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Vertical Limit

  • 2000
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 4min
NOTE IMDb
6,0/10
68 k
MA NOTE
Chris O'Donnell and Robin Tunney in Vertical Limit (2000)
Vertical Limit: Poster Art
Lire clip0:31
Regarder Vertical Limit: Poster Art
2 Videos
99+ photos
ActionAventureDrameSportThrillerAventure en montagneSurvie

Un alpiniste doit sauver sa soeur au sommet du K2, l'une des plus grandes montagnes du monde.Un alpiniste doit sauver sa soeur au sommet du K2, l'une des plus grandes montagnes du monde.Un alpiniste doit sauver sa soeur au sommet du K2, l'une des plus grandes montagnes du monde.

  • Réalisation
    • Martin Campbell
  • Scénario
    • Robert King
    • Terry Hayes
  • Casting principal
    • Scott Glenn
    • Chris O'Donnell
    • Bill Paxton
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,0/10
    68 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Martin Campbell
    • Scénario
      • Robert King
      • Terry Hayes
    • Casting principal
      • Scott Glenn
      • Chris O'Donnell
      • Bill Paxton
    • 434avis d'utilisateurs
    • 104avis des critiques
    • 48Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 victoires et 4 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Vertical Limit: Poster Art
    Clip 0:31
    Vertical Limit: Poster Art
    Vertical Limiit: Epk
    Featurette 2:23
    Vertical Limiit: Epk
    Vertical Limiit: Epk
    Featurette 2:23
    Vertical Limiit: Epk

    Photos109

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    + 103
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux40

    Modifier
    Scott Glenn
    Scott Glenn
    • Montgomery Wick
    Chris O'Donnell
    Chris O'Donnell
    • Peter Garrett
    Bill Paxton
    Bill Paxton
    • Elliot Vaughn
    Robin Tunney
    Robin Tunney
    • Annie Garrett
    Stuart Wilson
    Stuart Wilson
    • Royce Garrett
    Augie Davis
    Augie Davis
    • Aziz
    Temuera Morrison
    Temuera Morrison
    • Major Rasul
    Roshan Seth
    Roshan Seth
    • Colonel Amir Salim
    Alejandro Valdes-Rochin
    • Sergeant Asim
    Nicholas Lea
    Nicholas Lea
    • Tom McLaren
    Rod Brown
    • Ali Hasan
    Steve Le Marquand
    Steve Le Marquand
    • Cyril Bench
    Ben Mendelsohn
    Ben Mendelsohn
    • Malcolm Bench
    Izabella Scorupco
    Izabella Scorupco
    • Monique Aubertine
    Ed Viesturs
    • Self
    Robert Taylor
    Robert Taylor
    • Skip Taylor
    Alexander Siddig
    Alexander Siddig
    • Kareem Nazir
    Clinton Beavan
    • WNN Cameraman
    • Réalisation
      • Martin Campbell
    • Scénario
      • Robert King
      • Terry Hayes
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs434

    6,067.6K
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    Avis à la une

    7helenaspelena

    It wasn't that bad!

    I can't believe how many people pick on this movie! It's a movie...and movies are meant to entertain. I thought it was a good story line, very suspenseful & emotional. Yes, there was a lot of unbelievable problems that arose, and maybe the acting wasn't all that great. Chris O'Donnell is very cute to look at, but I have to admit he's not the best actor out there. Scott Glenn is great in every movie he is in. The rest of the actors were OK. I just don't see why this movie was picked on so much. I don't watch movies so I can pick on them, I watch them for entertainment..and I was entertained by this movie. I would recommend it to anyone who is wanting to see an edge-of-your seat, emotional movie.
    7ccthemovieman-1

    Great Sound & Stunts, So-So Story

    When I saw this shortly after it came out on DVD, it got high marks just for the spectacular sound alone. It had some of the best rear-speaker sound I had ever heard. It was a showpiece for DVD players at the time.

    The movie is interesting with it's main fault being a common one: overdone action at the end. Along the way, however, it has many almost jaw-dropping scenes and some spectacular mountain scenery which looks great on the sharp DVD transfer. The stunt work in here is also incredible. Martin Campbell, the same director who did The Mask Of Zorro and Goldeneye, is good at producing eye-popping action scenes.

    The dialog at times is juvenile, but it could have been worse. The profanity was lower than expected, too. How accurate is it concerning mountain-climbing? Probably like most films: totally inaccurate, at least that's what a mountain- climbing expert told me, and I believe him.

    All in all, however, a far better film than I expected.....strictly for the entertainment.
    bob the moo

    Has moments but is surprisingly lacking in real excitement

    Years after he and his sister survived a climbing accident where their father died, Peter and Annie Garrett find themselves on K2 for different reasons. Peter is on the foothills taking pictures for National Geographic, while Annie is part of the documentary crew with playboy millionaire Elliot Vaughn, who is aiming to reach the summit in time to promote the launch of his new airline. However when a storm comes in., most of the party are killed with only Elliot, Annie and leader Tom surviving in a crevice. Peter puts together a rescue mission, led by veteran Montgomery Wick.

    It is just this film's bad luck that I watched it only a matter of days after I saw the much better Touching The Void. That film had me on the edge of my seat with my mouth agape at times with a story of a climbing accident and the aftermath. However Vertical Limit doesn't go for realism at any point. The plot is a real mess; it doesn't risk having it's thrills from the effects of the mountain so it also adds a traditional bad guy and a `wages of fear' twist involving the climbers carrying nitro in their backpacks. That's not to say the film doesn't have exciting moments - the opening scene is very dramatic and powerful (despite O'Donnell's crap wide-eyed acting) but it never reaches that again. Instead, it settles for effect shots of climbers hanging over great heights etc. These are visually impressive and they do manage to get a sense of urgency to them but it never lasts long.

    It's a shame, because Cliffhanger was enjoyable and Void showed that the real drama can come from just the mountain itself, however here it keeps adding more stuff to try and force drama out of the situation. The lack of real characters is a problem - instead we have very wide clichés almost; `dudes', wise old men, ruthless billionaires, sexy mountain chick and clean cut siblings. Aside from the opening sequence, it is hard to feel an emotional connection to any of them and, as the latest disposable actor hangs over a drop awaiting the chop I was more focused on how good it looked rather than nerves over the outcome. O'Donnell is as bland as he often can be and didn't impress me at all; likewise Tunney was a bit `all-American' for my taste. Paxton could have been sending up Richard Branson if he hadn't been playing it so straight. In a similar vein, Glenn would have been better if he'd put his tongue in his cheek and acknowledged how daft his character was! The support cast or `drop monkeys' as I call them are an average enough bunch but the film basically kills them off one by one like a horror movie - to much audience apathy I might add.

    Overall this is an OK film if you can just turn off your brain and enjoy the vertigo-inducing effects. However with no good plot, dialogue or characters it will be very difficult for anyone to really get involved in the film beyond this aspect. I can only plea to you to seek out a film with a fraction the budget of this and that's Touching The Void. It is a true story with no digital effects but it is a similar setting but much, much better.
    Philby-3

    There's no limit to mountaineering melodramatics

    While mountaineering is one of the most exhilarating of sports it has produced little good fiction, and few good fictional movies, though there have been some excellent documentaries ('The Man who Skied Down Everest', the Imax 'Everest' film, for example). Somehow, when it comes to fiction, the clichés take over, and this film, with some genuinely gorgeous camera-work and impressive stunts, is full of them. The wealthy megalomaniac determined to conquer K2 at any cost, the climber who lost his nerve when his father was killed who pushes himself into action to save his sister, stuck in a crevass high up the mountain with the moneyed one, the bitter old man of the mountains who is essential to the rescue, the guide who has sold out, It's all there. One does expect some improbability of plot in a film like this, but the thought that someone might cart Pakistani Army liquid nitro-glycerine in back packs to the top of K2 to blast a crevasse open really was a bit much.

    Apart from a very attractive opening sequence in Utah (Monument Valley, I think) the film was shot in the New Zealand Alps, with a few clips of the genuine Karkoram Himalaya spliced in. For this viewer, it brought back pleasant memories of climbing in the University holidays around the Southern Alps. But climbing is a dangerous sport; on one trip I was accompanied by four people, all of whom subsequently died in separate climbing accidents (one on Makalu, next to Everest). There is a fair amount of special effects malarky (no-one, not even Temuera Morrison pretending to be Pakistani, would fly an old military helicopter so close to a mountain wall at 21,000 feet), but there are also some genuinely stirring shots.

    Unfortunately, the acting for the most part matches the script. Chris Connelly, good at sensitive young men, is wrong for the brother bent on rescue (it's more of a part for Bruce Willis), and Bill Paxton is only moderately menacing as the ruthless Richard Branson-style billionaire. In fact the only decent piece of acting is Scott Glenn's Wick, the veteran with attitude. The'comic' Australian climbing brothers, Ces and Cyril, or whatever their names were, were profoundly embarrassing – I guess Ben Mendelsohn will be hoping no-one will recognise him with a balaclava on his head. There were also lackluster performances from the two female leads, Robin Tunney and Izabella Scorupco. One of them, Scorupco, is an ex-Bond girl ('Goldeneye') – the casting people obviously didn't realise she was going to be spending the entire movie wrapped up in Gore-Tex. There's no sex at high altitude – it's too damned cold and anyway survival takes precedence over procreation.

    I think Roger Ebert got it right on this one – a 'B' movie with an 'A' movie budget. There are all sorts of anomalies – the lack of visible water vapour issuing from the climbers, their sprightly behaviour even after hours at 26,000 feet, the use of north wall hammers to attack a rock/ice pitch, the miraculous helicopter piloting – but somehow the magnificence of those great peaks comes through. The worst thing about a movie like this is that it portrays the mountains as hellish, which is far from the truth. What is it the psalm says 'I will lift up mine eyes to the hills, from whence cometh my strength'? Climbing is one thing I have never regretted doing, and it would be a pity if people were put off the sport by stuff like this. Actually I think the people who do attempt peaks like K2 would see this film as preposterous, overblown Hollywood brown smelly stuff, and they'd be right. But there is some nice scenery.
    5Wuchakk

    A Fun Time but overKILL to the Extreme

    I had high hopes for this film after seeing the thrilling opening sequence in Monument Valley, Utah; but, alas, it was not to be.

    THE STORY: A famous female climber gets stuck in an ice cave with two others near the top of K2, the second highest mountain on Earth. Her brother, who has sworn off climbing because of his father's climbing death, has no choice but to assemble a team to rescue the trio.

    WHAT WORKS: As already mentioned, the opening sequence is excellent, the locations are great (the New Zealand Alps), the story pretty much keeps your attention (until the absurdities really mount up -- pun intended) and both Robin Tunney & Izabella Scorupco are deliciously beautiful.

    WHAT DOESN'T WORK: As the story continues the believability decreases severely. In fact, the crisis/suspense/action sequences are so EXTREME and strung so close together (especially as the movie proceeds) they tend to make you bust out laughing -- the very OPPOSITE reaction the creators wanted. By the very end the ridiculous overkill made me lose interest in whatever story was supposed to be there.

    FINAL ANALYSIS: I was hoping for something unexpectedly great like "The Edge," but ended up with a fun but ultimately shallow time-waster. For comparison, "Cliffhanger" is "Apocalypse Now" next to "Vertical Limit."

    GRADE: C.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The well-known climber Ed Viesturs plays himself in the movie. He also worked as a trainer for the actors.
    • Gaffes
      The depiction of High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE) is grossly inaccurate. HAPE is usually a result of altitude sickness and can most commonly be prevented (or at least have a measure of prevention provided) by slow acclimatization to the higher altitude. It is not a guaranteed condition to every climber at a high altitude. Moreover, the consumption of water has little bearing on the onset of HAPE. Additionally, given Annie's and Tom's high-degree of experience, and previous statements regarding their proposed high level of safety, they would most certainly have insisted on climbing K2 with the aid of oxygen, the use of which also staves off HAPE.
    • Citations

      Skip: Don't mind her. She's French-Canadian. Some days she's Canadian. Can be quite pleasant. Today she's obviously French.

    • Connexions
      Edited into Les Roches Maudites (2011)
    • Bandes originales
      Take It to the Limit
      Written by Don Henley, Glenn Frey and Randy Meisner

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Vertical Limit?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 21 février 2001 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Allemagne
      • États-Unis
    • Site officiel
      • Filmymen
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Urdu
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Límite vertical
    • Lieux de tournage
      • K2, Karakoram Mountain Range, Pakistan
    • Sociétés de production
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Global Entertainment Productions GmbH & Company Medien KG
      • Mountain High Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 75 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 69 243 859 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 15 507 845 $US
      • 10 déc. 2000
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 215 663 859 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 4min(124 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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