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Feux rouges

  • 2004
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 45min
NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
3,2 k
MA NOTE
Feux rouges (2004)
CriminalitéDrameMystèreThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA cross-country trip turns out to be a nightmare for a troubled couple.A cross-country trip turns out to be a nightmare for a troubled couple.A cross-country trip turns out to be a nightmare for a troubled couple.

  • Réalisation
    • Cédric Kahn
  • Scénario
    • Georges Simenon
    • Laurence Ferreira Barbosa
    • Cédric Kahn
  • Casting principal
    • Jean-Pierre Darroussin
    • Carole Bouquet
    • Vincent Deniard
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,6/10
    3,2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Cédric Kahn
    • Scénario
      • Georges Simenon
      • Laurence Ferreira Barbosa
      • Cédric Kahn
    • Casting principal
      • Jean-Pierre Darroussin
      • Carole Bouquet
      • Vincent Deniard
    • 36avis d'utilisateurs
    • 57avis des critiques
    • 74Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 nominations au total

    Photos7

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    Rôles principaux55

    Modifier
    Jean-Pierre Darroussin
    Jean-Pierre Darroussin
    • Antoine
    Carole Bouquet
    Carole Bouquet
    • Hélène
    Vincent Deniard
    • L'homme en cavale…
    Alain Dion
    • Le collègue de bureau
    Olivier Fornara
    Olivier Fornara
    • Le serveur de la brasserie
    Damien Givelet
    • Le présentateur des actualités (on tv)
    Philippe Ivancic
    • Le serveur quartier Antoine
    Candide Joseph
    • La femme accidentée
    Brigitte Pain
    • La serveuse du bar routier
    Igor Skreblin
    • Le Croate au téléphone…
    Fabrice Robert
    • Le barman du Nirvana
    Micky Finn
    • Le Rocker Irlandais…
    Moussa Boucetta
    • L'employé gare de Tours
    Thomas Germaine
    • Le gendarme du 1er barrage
    Patrick Servoin
    • Le chef de Gare de Ste Maure
    Yves Michel
    • Le barman de Ste Maure
    Stéphane Chivot
    • L'homme accidenté
    Hervé Lassïnce
    • Le pompiste
    • Réalisation
      • Cédric Kahn
    • Scénario
      • Georges Simenon
      • Laurence Ferreira Barbosa
      • Cédric Kahn
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs36

    6,63.1K
    1
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    10

    Avis à la une

    10Quinoa1984

    If you love diving into a character via roadhouse blues in France, you'll really like this movie, if not love it

    The first thing to take note in Red Lights is that the story is not rushed: Antoine (Jean-Pierre Darrousin) is perhaps a passive-aggressive, or maybe just having a mid-life crisis. He and his wife Helene are planning for a trip to pick up the kids from summer camp. But the drive hits some things in the way- he has a beer and a whiskey before leaving; a traffic jam gets to Antoine; he drinks again at a roadside; he and his wife bicker; he drinks again; she leaves, and once he realizes he can't catch up with her, he decides to have a night with a little more drinking ahead. While he says he doesn't drink too often ("two, three times a year", he says), this night is different. Especially with a fugitive somewhere out on the loose, as the radio says.

    Cedric Kahn is a skilled and trust-worthy director (via France) for a few reasons in dealing with his latest film Red Lights. He doesn't make the pace in the tenser scenes (with a couple of juicy exceptions) really quick cut like in a choppy Hollywood piece. He brings an interesting blend of visuals with the city and the roads, the cars, then as it grows darker outside, the lights outside become key. When Antoine awakes the next morning on the roadside, he's out in the country. As well, he has a great blend of music from Debusy, whom I may have heard before this film but never recognized. It's a fascinating element to add with the impending doom of the film's story. But the key thing that the director can do for a film is the right casting, and here's it's impeccable in dealing with the three leads. Jean-Pierre Darrousin is terrific at conveying the mind-set of this husband in a rocky relationship. Then in the second and third acts, despite what he's doing on the road, he keeps consistent in keeping as the film's reluctant hero. Credit should also be given to first-time actor Vincent Deniard, who is perfect at being the "quiet one you got to watch". And Carole Bouquet is a fair counterpart to a Darrosin.

    Although the denouement starts to drag, for my money the film's main chunk doesn't. It would be one thing if Antoine just got drunk. But there's also a good interest in the talking points with the character, as he decides to blow his mind in the process. Red Lights is definitely an art-house film that won't please everyone (the film ends rather realistically, without the kind of extra bit American audiences might want that's more intimate here), but it's still very compelling.
    7christopher-underwood

    we struggle to assure ourselves as to what is really happening

    Opens with brilliantly shot sequences and if it then moves into more traditional French bourgeoisie territory it does it with passion and intelligence. As the narrative unfolds, involving a car drive that begins tetchy and proceeds to become really scary, we identify with the main protagonists and are as concerned as the male lead when the other disappears. A lot of the first part of the film is shot through the front screen of the car but this is so well done with the accompanying dialogue, developing tragedy and suspense we are almost on the edge of our seats. We lurch into nightmare territory and things become almost unbearable as we struggle to assure ourselves as to what is really happening. I was not as interested as the director in the relationship between the high flying wife and the husband who sees himself as her poodle and presumably this is why I found the ending simplistic and verging on the insulting, but never mind a good ride up to then!
    Ali_John_Catterall

    The Red & The Black

    Red Lights is like a bad dream you might have if you nodded off over the wheel during a long car journey, with the roar of the motorway and the crunch of tyres on gravel seeping into your subconscious. It's so ambient, it would work just as well as a radio play. En route to collecting their kids from summer camp, 'married alive' couple Antoine (Pierre-Darroussin) and Helene (Bouquet) bicker in the car, as Antoine accuses her of cramping his style. The only way this sad little man can assert himself is to pull over and slug whisky after whisky in every roadside bar. When his furious wife bails out to catch the train instead, it's the start of one of those Long Dark Nights of the Soul for both parties. 'I got sick of playing the good little doggie', Antoine tells his mysterious hitchhiker, in one of the movie's most memorable exchanges. 'You're like my doggie,' sneers his passenger. 'Always thirsty.' 'Where's your dog?' 'He's dead…' Based on the Georges Simenon novel, here's a dark little number, blackly comic, and as searing as the red neon lights that accompany each pit stop on the road to Hell.
    Larry-115

    Two thirds of a good thriller

    Red Lights does not disappoint for artful cinematic tension, mining the rich resources of the French thriller -- no one can craft a thriller like the French. As the story unfolds, the viewer is driven increasingly into unease by the movie's primary conceit: the sudden unraveling of the milquetoast male lead before and then during a road trip into the country (in the throng of traffic during French vacation season) to pick up the couple's kids from camp. This ultimately has disastrous consequences for both husband and wife, despite their separating early in the story.

    There are very effective touches here, unique to the French thriller. I especially liked Kahn's fearless willingness to run a protagonist straight into the ground so we can watch him grossly err and see him swerve into disaster, a risk most American directors wouldn't have the guts to take. He infuriates us and we are in total fear for him all at the same time. I also liked the way that Kahn can imbue simple sequences, like a series of phone calls, with utter tension.

    What I did not like was the encroachment of pat, storytelling elements. The resolution is purely canned, and in particular there is one coincidence in the movie that is so Hollywood -- so Jerry Bruckheimer -- that it made me wince in embarrassment. It almost seems that, at the end, another director altogether stepped in to take the helm.

    Red Lights is definitely worth seeing, but Kahn should have stayed the course with his somber, bold storytelling, rather than chickening out as he did. A good movie that could have easily been better.
    9lawprof

    A Nervy Thriller: Contemporary French Noir

    Director Cedric Kahn's "Red Lights" alternates between bright day and scary night. Antoine Dunand (Jean-Pierre Darrousin) is an insurance company employee who may enjoy a decent salary but he feels outclassed, and is out-earned I'm sure, by his corporate attorney spouse, Helene (Carole Bouquet). They have a nice, urban apartment and two young kids, a boy and a girl, both at camp eagerly awaiting pickup by their parents.

    Antoine feels neglected by Helene, actually hated, and he even half-suspects her time with fellow male employees goes beyond business. He consoles himself with beer and scotch, preferably one after the other. He's clearly becoming, if he isn't already, an alcoholic.

    The two leave to pick up their children from a distant camp. It's holiday-making time in France and the highways are jammed. An impatient Antoine, infuriated by the crawl, takes two successive detours, one off the main highway, the other for several refuelings at on-the-way bars. His driving becomes increasingly erratic, his wife's complaints more provocative. Eventually she realizes he's not just driving poorly, he's getting progressively more smashed. An argument ensues interrupting the classical music on their radio. Her anger at his driving is a coda for their growing estrangement. And then a bulletin announces a dangerous criminal has broken prison and is on the loose.

    Recognizing that Antoine is really loaded and he won't yield the car keys, Helene runs off while her husband is knocking down scotch, leaving a note that she'll take a train.

    Antoine is excessively upset at finding Helene missing-though befogged by booze, he also probably recognizes his own weirdness. Setting off to intercept her train he accepts a morosely quiet hitchhiker (Vincent Deniard), a fellow who offers no name but guess who he really is (hint above).

    The film now enters a dark and isolated countryside where Antoine, despite his towering blood alcohol level, becomes justifiably afraid of his mostly silent young passenger.

    The ride becomes a trip to terror for Antoine who sobers up enough to know he better master a deteriorating and life-threatening situation. Having done that he hunts for his wife. To tell more would be to spoil an original, well-acted story about fairly ordinary people who have let their marriage grow stale for all the usually mundane reasons that presage a relationship crisis.

    The three main characters make "Red Lights," a title that superficially is about Antoine's reckless disregard of traffic signals but actually spotlights the warnings we receive and often ignore about impending personal crises, work. Largely unknown outside of French cinema, all three well-experienced and effective lead actors keep the viewer glued to the screen.

    Compared to the current star vehicle hit, "Collateral," "Red Lights" carries forward true, outstanding noir drama by focusing on the straying from safe paths of ordinary people in common situations.

    9/10

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    Criminalité
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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Gaffes
      At the beginning of the movie, the main characters meet at a cafe in the late afternoon. They then go home and get ready to travel to Bordeaux to pick up their kids. On the trip to Bordeaux, they are stuck in heavy traffic. Although it is now early evening, the vertical shadows cast by the cars indicate that the traffic scenes were shot at mid-day.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Le documentaire culturel: Le siècle de Simenon (2014)
    • Bandes originales
      Nuages
      from "Nocturnes"

      Written by Claude Debussy

      Performed by Etienne Baudo and LOrchestre de l'Opéra national de Paris

      Conducted by Manuel Rosenthal

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Red Lights?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 3 mars 2004 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Site officiel
      • Official site (France)
    • Langues
      • Français
      • Serbo-croate
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Red Lights
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Cléré les Pins, France(The garage where Antoine has his tyre changed.)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Alicéléo
      • France 3 Cinéma
      • Gimages
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 673 828 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 3 202 $US
      • 22 août 2004
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 2 394 429 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 45min(105 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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