Un capitaine de l'armée doit utiliser ses années d'entraînement tactique et son expertise militaire lorsqu'une attaque coordonnée simultanée menace la station d'interception de missiles à di... Tout lireUn capitaine de l'armée doit utiliser ses années d'entraînement tactique et son expertise militaire lorsqu'une attaque coordonnée simultanée menace la station d'interception de missiles à distance dont elle est aux commandes.Un capitaine de l'armée doit utiliser ses années d'entraînement tactique et son expertise militaire lorsqu'une attaque coordonnée simultanée menace la station d'interception de missiles à distance dont elle est aux commandes.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 2 nominations au total
- Nikolai
- (as Steven A Davis)
Avis à la une
More bizarrely to all that, we have Chris Hemsworth providing comic interludes. Did the mildly simmering tension really need that?
Not really. The scenario is a claustrophobic set, resulting in intense and brutal fights, with basically the one goal that's in the title. Forget any notion of checking to see if the rest of the ships crew are alive (we told you we used nerve gas and shot them all, but maybe we didn't...), she has one mission and will carry it out. Tim Wong (who's also the films fight coordinator) as Zhang and Ingrid Kleinig (who's also the films second unit director) as Kira are most known for their stunt work, so it's no surprise that they are involved in some of the more physical acts. Steven A. Davis as Nikolai is also the films assistant fight coordinator, though he's not that active in fighting. Emotional support comes from Mayen Mehta as Corporal Rahul Shah playing the introverted subordinate soldier - a turtle owning family man - while Rhys Muldoon as Lieutenant Colonel Clark Marshall fills in the emotional back story about how the Captain has suffered in her career, with Belinda Jombwe as Ensign Washington giving a brief motivational speech . That seems to be the take away from the film; all the main characters feel/should feel wronged by the system, and it's how they deal with those feelings that separates which side their on.
The set is very minimal and the CGI reminiscent of 80's VHS stuff - it gets the story where it needs to go - while the soundtrack accents the vision; you can watch with subtitles and know something is going to happen by the "tense instrumental music".
IMDB also have Ali Kadhim as Dark Cloud (Japanese Sword Guy), yet he's not included in the films credits (and I don't remember him in the film). Maybe the producers thought that was one cliche too far?
This reminded me of some straight to VHS average action flicks that you'd pick up from the rental place completely deliberately for that day where you just want a mindless movie and as such, it worked very well. Did I laugh and roll my eyes at convenient plotpoint? Sure. But I also expected to.
I kinda liked seeing a female lead for once. Just like male leads powers are always played way up and how John McLane can still run and kick ass after being battered and bruised beyond any reason, just flying away from explosions instead of exploDING, so did she. If your suspension of disbelief fails only on the part of her being a woman, I guess you truely have it ingrained in you that "women = weak" and can't even for a moment tune that out in a silly action flick.
This kinda reminded me of some "Tomb Raider" kind of deal, with the exception that I actually enjoyed this more than any Tomb Raider movie.
If you are "tired of feeling like my identity is always attacked by films such as this.", that is just sad. There have been crazy egomaniac villains that have agendas like this in movies for a small eternity and obviously the movie's not saying he's right.
If you are very keen on only seeing agendas in women being shown as anything capable, do yourself a favor and skip it. If you're looking for a generic action flick for a mindless day? Sure, why not :)
Almost right off the bat, Patacky gets down to action gear where we can enjoy looking at her very well muscled shoulders and arms (and that's kind of the main interest of the movie -- they really are nice to look at). There's lots of hand-to-hand combat and a fairly high body count, with the hero(ine) taking and dishing out lots of punishment and displaying superhuman stamina, but I'd be hard pressed to think of any original twist on anything that happened here. The idea that the US missile defence system depends on a single little remote ocean base that seems about as hard to knock over as a candy store is pretty implausible.
It feels like a B-grade version of Die Hard.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesElsa Pataky and Chris Hemsworth are married. This is the second movie they've collaborated on after Horse Soldiers (2018).
- GaffesWhen Captain Collins arrives via helicopter to the platform in the middle of the ocean, she exits the helicopter and there is no wind what so ever. Her hair and clothes do not move at all despite standing next to a helicopter with its rotor spinning and the sea in the background clearly has small waves, indicating some wind.
This scene was clearly shot inside against a green-screen.
- Citations
JJ's Dad: What's the one thing I've taught you since you were little? The one rule in life?
JJ Collins: Never stop fighting.
- Crédits fousHalfway through the closing credits, the TV salesman is seen lying on a vibrating massage recliner.
- ConnexionsReferenced in 420 Awards - 5th Annual Event (2023)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Interceptor?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- مهمة اعتراضية
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 15 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 39 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1