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Card Player

Titre original : Il cartaio
  • 2003
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 43min
NOTE IMDb
4,9/10
5,8 k
MA NOTE
Card Player (2003)
Home Video Trailer from Anchor Bay Entertainment
Lire trailer1:56
1 Video
53 photos
HorreurMystèreThrillerGialloWhodunnit

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA Rome policewoman teams up with a British Interpol agent to find a crafty serial killer who plays a taunting game of cat-and-mouse with the police by abducting and killing young women and s... Tout lireA Rome policewoman teams up with a British Interpol agent to find a crafty serial killer who plays a taunting game of cat-and-mouse with the police by abducting and killing young women and showing it over an Internet web cam.A Rome policewoman teams up with a British Interpol agent to find a crafty serial killer who plays a taunting game of cat-and-mouse with the police by abducting and killing young women and showing it over an Internet web cam.

  • Réalisation
    • Dario Argento
  • Scénario
    • Dario Argento
    • Franco Ferrini
  • Casting principal
    • Stefania Rocca
    • Liam Cunningham
    • Silvio Muccino
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    4,9/10
    5,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Dario Argento
    • Scénario
      • Dario Argento
      • Franco Ferrini
    • Casting principal
      • Stefania Rocca
      • Liam Cunningham
      • Silvio Muccino
    • 71avis d'utilisateurs
    • 103avis des critiques
    • 48Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    The Card Player
    Trailer 1:56
    The Card Player

    Photos53

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    Rôles principaux37

    Modifier
    Stefania Rocca
    Stefania Rocca
    • Anna Mari
    Liam Cunningham
    Liam Cunningham
    • John Brennan
    Silvio Muccino
    Silvio Muccino
    • Remo
    Adalberto Maria Merli
    • Police Commissioner
    Claudio Santamaria
    Claudio Santamaria
    • Carlo Sturni
    Fiore Argento
    Fiore Argento
    • Lucia Marini
    Cosimo Fusco
    Cosimo Fusco
    • Berardelli
    Mia Benedetta
    Mia Benedetta
    • Francesca
    Giovanni Visentin
    • C.I.D. Chief
    Claudio Mazzenga
    • Mario
    Conchita Puglisi
    Conchita Puglisi
    • Marta
    Micaela Pignatelli
    Micaela Pignatelli
    • Professor Terzi
    Luis Molteni
    Luis Molteni
    • Pathologist
    Carlo Giuseppe Gabardini
    • Anti-Hacker #1
    Alessandro Mistichelli
    • Anti-Hacker #2
    Francesco Guzzo
    • Anti-Hacker #3
    Pier Maria Cecchini
    • Flying Squad Chief
    • (as Piermaria Cecchini)
    Jennifer Poli
    Jennifer Poli
    • Christine Girdler, First Victim
    • Réalisation
      • Dario Argento
    • Scénario
      • Dario Argento
      • Franco Ferrini
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs71

    4,95.8K
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    Avis à la une

    6jangu

    A different Argento, to be sure, but that's not bad Argento!

    I have read the reviews complaining about that Dario has abandoned his style and all the gore to produce a tame TV-thriller. Far from the truth, according to me! I really think that this is the best he has done since "Opera". Granted, his stylish touch might seem to be muted compared to the baroque thriller of the 70s and 80s, but this cold and bleak atmosphere that he conjures up this time along with very brightly lit camera-work for most of the scenes, is something I enjoyed throughout! Sure, the gore is almost totally absent (apart from one scene), but as a whole this picture is much more efficiently done. The pace is fluent and unlike most of his other movies, there is actually no point where the characters just stand around and talk (and sometimes his players have been involved in some truly atrocious conversation) to fill out the time.

    *MINOR SPOILER* And in "Il cartaio" the three main actors are actually very good! They are people you can care about and when they are in danger or die, you feel sorry for them. *END OF SPOILER* Like I mentioned before, I enjoyed the bleak look of the movie...as always classy camera-work in every frame of an Argento picture! And Claudio Simonetti's score is his best in years even though you might be just a little bit tired of it by the time the movie reaches it's conclusion. And talking about the finale, I found it both interesting, but at the same time also maybe a little bit of a letdown. However, the endings have been a bit weak lately in Dario's films. Not since "Tenebrae" has there been a really powerful conclusion. And two minor complaints finally...it was too easy to guess who the killer was. This has been mentioned before and I think it is true. The killer's identity could have been better camouflaged without a "certain scene" (you will know which one). And the card scenes went on too long on two occasions. The constant screaming from the victims became annoying in these scenes and I almost wanted them to die just to make them shut up! Otherwise, his best work in years and a film where he is not just content with repeating an old formula (like in "Sleepless" which I liked anyhow), but is actually trying to find a whole new path in his art.
    5Gunnar_Runar_Ingibjargarson

    Good one

    The Card Player' directed and co-authored by leading Italian filmmaker, Dario Argento is quite different from what I expected, based on Argento'' reputation based on his best known film, the horror classic, 'Suspiria' of about 20 years ago. This movie is much less Wes Craven and much more Alfred Hitchcock, although I think Argento does not quite measure up to the Great Hitchcock in his use of subtlety and surprise, although there are a few good surprises in this film.

    While this movie was made by a thoroughly Italian cast and crew, except for Irish actor, Liam Cunningham, almost all the original dialog as we hear it in the film was spoken in English as it was filmed. Mistaking this for a horror film was easy based on the cover art and some of the blurbs on the package. And, these hints are not entirely misleading, as there is a fair amount of intentional horror based on a fairly extended threat of death to a victim seemingly unable to free herself from the situation, unlike Hitchcock's secret threat, suddenly sprung on the unsuspecting victim as in 'Psycho'.

    The mechanics and most business of the story are ultramodern. The victims are kidnapped, bound, and gagged (albeit a bit amateurishly), and the prep sends an e-mail to a female police detective that in order to free the Vic, the police will need to have someone play computer poker with the prep, freeing the Vic by winning two out of three hands. The first victim is a British tourist, bringing the Irish detective attached to the UK consulate in Rome into the case. And, this detective happens to be a forensics expert, so a lot of his early investigations are straight out of the 'CSI' casebook. Although, none are so modern that you couldn't see almost the identical business in a movie made 50 years ago, just as you see them in the murder / suicide investigation scene in Fellini's 'La Dolce Vita'.

    Not only is the plot much more a thriller than a horror show, but the quality of the acting, directing, and camera work is high as well. Unfortunately, I feel the writing, in the implausibility of many plot turns, is just a bit too weak. While Argento may be one of the best known Italian filmmakers working today, his scripts fall far short of the great plot and dialog of Fellini and Bertolucci.

    One of the very first weaknesses is in the way the police failed to play the contact with the prep. Given the chance to bring in an expert poker player to play the hands, that task falls wholly nilly to the female detective who is not only a poor poker player, but has a monkey on her back about gambling and poker, as her father committed suicide after a failure at cards. For the second kidnapping, the police happen upon a detective who knows something about poker, but who fails nonetheless. Only with the third victim do the police enlist the assistance of an expert computer poker player, who succeeds in effecting the release of the victim.

    Explaining more implausibilities starts to give away some of the better parts of the plot, so I will stop there and note that this DVD has my very favorite feature, an audio commentary running the entire length of the film. The commentary is by the cinematic author, Alan Jones rather than by the director or his co-author or producer, but it's pretty good. Since, as the commentator notes, Argento does not film in any of the well-known tourist locations (except for a brief glimpse of the Pantheon and a scene in the Tiber), but in the 'real' bourgeois' Rome. So, commentator Jones gives us an orientation for where we are in Rome and on the events which help us understand the plot. He also points out the virtually total absence of blood in the film, which was a conscious decision by the director, since so many of his other films are so singularly bloody.
    5Bunuel1976

    THE CARD PLAYER (Dario Argento, 2004) **1/2

    I was among those who felt that Argento lost his touch after TENEBRAE (1982), and that his output during the last 20 years or so was just a pale shadow of his best work (with the truly lamentable 1998 version of THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA being the worst of all). While all these films contained some interesting elements, they failed to jell into a satisfying whole; the same, therefore, can be said of his latest offering.

    THE CARD PLAYER was originally intended as a sequel to THE STENDHAL SYNDROME (1996), which had starred the director's talented daughter Asia: however, in the interim she had turned her attention to directing small, personal films and at the time of the proposed shooting was staying in the U.S.; so, the lead character's name and background had to be slightly changed to accommodate a new actress – Stefania Rocca. Unfortunately, the days when Argento's unique visual style was alone worth the price of admission are long gone and, despite a few distinct touches here and there (with the best sequence being when Rocca is stalked at night by the killer in her own house), THE CARD PLAYER looks – and feels – distressingly like the typical made-for-TV movie that fills up the tube's schedule in Italy virtually every week (the fact that the film is considerably less gory than his earlier stuff, with the majority of the murders taking place off-screen, or that none of the cast members other than Rocca herself are well-known, let alone overseas, only adds to this impression)! At least, regular collaborators Claudio Simonetti (music score) and Sergio Stivaletti (make-up effects) are on hand to offer their consistently reliable input…

    Anyway, the cat-and-mouse thriller plot (once one gets over the silly premise that the Police would accept the challenge of a poker game with the killer, even if the prize is the life of a hostage) is intriguing and compelling enough for the most part – but characterization is alarmingly shoddy (despite its attempt to create a romantic situation between Rocca and Liam Cunningham, the latter sent by the British Embassy in Rome to investigate the murders), while the eventual revelation and subsequent climax involving a speeding train are quite a disappointment (though, from what little I recall of Argento's later work, at least OPERA [1987] and SLEEPLESS [2001] were also given lame endings)!
    prod74

    A bit disappointing

    What can I say about this film? It certainly is not a typical Argento film (and I mean that in a very broad sense - there are some things you expect from an Argento film, like gore, tension and a certain visual style), but is it really bad? Well, it's not a terrible movie but from the man that gave us Suspiria, Deep Red and Tenebrae I expected much more.

    First of all it's not giallo but more of a run of the mill detective story. Now, this wouldn't be bad if it was a good detective story, but it's not. The identity of the killer was predictable and some parts of the story did not make any sense. On top of that, the acting was not very good and the music was at best tolerable. And the final scene was just bad and did not make much sense.

    The only good things about the movie were some great shots of Rome, and a couple of good, powerful scenes (like the first 2 murders) that reminded me a little of Argento's better films.

    It's not a very bad movie, it's just a mediocre one. But since it's an Argento movie I expected much more. I give it 5 out of 10.
    6lilac_point_burmese

    Not great Argento but not awful

    This movie deserves a bit more credit - it is not the best Argento film but it is certainly better than Phantom of the Opera. I think the main complaint that an Argento fan could have about this film is it is very un-Argento - it feels a bit more like a gory Ruth Rendell. However the plot is quite tight, the poker playing serial killer is a new concept that I quite appreciated, the main actress I thought was excellent, she reminded me a lot of Franka Potente. Definitely give this one a watch, its not the usual Argento style but it is still a good thriller. Do not watch this one if you are not a fan of Agatha Christie/Ruth Rendell/Inspector Morse and are expecting Argento's usual slightly bizarre edge - this is a pretty ordinary "detective trying to catch serial killer" flick.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      When Anna (Stefania Rocco) is attacked in her home, (suddenly) a pair of dismembered fingers are shown; this is left in / over from shots not included the film, first inferred when John (Liam Cunningham) inspects / lifts the first victim corpse's arm in the mortuary, and then to the water recovered victim, which in a short location 'making of' documentary, is shown as also had missing fingers.
    • Gaffes
      Boom mic visible at the top when English detective comes and insulting begins.
    • Citations

      John Brennan: THIS IS FUCKING BOLLOCKS!

    • Connexions
      Referenced in Vous aimez Hitchcock? (2005)

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    FAQ16

    • How long is The Card Player?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 2 janvier 2004 (Italie)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Italie
    • Langue
      • Italien
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • El amo del juego
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Rome, Lazio, Italie
    • Sociétés de production
      • Opera Film (II)
      • Medusa Film
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 2 000 000 € (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 3 368 452 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 43 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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