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The Limits of Control

  • 2009
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 56min
NOTE IMDb
6,2/10
22 k
MA NOTE
The Limits of Control (2009)
The story of a mysterious loner (De Bankolé), a stranger, whose activities remain meticulously outside the law. He is in the process of completing a job, yet he trusts no one, and his objectives are not initially divulged.
Lire trailer1:36
6 Videos
99+ photos
CrimeDramaMysteryThriller

L'histoire d'un mystérieux homme solitaire, un étranger sur le point d'accomplir une mission criminelle.L'histoire d'un mystérieux homme solitaire, un étranger sur le point d'accomplir une mission criminelle.L'histoire d'un mystérieux homme solitaire, un étranger sur le point d'accomplir une mission criminelle.

  • Réalisation
    • Jim Jarmusch
  • Scénario
    • Jim Jarmusch
  • Casting principal
    • Isaach De Bankolé
    • Alex Descas
    • Jean-François Stévenin
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,2/10
    22 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Scénario
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Casting principal
      • Isaach De Bankolé
      • Alex Descas
      • Jean-François Stévenin
    • 124avis d'utilisateurs
    • 113avis des critiques
    • 41Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire au total

    Vidéos6

    The Limits of Control: UK Trailer
    Trailer 1:36
    The Limits of Control: UK Trailer
    The Limits of Control
    Trailer 1:40
    The Limits of Control
    The Limits of Control
    Trailer 1:40
    The Limits of Control
    The Limits of Control
    Clip 1:03
    The Limits of Control
    The Limits of Control
    Clip 1:40
    The Limits of Control
    The Limits Of Control: I Used My Imagination
    Clip 1:04
    The Limits Of Control: I Used My Imagination
    The Limits Of Control: Blonde
    Clip 1:41
    The Limits Of Control: Blonde

    Photos110

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 104
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux48

    Modifier
    Isaach De Bankolé
    Isaach De Bankolé
    • Lone Man
    Alex Descas
    Alex Descas
    • Creole
    Jean-François Stévenin
    Jean-François Stévenin
    • French
    Óscar Jaenada
    Óscar Jaenada
    • Waiter
    • (as Oscar Jaenada)
    Luis Tosar
    Luis Tosar
    • Violin
    Paz de la Huerta
    Paz de la Huerta
    • Nude
    Tilda Swinton
    Tilda Swinton
    • Blonde
    Yûki Kudô
    Yûki Kudô
    • Molecules
    • (as Youki Kudo)
    John Hurt
    John Hurt
    • Guitar
    Gael García Bernal
    Gael García Bernal
    • Mexican
    Hiam Abbass
    Hiam Abbass
    • Driver
    Bill Murray
    Bill Murray
    • American
    Héctor Colomé
    Héctor Colomé
    • Second American
    • (as Hector Colomé)
    María Isasi
    María Isasi
    • Flamenco Club Waitress
    • (as Maria Isasi)
    Norma Yessenia Paladines
    • Flight Attendant
    Alejandro Muñoz Biggie
    • Street Kid
    • (as Alexander Muñoz Biggie)
    Cristina Sierra Sánchez
    • Street Kid
    Pablo Lucas Ortega
    • Street Kid
    • Réalisation
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Scénario
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs124

    6,221.6K
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    Avis à la une

    jayraskin1

    Occasionally Charming But Too Long and Slow

    I guess for Jim Jarmusch, the shot, not the characters or the narrative is the building block and center of the film. Each shot is almost a minor Magritte painting with some detail incongruous enough to make us chuckle or wonder WTF. Why does the lead character order two cups of espresso? Why does the character wear those too tight shiny suits? What is the meaning of the constant exchanging of match boxes? This movie could be called "Match boxes and coffee" instead of "Cigarettes and Coffee," an even slower movie Jarmusch. The narrative is without excitement or tension. For a brief moment I had hoped that Jarmusch would pick up the pace when the hero saw the armed camp/complex. I thought the hero would race down and shoot ten or twenty men and jump out of the way of army jeeps and bound over walls to get inside. Nope, not this movie. Jarmusch just has the character appear inside the complex in the next scene and mysteriously hint at the way he got in. The movie does pick up in about five or six scenes with Paz De La Huerta. She is just called Nude and she appears in a series of what seems like nude poses. It is quite erotic and does make the first half of the picture move entertaining. There is also a nice dialogue scene about Orson Welles "Lady from Shanghai." These are the highlights of the film for me ten minutes watching Paz De La Huerta act without clothes, a discussion of "Lady from Shanghai" and those too tight shiny suits. Amusing, but too laid back.
    lor_

    Jim succumbs to Film Festival-itis

    I like Jim Jarmusch personally (I first met him when we were both new to NYC, in the early '80s) and as a filmmaker, but I believe LIMITS was a mistake. He needs to seek out a wise old mentor, I suggest Werner Herzog (who recently reinvented his career with 3 fine Hollywood genre films in the manner of Sam Fuller, one of Jim's heroes). Otherwise he has fallen into an easy trap: what I call Film Festival-itis.

    Film Festivals were invented in the 1930s and 1940s for local tourism & boosterism reasons (Cannes most obviously), became entrenched in the industry in the 1950s and more recently have spun out of control, numbering in the thousands and pretty much used for phony "snob appeal" in posters & trailers, using the familiar Cannes palm logo to surround the names of many idiotic and worthless events. About 25 years ago I came up with a theory that many of the "hottest" international auteurs were locked into the Fest circuit, simply because they had become the darlings of the two dozen or so most-prominent gatekeepers: the festival directors and programmers. Flash forward towards the present day and you can see how Von Trier and Tarantino spring boarded their careers (and critical acceptance, along with devoted fan bases) from key festival exposure. But for every lucky Lars or Quentin there are thousands of indie filmmakers whose movies are CONSUMED on the festival circuit -virtually their entire audience (apart from that bastard offspring, the "home viewer" addicted to Blu-Ray and DVDs) is at these phony events, with little or no subsequent theatrical exposure. Based on my recent study (using 2000 as a sample year), I estimate that roughly 90% of the indie films being made in the past decade or so have failed to find a theatrical distributor.

    Back in the '80s it was a familiar group: Wenders, Greenaway, Akerman, Angelopoulos, de Oliveira, Ruiz, Tanner, Kaurismaki (and less so his brother Mika), Jarmusch, several Italians like Amelio, Tornatore and Salvatores (the second wave after Bellocchio & Bertolucci of the '60s), plus up & coming talents from exotic places like Taiwan, Iran and South Korea. What most had in common was a devotion to minimalism: the shot, the lonely landscape was pre-eminent. Film festival directors and cinema buffs are united in their devotion to such minimalist beauty, whether it be evident in the work of now-abandoned Miklos Jancso, or the best of Herzog.

    With THE LIMITS OF CONTROL Jarmusch has made a film directly appealing to this film fest sensibility: it answers the pointless question: what new film would Greenaway, Akerman, Raul, Wim & Aki want to see? Such a clubby, insider approach to cinema may be rewarding if one is an amateur navel-gazer with no interest in the audience beyond a small circle of friends -perhaps (I dread) the future of "cinema/video" in a world where You Tube and MySpace are taken seriously. But to my mind this is a dead end, and a career-ending move by someone as talented as Jarmusch.

    To a film buff, the obvious starting point for LIMITS OF CONTROL is Jean-Pierre Melville, whose LE SAMOURAI is the unequal-able quintessence of the loner genre. When the protagonist is lying on his bed in a lonely room, Jim fails to achieve the beauty of Melville's color drained cinematography and experimental simultaneous zoom in/dolly out surreal effects, and although Paz is a photogenic bedmate, he doesn't give poor Isaach any memorable motifs comparable to Alain Delon's wonderful pet parakeet in the apartment.

    So Jim had Isaach wander around, looking cool in a series of Regis Philbin monochrome suit/shirt combos (casting Regis in the role would have elevated the film immensely for me, just as substituting Al Roker for Bill Murray in the original GROUNDHOG DAY would have made that one brilliant). In the very dull & sycophantic "making of" docu on the DVD Jim is explicit in his rant about the importance of repetition and his foolish claim that nothing is original, all stories have been done already, only variations are possible, but in the final product LIMITS OF CONTROL is way too close to Peter Greenaway's trademark approach to cinema. Copping out doesn't hide this fact. And the philosophical doggerel of his screenplay's dialog is as fatuous as Jim's telling remark in the docu that he is such an expert on music and film history, but what he DOESN'T know is what counts. Jim's apologist fans (the LAST thing he needs!) have already littered IMDb with comments on the zen-like nature of LIMITS, but its endlessly repeated guest star dialog is rather on the level of "Confucius say..." instead.

    From an early supporter and fellow Ohioan, I say: it's time to pull your socks up Jim (to paraphrase my favorite Physics professor's Britishism tag line from college). One of my favorite filmmakers in the '60s when I was introduced to Underground Films every Friday & Saturday at midnight showings was George Kuchar, and he has maintained his amateurism for 40 years. I always preferred his funny, cute little story shorts to the bombastic pretentiousness of critical darlings like Michael Snow (see: WAVELENGTH) or Hollis Frampton (ZORN'S LEMMA). Jarmusch's sardonic humor bridges these two extremes of what used to be called the avant garde.

    Jim, you've made the big time -you're almost in the pantheon of greats, so don't blow it by listening to the yes-men; you're better than that! Make a film Jean Renoir would be proud of -it's pointless to go down the abstract imagery road of Godfrey Reggio and Ron Fricke.
    rooprect

    Quickest review you've ever seen

    I'm not going to waste anyone's time with subjective yammering, whether it be positive ("a cinematic tour de force!") or negative ("pretentious artsy fluff!") because, let's face it, those comments don't mean squat to anyone but the person saying it.

    Instead, just rifle through this list of movies and if you liked any of them, you'll probably like this movie.

    "Tetro" (director Francis Ford Coppola, 2009), "Broken Flowers" (director Jim Jarmusch, 2005), "Before It Had a Name" (director Giada Colagrande, 2005), "A Scene at the Sea" (director Takeshi Kitano, 1991), "Der Himmel über Berlin" a.k.a. "Wings of Desire" (director Wim Wenders, 1987), "Paris, Texas" (director Wim Wenders, 1984).

    If you haven't heard of, or seen, any of those then just bear in mind that "Limits of Control", like the movies mentioned above, is very slow, almost uneventful, without a lot of revealing dialogue to carry the story. These stories are told in images, and it can be a real challenge keeping up, not because there are a lot of crazy twists and turns, but because there's almost nothing. I could sum up the plot of this movie in 8 words: "a day in the life of a hit-man". But if you're up for a challenge, give it a shot.
    lefaikone

    Jim, next time you get a midlife crisis, buy a Harley like the rest of us

    I think I can somehow imagine what Jarmusch was trying to deliver with this - some sort of an existentialistic feeling of being abandoned in this world, and how arts and music etc. reflect our world-view and life in general. May have worked in theory, but definitely not in practice. To me, Jim Jarmusches works are all about cutting the technical nonsense to the minimum, and replacing it with powerful inner depth, such as interesting and multileveled characters - this one seemed to be the other way around.

    The whole thing smelt like new wave and Godard ten miles away, with the whole style, and all the references to it (for example the Spanish girl holding the gun to Bankolé's face was almost exact reference to Godard's Made in U.S.A.) - and I didn't like the scent of it one bit. It was superficial, and didn't evoke any feelings in me. It was like Jarmusch was trying to speak with a language that wasn't his own. And the whole anti-capitalist "black James Bond" theme came as just naive to me.

    About the only things that left me a good taste in my mouth, was the feeling of loneliness and emptiness that it delivered, plus John Hurt's short appearance with his monologue with the Kaurismäki- reference. That's about it, and even the mood was almost ruined by the two-pence Neil Young that kept on howling on the back.

    Never would have believed to say this about a Jarmusch movie, but it was a huge disappointment.
    ametaphysicalshark

    Impressively photographed, slow but involving and never a bore

    Someone needs to tell Jarmusch and like-minded directors and writers that monotone conversations about the nature/meaning/origin of so-and-so are to art films what sweaty men walking away from explosions in slow motion are to big-budget post-Bruckheimer action flicks. For all of Jarmusch's talk in his interview with Gavin Smith in Film Comment about avoiding clichés he seemed to fall into that trap pretty easily. Much of the dialogue in the film is really quite horrible, shallow, miserable artsy nonsense. Then you have some conversations, particularly in the latter half of the film, which are absolutely wonderful. You also have to look at the fact that the 'horrible' dialogue in the previous conversations ultimately worked as they were necessary for the thematic aspects of the film to make sense in the beautifully confusing way they do. Glad to say I was wrong about Jarmusch being the emperor's new clothes and that "The Limits of Control" is a spectacular aesthetic achievement thanks to both Jarmusch and DP Chris Doyle's work. It's absolutely wonderful overall, leading up to an absolutely fantastic final thirty minutes. It has its flaws and certainly could've done without people approaching and leaving in slow motion which just seemed really cheesy but overall this is just a top-notch film, and the comparisons made to Rivette films like "Pont du nord", "Paris nous appartient", and "Out 1" in the aforementioned Film Comment interview by Gavin Smith and Jarmusch himself not only make sense, but are well-deserved. A cinematic enigma, and nothing is more attractive to me than that.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The Finnish movie, to which Man with Guitar (Sir John Hurt) refers, is La vie de bohème (1992) by Director Aki Kaurismäki, a friend of Writer and Director Jim Jarmusch.
    • Gaffes
      When the Lone Man travels from Madrid to Sevilla, he enters a S 100 AVE train set. But the interior shots are clearly done in a S 103 (Velaro E), a totally different - and much newer - type of train.
    • Citations

      Blonde: Are you interested in films, by any chance? I like really old films. You can really see what the world looked like, thirty, fifty, a hundred years ago. You know the clothes, the telephones, the trains, the way people smoked cigarettes, the little details of life. The best films are like dreams you're never sure you've really had. I have this image in my head of a room full of sand. And a bird flies towards me, and dips its wing into the sand. And I honestly have no idea whether this image came from a dream, or a film. Sometimes I like it in films when people just sit there, not saying anything.

    • Crédits fous
      "NO LIMITS NO CONTROL" at the end of the closing credits
    • Connexions
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: Watchmen/Shuttle/12 (2009)
    • Bandes originales
      Feedbacker
      Written & Performed by Boris

      Courtesy of Boris

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    FAQ20

    • How long is The Limits of Control?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Is "The Limits of Control" based on a novel?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 2 décembre 2009 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
      • Japon
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Espagnol
      • Arabe
      • Français
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • No Limits No Control
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Torres Blancas - 37 Avenida de América, Madrid, Espagne(apartment tower)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Focus Features
      • Entertainment Farm (EF)
      • PointBlank Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 426 688 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 55 820 $US
      • 3 mai 2009
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 1 981 134 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 56 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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