Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen a titan music mogul is targeted with a ransom plot, he is jammed up in a life-or-death moral dilemma.When a titan music mogul is targeted with a ransom plot, he is jammed up in a life-or-death moral dilemma.When a titan music mogul is targeted with a ransom plot, he is jammed up in a life-or-death moral dilemma.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
A$AP Rocky
- Yung Felon
- (as A$AP Rocky a.k.a. Rakim Mayers)
Ice Spice
- Marisol Cepeda
- (as Isis 'Ice Spice' Gaston)
Avis à la une
I feel like the only reason Denzel accepted this script is because it's a Spike Lee joint. I felt like the soundtrack was unused/left over music from one of Spikes unreleased films from the 90's. The cuts are messy. Not the worst film but I always debate my cousin about who has the better filmography Denzel or Will Smith...he finally has a poor film to use against me.
Spike Lee movies are always a hit or miss with me. Loved his first, She's gotta have it, Malcolm X (too long), Do the Right Thing (too long), but I never got past the few other movies I saw. IMO the scoring of his movies is atrocious. And he seems to stretch out the scenes filled with dialog too long to the point you want to say "cut" or edit. And that's what I felt watching this "Apple Studio" movie. Spike in an interview said Apple was the only studio that would finance it. It's going straight to stream in about two weeks.
The acting is subpar and his close-ups of Denzel pondering decisions are laughable. Most of the actors are TV actors so that explains it the subpar-ness.
The movie perks up when the ransom drop takes place, but even then you wonder - WHAT the H? The money bag is passed from moto biker to moto biker and the police lose the actual money bag. From my understanding when there's a kidnapping and ransom of a high-powered executive like David King, the FBI takes the lead. Did Spike NOT do his home work?
Denzel is in every scene and that can be a bit too much. I wished to see more of the police work to find the kidnapper, but that falls to Denzel and his chauffeur. Which wouldn't happen in real life. An executive of a record company wouldn't go on the hunt himself. IMO. He would have security do it. Which was also a head-scratcher. The music executive did not have a bodyguard. Even JayZ has a bodyguard.
If you have Apple TV, I would recommend you wait for Highest2Lowest, it will be streaming in a week.
The acting is subpar and his close-ups of Denzel pondering decisions are laughable. Most of the actors are TV actors so that explains it the subpar-ness.
The movie perks up when the ransom drop takes place, but even then you wonder - WHAT the H? The money bag is passed from moto biker to moto biker and the police lose the actual money bag. From my understanding when there's a kidnapping and ransom of a high-powered executive like David King, the FBI takes the lead. Did Spike NOT do his home work?
Denzel is in every scene and that can be a bit too much. I wished to see more of the police work to find the kidnapper, but that falls to Denzel and his chauffeur. Which wouldn't happen in real life. An executive of a record company wouldn't go on the hunt himself. IMO. He would have security do it. Which was also a head-scratcher. The music executive did not have a bodyguard. Even JayZ has a bodyguard.
If you have Apple TV, I would recommend you wait for Highest2Lowest, it will be streaming in a week.
This was a "we made it" film. Spike Lee, Denzel Washington and Jeffrey Wright are far from needing to prove their filmmaking and acting chops, so this was a love letter to New York, Brooklyn and Black art. It's a timely representation of Black men building from the ground up, growing together and being a bridge to the young men (A$AP Rocky) who aspire to become them. The plot fell flat for me, because more could've been done with the characters, especially Jeffrey Wright's role. I watched and became more engrossed in the art collection than the story itself.
I loved seeing Spike Lee and Denzel Washington teaming up again for a new film. From start to finish, though, the movie felt scattered-jumping around with no clear plot or objective. As expected, Denzel did his thing and really carried it. A$AP Rocky wasn't bad, and Ilfenesh Hadera held her own, but overall the film was just... okay. At times, it definitely gave off Godfather of Harlem vibes, and it was New York through and through from beginning to end.
Movie Grade:C-/C.
Movie Grade:C-/C.
Denzell Washington is a very successful music producer with, as he calls it, "The best ears in the business". He sold off a piece of his corporation a few years back and lives an opulent lifestyle. But the changed economics of the music business, a company sniffing around to buy the company from under him, and a desire to be more of a producer than a businessman have worn on him. He arranges for a loan to buy a block of shares that will give him control. And then his son is kidnapped.
Many of you will recognize this as a remake of Kurosawa's Tengoku to jigoku aka High and Low. As a result, the first big plot twist did not surprise me. What did surprise me was Spike Lee's expansion, not only of the divide between the highest and lowest wealth in the movie -- although that was by making Washington so very rich -- as the expansion of the ending. Several of Kurosawa's movies seem to end abruptly to me, pointlessly so: an ending that shocks rather than concludes. That is, undoubtedly, a cultural difference. But Lee comes down on my side, and with equally stern cultural self-criticism. In doing so, he demonstrates this is a sturdy story, both in terms of its thriller/kidnapping plot and in terms of how societies view art, money, and privilege.
Many of you will recognize this as a remake of Kurosawa's Tengoku to jigoku aka High and Low. As a result, the first big plot twist did not surprise me. What did surprise me was Spike Lee's expansion, not only of the divide between the highest and lowest wealth in the movie -- although that was by making Washington so very rich -- as the expansion of the ending. Several of Kurosawa's movies seem to end abruptly to me, pointlessly so: an ending that shocks rather than concludes. That is, undoubtedly, a cultural difference. But Lee comes down on my side, and with equally stern cultural self-criticism. In doing so, he demonstrates this is a sturdy story, both in terms of its thriller/kidnapping plot and in terms of how societies view art, money, and privilege.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film is a reinterpretation of Akira Kurosawa's Entre le ciel et l'enfer (1963), which was in turn based on the novel "King's Ransom" by Evan Hunter, published in 1959 under his pen name "Ed McBain."
- GaffesWhen David King and Yung Felon are talking in the studio, Yung Felon takes off his headphones midway through the scene. However, in a later shot he still has them on.
- Citations
Paul Christopher: I ain't gonna lie. I wanna hurt this boy.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Radio Dolin: Best Movies of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival (2025)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- 上流× 下流
- Lieux de tournage
- Brooklyn, New York, États-Unis(on location)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 2h 13min(133 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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