Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA criminal arrives in a small town and plans to rob the local bank. But when he arrives, he meets a retired professor, and his plans change unexpectedly. The professor lets the thief live in... Tout lireA criminal arrives in a small town and plans to rob the local bank. But when he arrives, he meets a retired professor, and his plans change unexpectedly. The professor lets the thief live in his home, and a troubled friendship arises.A criminal arrives in a small town and plans to rob the local bank. But when he arrives, he meets a retired professor, and his plans change unexpectedly. The professor lets the thief live in his home, and a troubled friendship arises.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Darbon
- (as Sam Jephcott)
- Bank Manager
- (as Bill Pappas)
Avis à la une
As we all know, Donald is a seasoned veteran but U2 guy Larry is new to cinema, and boy does it show.
I guess Donald has about 3,000 pages of dialogue here to Larry's one page. Larry's excuse is that he is playing a guy (we never know his name) who doesn't say much, although he's on screen nearly as much as Donald.
Basically the movie is about Larry (known as the thief) who arrives in town straight off a train and makes an accidental acquaintance with a Professor, played by Sutherland. Bizarrely, the professor invites the thief to stay at his home, while the thief secretly plans a robbery at a local bank.
It's a very slow film that never picks up speed. Donald acts his socks off, but Larry is so quiet and dull, the film hardly makes an impact.
Without Sutherland this film would have bombed. With a different actor playing the thief it might have been better.
I give it 5/10 because of Sutherland but the movie really doesn't deserve it.
Mr. Mullen can definitely give up his day job, he is the cinematic acting discovery of the year. His style is that of James Dean in "Rebel Without A Cause" or Martin Sheen in "Badlands," and he matches the veteran Sutherland in scene after scene. The two are terrific together. Mullen possesses a natural, charismatic charm.
A major problem is the soundtrack, which frequently features a piano in the background at a volume clashing with the actors' lines; at times I was wishing for subtitles.
The professor and the stranger with no name ponder each others lives, contemplating the paths they have chosen, a universal theme we can all relate to. The two leads keep it moving along and make it worthwhile.
The story is simple and the film VERY low-key...so much so that I can understand why many reviewers seem turned off by the movie. I also thought the soundtrack (by Mullen) has decent aspects but at times it sounds very repetitive and needed more life...just like the story. Now I am not saying it's bad...but everything is super low energy and could have used an infusion of life. This is an aspect of the story you'll either love or hate, as I noticed reviewers were very widely divergent...either hating or loving the film.
Overall, I enjoyed the movie because it was different...but it also felt like an interesting experiment that just didn't work. A nice try...but nothing more.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesLarry Mullen Jr is also a member of the group U2.
- Citations
The Professor: [to his student] I don't know who is the more obtuse, you who see questions when there are only answers to be seen, or me who seeks an answer when there might not even be a question.
- Crédits fousThe film shows the credit "based on the film directed by Patrice Leconte "L'Homme du train" screenplay by Patrice Leconte and Claude Klotz" but the original film "L'Homme du train" only credits the screenplay to Claude Klotz (Scenario et dialogues: Claude Klotz)
- ConnexionsRemake of L'homme du train (2002)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Man on the Train?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée
- 1h 40min(100 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1