Civil Action, for instance, probably because we SEE Baldwin's slime, while Travolta's is merely described. Kingsley plays a devout Jew and CFO of a major corporation.

    When Kingsley commits a triple homicide (no spoiler, that; it's on the back of the box) and becomes Baldwin's client (retainer paid by Sanders, Kingsley's boss), we have a surprisingly subtle film about doing what's right, knowing what's right, human law and God's Law: the good man who does wrong defended by the bad man who never gets caught.

    It's a moral movie without moralizing--at least as far as Hollywood gets. Kingsley and his family are the definition of upstanding and decent. As Baldwin enters their orbit, his own recessive goodness is evoked, while his dominant corruption simultaneously taints Kingsley's family. The relationships are complex, and not because of any cheap tricks of screenwriting or silence, but because of the characters themselves. The right thing to do recedes from initial clarity (for each main character) and gets lost in a multitude of possible "right" things: what is right for Irving, for Kingsley, for justice, for Sanders, for Baldwin's career, for Baldwin's emerging desire to be one of the good guys.

    It's a religious movie, yet not a preachy one. We see Kingsley's devotion to God as he understands it. We have Kevin Conway ostensibly playing Baldwin's co-counsel and investigator, but in reality serving as his conscience and confessor (there's even a baptism-with-bourbon scene in a bar--both odd and provocative). We have the rigid orthodoxy portrayed ably by Kingsley, and the more human ethical luke-warmth of Irving.

    What matters most is that soon into the film we really know the three main characters, from multiple angles, not simply in religious, professional, or ethical categories. And yet we know not what they'll do next because the story captures them in a moment of rapid change, growth and crisis.

    Had this been a small independent film, the second hour and the secondary plot (a corporate/power-politics mystery) would have been lopped off, but this Hollywood touch doesn't get in the way.

    Thematically, one lens through which to view this is the battle between corruption and saintliness. We have Baldwin's corruption as a defense attorney, which, to some extent, is actually virtuous for a defense attorney--he gets his clients off. We have the police department's corruption in the early scenes. References to, if not corruption, then compromise, in the DA's office in plea bargains and decisions on the death penalty. Legal corruption in extremely ex parte assignations. Marital corruption and two different responses to it. Corruption of the common good for private gain.

    And yet we are shown the flipside. Baldwin is praised as a man of conscience while those bestowing the compliment are themselves so corrupt the word sounds phony on their lips. We see bureaucratic corruption yet also the wrongness of vigilantism as retribution. We see the insanity of assuming that a man who admits guilt and welcomes punishment must be insane--lying and refusing to accept punishment being the "sane" response. We see Baldwin argue with Kingsley about God's law and justice, both when Baldwin plays the sophistic devil's advocate and later, when the discussion comes to have meaning for him. We see the possible foolish consistency in Kingsley devoting himself with such absolutist fervor to his work, his son and his God--while neglecting his wife...and yet we see Irving's foolish consistency in defining herself completely by reference to her son and husband.

    The ending is a bit dramatic for the rest of the film but there is no sugar-coated salvation. We get to see the truly vile punished. And while the conscientious sinners also suffer a penalty or two, it's a just, if sad, penalty all told. There's a redemptive feeling to this movie, though finding evidence of concrete redemption is hard. The closest character to redemption is Baldwin, but his fate is by no means secure. Perhaps the redemption consists in the main characters emerging from the swamp of corruption alive and wiser, if somewhat less saintly for it all. Maybe it's in the relative lack of trumpet fanfare: a resolution that isn't exactly happy but just, leaving the players capable of contentment and continued life.

    Amy Irving is amazing, though she peters out near the end. Kingsley is, well, a god. Baldwin has a lot of silent staring whilst others blather and exposit, but it never rises to annoyance. Sanders does well as a slick, ultra-rich CENSORED.

    Some may criticize the film for beating us over the head with airheaded religion--but this signals a fixation on the obvious that blinds them to the subtle. There are no easy answers here, and that's rare.
    6shrutinsit

    Great Movie but slow.

    Great Performances by Alec Baldwin and Ben Kingsley. But too much time was spent to convert Alec, and reach to what has seemed to have been an obvious climax.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      According to his diaries, Alan Rickman turned down a role in this movie
    • Gaffes
      The prosecutor asks for sauerkraut and mustard on his hot dog, but they aren't on it.
    • Citations

      Jack Renoble: A cynic is an idealist who's been disappointed.

    • Bandes originales
      Bleakie's Bounce
      Composed & Produced by David Feinman

      ©1998 Non-Linear Music/BMI

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Confession?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 22 janvier 1999 (Brésil)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Hébreu
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Покаяння
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Battery Park, Manhattan, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • El Dorado Pictures
      • Phoenician Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 4 000 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 54 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Alec Baldwin and Ben Kingsley in The Confession (1999)
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