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Policier, adjectif

Titre original : Politist, adjectiv
  • 2009
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 55min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
5,4 k
MA NOTE
Policier, adjectif (2009)
Cristi is a policeman who refuses to arrest a young man who offers hash to two of his school mates. "Offering" is punished by the law. Cristi believes that the law will change, he does not want the life of a young man he considers irresponsible to be a burden on his conscience. For his superior the word conscience has an entirely different meaning...
Lire trailer2:04
3 Videos
13 photos
Dark ComedyCrimeDrama

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA police officer refuses to arrest a young man for offering drugs to his friends.A police officer refuses to arrest a young man for offering drugs to his friends.A police officer refuses to arrest a young man for offering drugs to his friends.

  • Réalisation
    • Corneliu Porumboiu
  • Scénario
    • Corneliu Porumboiu
  • Casting principal
    • Dragos Bucur
    • Vlad Ivanov
    • Ion Stoica
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    5,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Corneliu Porumboiu
    • Scénario
      • Corneliu Porumboiu
    • Casting principal
      • Dragos Bucur
      • Vlad Ivanov
      • Ion Stoica
    • 45avis d'utilisateurs
    • 131avis des critiques
    • 81Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 15 victoires et 15 nominations au total

    Vidéos3

    Police, Adjective
    Trailer 2:04
    Police, Adjective
    Police, Adjective: Clip 2
    Clip 2:47
    Police, Adjective: Clip 2
    Police, Adjective: Clip 2
    Clip 2:47
    Police, Adjective: Clip 2
    Police, Adjective: Clip 1
    Clip 1:21
    Police, Adjective: Clip 1

    Photos13

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 6
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    Rôles principaux19

    Modifier
    Dragos Bucur
    Dragos Bucur
    • Cristi
    Vlad Ivanov
    Vlad Ivanov
    • Anghelache
    Ion Stoica
    • Nelu
    Irina Saulescu
    Irina Saulescu
    • Anca
    Cerasela Trandafir
    • Gina
    Marian Ghenea
    • Prosecutor
    Cosmin Selesi
    • Costi
    Serban Georgevici
    • Sica
    George Remes
    George Remes
    • Vali
    • (as Remes George)
    Adina Dulcu
    • Dana
    Dan Cogalniceanu
    • Gica
    Constantin Dita
    • Officer on Duty
    • (as Costi Dita)
    Alexandru Sabadac
    • Alex
    Anca Diaconu
    • Doina
    Radu Costin
    • Victor
    Viorel Nebunu
    • Alex's Father
    Emanoela Tigla
    • Alex's Mother
    Daniel Bîrsan
    • Barman
    • Réalisation
      • Corneliu Porumboiu
    • Scénario
      • Corneliu Porumboiu
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs45

    6,95.4K
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    Avis à la une

    8stensson

    Absolutely not your common police movie

    The Romanian film wonder goes on and what's wonderous about it is that it's not afraid of life, like most movies around the world are. Since the beginning of the 1900s, there's an agreement about that life being absolutely boring. Lucky thing you can cut the film.

    But here, we follow the young policeman on a routine mission, trying to investigate a supposed drug crime. The camera goes on for ten minutes, nothing happens or more likely...everything happens. What's morality about. Following the law or following your conscience? Or is it the same thing? Or should it be? An action drama there the action takes place inside the characters and the viewers. And that's absolutely fair enough.
    DataCraft

    One of the most boring film I ever watched

    As a romanian I can not believe that some people actually liked this. The action is so slow. I mean we spend 10 minutes watching the main character eat soup, in another scene we see him for about 15 minutes undressing when he comes home.

    I mean ... come on what were they trying to do ? Waste film. IMHO

    As for the directing goes I have no objection, as this is very easy to film.

    You can honestly fit the script into 1 A4 page. Just trash IMO. But that does not mean that we do not make good films.

    Better luck next time.
    10howard.schumann

    Provides a welcome dose of conscience

    Like Bruno Dumont's epic police procedural L'Humanité, Police, Adjective is a film of mood, silence, and soul. Winner of the Un Certain Regard Jury Prize at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival, the second feature by Romanian director Corneliu Porumboiu is a follow-up to his black comedy 12:08 East of Bucharest which won the Camera D'Or at Cannes in 2006. Police, Adjective is about a taciturn, plain-clothed police officer who has developed a conscience over making an arrest, an unusual occurrence in the bureaucratic, post-Communist society of Romania where the law is rigidly enforced regardless of its logic. Like Phaaron of L'Humanité, Cristi (Dragos Bucur) is an unlikely cop, an unglamorous member of the working class who wears the same pullover sweater four days in a row and goes about his job in a mechanical and emotionally unexpressive manner.

    Shown at the Vancouver Film Festival, Police, Adjective is set in the director's hometown of Vaslui in northeastern Romania, a venue that looks unbearably bleak. The general atmosphere is one of decay with paint inside the houses peeling and chipped, lockers rusted, mailboxes broken, and computers looking like Model Ts. There are no camera tricks here, only long takes delivered from a horizontal pan, cinematography that deliberately enhances the tedium. Porumboiu devotes long stretches of the film watching Cristi simply going about his routine. On orders from his superior, Nelu (Ion Stoica), he follows Alex (Alexandru Sabadac), a teenager at the local high school who is suspected of buying hash and selling it to his fellow students, shadowing the boy daily from home to school in hopes of finding out the source of the drugs.

    In the course of his investigation, however, Cristi realizes that Alex is just a kid who occasionally smokes pot with some of his pals and is not a threat to society. Taking detailed notes, Cristi avoids meeting with his boss, waiting to find out the source of the hash before making a move, knowing that arresting a sixteen year old boy for smoking will mean a prison term of at least three years and possibly seven. Finally, when he is ordered to make a full report and take action, Cristi refuses to follow orders from the Police Captain, citing his conscience and the fact that the law will soon be repealed. Like Phaaron of L'Humanité, Cristi is willing to remain faithful to what he believes in but his feelings are ignored by those in a position of power.

    In a memorable sequence, Cristi's boss, Captain Anghelache (Vlad Ivanov) brings in a Romanian dictionary and asks him to look up the meaning of the words "conscience", "law", "moral", and "police", attempting to show him that as a police officer he must obey the letter of the law, not impose his own morality on the situation. The scene is cold, efficient, and persuasive but it is obvious that the law he is asked to follow is based more on semantics than on morality. While most of the first half of the film is filled with uneventful surveillance, a scene at home between Cristi and his wife Anca (Irina Saulescu) adds some humor to the dour proceedings. Husband and wife discuss the meaning of the lyrics of a popular song that Anca is playing over and over again, Cristi giving the words a literal meaning which make little sense, while his wife ascribes to them their proper symbolic and poetic meaning.

    Police, Adjective provides a welcome dose of conscience to a genre that has been buried in technology and filled with violence, car chases, and ugliness, a genre that has dealt only with methods and not consequences. While the film is austere and requires a great deal of patience, with little dialogue and no musical score, Porumboiu forces us to relate to the characters by observing their eyes, their physical movements, and their facial expressions. He expects us not only to see but to think about what we are seeing and, in the process, to bring us face to face with what makes us truly human.
    8lee_eisenberg

    conscience meets adjectives

    I recently saw "4 Months, 3 Weeks, 2 Days", about a woman's efforts to have an abortion in Nicolae Ceausescu's Romania. Now comes "Politist, adj." ("Police, Adjective" in English), Romania's submission to the Academy Awards as Best Foreign Language Film of 2009. This one looks at small-town cop Cristi (Dragos Bucur) assigned to investigate a boy smoking hashish, and how he begins to have misgivings about the ethical ramifications of the task.

    What strikes me is how much this small town in Romania looks like Russia. Most of the buildings all have a very Eastern Bloc look. To be certain, there are a few scenes where Dragos goes to the boy's house in what appears to be a posher section of the town, with more modern-looking houses. Many of the scenes in the film are long shots, especially the scene where Cristi and his superior use the dictionary to debate the true meaning of conscience and other words.

    I don't know if I would call this the greatest movie ever made, but I still recommend it. The scene where Cristi eats dinner while his wife has an obnoxious song playing on the computer really shows Cristi's break in terms of conscience, just because of how he reacts.

    Anyway, I like to get to see cultures that we don't often see, and I really liked this movie. I hope that Romania gives us more like this.
    thelasttwohundredyears

    Outsider attempts to do the right thing

    Police, Adjective This is an absolutely brilliant film. Many films have been made in Germany or the Czech Republic or Spain or various Latin American countries, and so on and on, about periods of interregnum between one form of government and another. Writer/Director Porumboiu goes right to the details in Romania. He takes the smallest possible case, an undercover officer checking out a high-school drug dealer, and makes us wonder about the biggest metaphysical situations involving law and justice. Wisely—almost incredibly—Porumboiu sets aside macropolitics and doesn't make a partisan or political film. Instead, he forces us to imagine the links between private behaviour and philosophical concepts.

    Many people are constantly writing that the movie is too slow or too long. Hell, I say that about car-chase movies that are 90 mins. of explosions or 130 mins. of James Cameron's computer-animation teams. There is not one wasted second in this film. It is not indulgent in the slightest. There are no car chases. This is a movie about a narc tailing a high-school kid. That's what it is. The only time the movie really really drags is when Cristi, the narc/undercover guy, is watching the home of the alleged squealer. That does go on for a long time, but, structurally, it makes sense, and Porumboiu leavens it a bit by making Cristi get tea from a nearby shop and discuss what he's doing in a communist-realist way that chips in to the overall narrative.

    The way Porumboiu binds the film together is admirable—we see Cristi early on telling his overweight colleague that that colleague just can't play soccer with them—those are the rules. Then Cristi gets told by the prosecutor that he isn't entitled to comment on laws. And then there's Cristi's girlfriend (the rules of language), and Zelu (sees all laws, accepts none, really) and Cristi's boss, Angelache (the rules of law, expressed by language).

    The endless opening and closing of doors, the bureaucracy, the people who think their lives are so much more important than yours, is compelling. Cristi never really imposes. He just has a sense of what is right (and he is a policing figure). His overweight colleague puts upon him. His lazy (political but useless) colleague Zelu is of no help. He goes to the prosecutor (Marian Ghenea—in a truly wonderful performance) and is granted a promise that we later learn has probably been betrayed. Costi, Vali, Doina—all are unwilling to act, knowingly or unknowingly, towards justice. Part of what made The Death of Mr Lazarescu by Puiu so compelling was precisely the fact that one knew that, whether or not you had the greatest American health insurance in the world (or even the most money in the world, maybe), or you lived in a country with one of the greatest public health insurance programs there were, you still were not immune to basic human failings. If Puiu did that with health care and medicine, Porumboiu does that with law and justice and society. What Poromboiu shows us, relentlessly, is that our lives are contingent upon others, and if others treat us the way we treat them, well. . . .

    There just isn't a bad performance in this film. One would finally have to say that Dragos Bucur is effective in his impossible role. He is the hunched anti-hero post-communist but still communist narc. His girlfriend, Anca, can talk of anaphoras, but when he tries to express what he knows is right, the state, in the person of well-known Vlad Ivanov, gets Cristi out a dictionary from which he cannot escape. Dictionaries, after all, like language, are arbitrary documents. A "tree" in Brazil means something entirely different from a "tree" in Siberia. Language is arbitrary and contextual, and this sophisticated film works with this knowledge.

    This is a carefully filmed movie that rarely draws attention to itself. As far as I can tell, every time Cristi is shadowing someone, the effect is very authentic. There are a lot of long shots. Close shots are sparing. Office shots are always as they should be or oblique. When Cristi gets back to his flat, the way Porumboiu films it so that we could only ever see the hallway and never a bedroom or any kind of intimacy at all is very, very wisely done. In some respects, Porumboiu boldly refuses to answer American hopes. He gives us no cheesy intimacy, and keep us always focused on Cristi, the man outside—outside shadowing a kid who may be a drug dealer, outside the changing Romanian legal system, outside his girlfriend's perfect—but changeable—command of language. Maybe Anca is the one who really ought to be determining things, for images are symbols, and symbols are images.

    As for the climactic scene, 20 mins. of pure dictionary: I can't think of 20 other minutes I'd love to watch more, from _The Getaway_ to _Unforgiven_. The climax of _Police, Adjective_ is utterly riveting, if you've grasped what has gone on before.

    This is just an all-around great movie. At times, you can sense opportunities for indulgence, but Porumboiu never takes them. I hope he'll continue not to.

    Yes, it's a given that people not from the U.S. may not understand movies from other places. But I'm getting a little bit tired of this. I can watch movies from Korea or Argentina or just about any country in the world and enjoy them and understand them and feel my way into them and engage with them intellectually and emotionally.

    Police, Adjective is definitely going to go down as a very important film. It comprises the human and the metaphysical the while excising the obvious political. That makes it political. This is an important film. Negative reviewers desperately cling to seeing "police" as a noun, and that is not what this film is about. ww

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Romania's official submission to 82nd Academy Award's Foreign Language in 2010.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Extraordinary Measures/Fish Tank/Creation/Police, Adjective/Crazy on the Outside (2010)
    • Bandes originales
      Nu te parasesc iubire
      Performed by Mirabela Dauer

      Arranged by Dan Dimitriu

      Lyrics by Dan Ioan Pantoiu

      Produced by Roton Music

      Played and discussed at Cristi's home

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Police, Adjective?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 19 mai 2010 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Roumanie
    • Site officiel
      • Official site
    • Langue
      • Roumain
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Police, Adjective
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Vaslui, Roumanie
    • Sociétés de production
      • 42 Km Film
      • Periscop Film
      • Racova
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 800 000 € (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 53 206 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 19 452 $US
      • 27 déc. 2009
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 162 974 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 55 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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