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Il 6° giorno

Titolo originale: The 6th Day
  • 2000
  • T
  • 2h 3min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,9/10
131.544
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
4843
72
Arnold Schwarzenegger in Il 6° giorno (2000)
Theatrical Trailer from Columbia Pictures
Riproduci trailer1: 23
2 video
99+ foto
AzioneCyber ThrillerFantascienzaMisteroThrillerThriller cospirativo

Un uomo incontra un clone di se stesso e si imbatte in una grande cospirazione sui cloni che conquistano il mondo.Un uomo incontra un clone di se stesso e si imbatte in una grande cospirazione sui cloni che conquistano il mondo.Un uomo incontra un clone di se stesso e si imbatte in una grande cospirazione sui cloni che conquistano il mondo.

  • Regia
    • Roger Spottiswoode
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Cormac Wibberley
    • Marianne Wibberley
  • Star
    • Arnold Schwarzenegger
    • Michael Rapaport
    • Tony Goldwyn
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,9/10
    131.544
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    4843
    72
    • Regia
      • Roger Spottiswoode
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Cormac Wibberley
      • Marianne Wibberley
    • Star
      • Arnold Schwarzenegger
      • Michael Rapaport
      • Tony Goldwyn
    • 354Recensioni degli utenti
    • 125Recensioni della critica
    • 49Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 8 candidature totali

    Video2

    The 6th Day
    Trailer 1:23
    The 6th Day
    The 6th Day Epk
    Featurette 1:24
    The 6th Day Epk
    The 6th Day Epk
    Featurette 1:24
    The 6th Day Epk

    Foto120

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    + 114
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    Interpreti principali64

    Modifica
    Arnold Schwarzenegger
    Arnold Schwarzenegger
    • Adam Gibson
    Michael Rapaport
    Michael Rapaport
    • Hank Morgan
    Tony Goldwyn
    Tony Goldwyn
    • Michael Drucker
    Michael Rooker
    Michael Rooker
    • Robert Marshall
    Sarah Wynter
    Sarah Wynter
    • Talia Elsworth
    Wendy Crewson
    Wendy Crewson
    • Natalie Gibson
    Rodney Rowland
    Rodney Rowland
    • Wiley
    • (as Rod Rowland)
    Terry Crews
    Terry Crews
    • Vincent
    Ken Pogue
    Ken Pogue
    • Speaker Day
    Colin Cunningham
    Colin Cunningham
    • Tripp
    Robert Duvall
    Robert Duvall
    • Dr. Griffin Weir
    Wanda Cannon
    Wanda Cannon
    • Katherine Weir
    Taylor Reid
    Taylor Reid
    • Clara Gibson
    • (as Taylor Anne Reid)
    Jennifer Gareis
    Jennifer Gareis
    • Virtual Girlfriend
    Don McManus
    Don McManus
    • RePet Salesman
    Steve Bacic
    Steve Bacic
    • Johnny Phoenix
    Christopher Lawford
    Christopher Lawford
    • Police Lieutenant
    Mark Brandon
    Mark Brandon
    • RePet Spokesman
    • Regia
      • Roger Spottiswoode
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Cormac Wibberley
      • Marianne Wibberley
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti354

    5,9131.5K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8movieed1

    Interesting Concept Gets Better With Age

    What a surprise! Must have missed this or it bombed at the box office. However watching this 18 year old movie (made in 2000), it seems to have stood the test of time. Much of the set designs, costumes and even self driving Chevy's and Drone style Helicopters! Super forward thinking concepts. It felt up to date and still relevant. Fun surprise of a flick. It has ages well like a good wine. 8 stars from me, kept our rapt attention. Well balanced and believeable sci fi, great sets, good soundtrack and lots of fun....WITHOUT ZOMBIES! LOL
    xanada73

    Not Really About Cloning

    This film was pushed as a dissertation on the ethical issues and social implications of cloning in the world of the near future, and most viewers seem to have interpreted it as just that. But the truth of the matter is, the aspect of human cloning isn't really the crux of this film at all: it's the 'syncorder' technology. Theoretically, we could clone a human being now, but such a process would be a threat to no one; we'd simply have a totally seperate individual with the same DNA the individual from whom he/she was cloned. The ability to 'synchord' peoples memories and personalities and implant them into the clone, however, allows the films villains to insidiously 'replace' their victims. Well, if you have a bloody syncorder, to hell with cloning! These people could already conquer the world by retrieving classified secrets from people to whom they give 'retinal scans!' Also, the existence of the syncorder implies that the information storage and retrieval systems of the human brain have been cracked. If that were the case, wouldn't people be able to build more advanced computer programs than the mindless, repetitive, doll-like imitations of SimPal Cindy and the Virtual Girlfriend?

    The fact is, this world is not one of the 'near future,' because the kind of technology required to build a synchorder, let alone one as small and easy to use as the 'vision testing machine' used by this film's villainry, is not going to be available to use for a long, looong time. Since the characters ignore this, and focus almost entirely on the mundane concept of cloning, most of the important questions are not asked. Arnold's clone wonders if he is human. Well of course he's human! And the idea that he doesn't have a soul simply because he is a clone is repulsive; how about not having a soul because his memories and personality emanate from a digital information storage device?

    Barring this, I think that this was a good action flick embedded in a surprisingly well done science fiction film. Innovative direction, if not choreography, and the movie puts a lot of things taken for granted from Arnie's previous action films on their heads, which is fun to watch. Having to kill the same people over and over ("Yeah, yeah, we've all been killed before."), and two Arnies arguing with each other and double teaming the bad guys, for example. My only problem; Arnold is some kind of extreme sports chartered helicopter pilot; how does that explain his trademark aim, paramilitary training, and the ability to effortlessly kill people with his bare hands? We know he HAS to be able to do these things, but it still makes no sense in this case.
    Tom Schulz

    Decent sci-fi flick with failed potential

    I recently had the pleasure of teaching the wonders of film criticism to an English composition class at Marietta College in Marietta, Ohio. The experience was enjoyable, and the class posed a number of questions. One of the more interesting questions concerned the films I had seen that I believed had potential, but ultimately failed in execution. While I have seen a number of films that fit into this category, I couldn't think of a decent example. This was because I hadn't seen "The 6th Day" yet. What could have been an interesting and exciting look at the evils of cloning was a "B" grade action film at best, despite an above-par script and one of Arnold Schwarzenegger's better roles to date.

    The film's premise is heavily based in TRUE science fiction; that is, fiction having its basis in scientific truth, using projections of the future to fully examine some aspect of our society. Sorry to go into such an elaborate definition, but I believe a lot of stuff gets swept into the category of science fiction simply because it has a robot, or takes place in outer space. But I digress.

    This fictional reality here deals with cloning. In the film, which takes place in the "near future," cloning is an every-day practice, but only with pets and animals. Cloning people has been outlawed, as the original human cloning project went horribly wrong. Schwarzenegger plays Adam Gibson, a decent family man and helicopter pilot chartered to fly Michael Drucker (Tony Goldwyn), a rich businessman who owns Replacement Technologies. This corporation is at the height of cloning technology, running everything from a fish cloning company to help repopulate the oceans, to "RePet," a company that clones dead family pets. There's even a rumor that the company's head doctor (Robert Duvall) is experimenting with illegal human cloning. Something goes terribly wrong on Drucker's first flight, and before he knows, Gibson discovers he has been cloned. Its up to him to discover the secret controversy, and get his life back.

    With this premise, the film is wide open to make many social observations, and does so very well, on occasion. Much of the legalities concerning cloning, as well as the ethical concerns, are discussed and examined by the characters. Even though the technology exists in the future, it is not widely accepted. Some of these observations are stated with all the eloquence you could expect from an Arnold/action film, but others are done so subtly, and surprisingly, with biting humor. Much of the concept of "RePet" is quite amusing.

    However, if science fiction is the film's basis, lame action sequences are its filler. In between these intriguing dialogues are shoddy, cookie-cutter action scenes one should expect from a made for TV film. No matter if it's a car chase, a laser gun shoot-out, or a helicopter battle, it all feels very dull. It's not that I'm knocking these things, because they have to appear in action film; I just wish they were done well. Ultimately, the action suffers from a lack of creativity, which ironically, is where the rest of the script excels.

    And one can't blame Arnold for not trying, as he is both charming and believable in his part. His is a performance with a surprising level of humanity, especially in scenes where he's going about his daily life. One almost forgets he's an action star and begins to take him a little seriously. But don't worry, after the first half-hour he's picked up a laser gun and is fighting and one-lining his way to the climax.

    I guess my one qualm with "The 6th Day" is its failed potential: with some better action sequences (like those found in "The Matrix"), this could have been a very decent film, one I would be sending you to right away. Instead, it's simply a wait-for-video flick, and by my guess, that wait won't be long.
    6rmax304823

    Duo.

    Ran "Raw Deal" (1986) and "The Sixth Day" (2000) back to back and its interesting to see the embodiment of decadence. Fourteen years can make a big difference. I don't mean Arnold's aging. That's a given for all of us. And I don't mean his graceless and wooden movements. That was always a given for Arnold. I mean the fact that Arnold's earlier movies were usually more or less realistic, although they sometimes reached the parameters of possibility. But later they tended to transform themselves into logical puzzles enhanced by an abundance of computer-generated images.

    In "Raw Deal," for instance, Arnold takes a few belts in the jaw, but he can clean out a nest of a dozen or more gangsters killing every one of them. They're all prepared and armed to the teeth but it makes no difference. They shoot and miss. Arnold doesn't miss. But that aside, it's a realistic movie set in the present. We can at least IMAGINE that Arnold can shoot that much better than everyone else. The story even reaches for the surreal at times. His drunken wife throws a cake at him. "You should not dwink and bake," he remarks unflappably. Later he kicks out the windshield of his Caddy convertible and drives wildly through a quarry full of enemies with machine guns. He mows them merrily down while "I Don't Get No Satisfaction" plays on his tape.

    In "The Sixth Day" the wit and self parody are largely absent. The pieces of the logical puzzle are there but no one really bothers to fit them together. One or two comments and Arnold has had enough of what he calls "philosophy." It's about cloning and the management and bioethics of same. The villains, for instance -- Tony Goldwyn in a fine performance -- have built a life-limiting disorder into each of their clones because even after cloning a psychopath there is still the possibility of redemption. What do you do if you encounter someone who is your identical clone, right down to the slightest episodic memory from childhood, carrying the same devotion to your wife and daughter as you -- and he, all unwittingly, has taken your place? You have a chance to murder him but should you? He is, in every sense except birthing, a second you, although he doesn't know he is. Isn't that murder? How about -- suicide?

    In any case, despite the zappy editing and loud noises, there are the usual moments of comedy. One young Gothic heavy has been killed and cloned so many times he's beginning to complain about a sore neck and has to be reminded that his spine was fractured in a previous life. A beautiful Goth woman with neon-blue hair is killed and then freshly reconstituted. She leaps nude from the table and rushes to a mirror, flushed with anger. "Now I have to pierce my ears again!"
    6ma-cortes

    A clichéd sci-fi thriller involved in humor touches by Arnold Schwarzenegger

    In an Utopian nearly future , cloning is a habitual exercise, fish, dogs,animals and food can be cloned, but no human genre, being illegal and pursued. When Adam Gibson(Arnold Schwarzenegger, also producer) goes to home after his job as helicopters pilot along with his friend Hank(Michael Rapaport) he encounters a clone has replaced him.Then he's chased by a murderers group(Michael Rooker, Sara Wynter, Terry Crews). He flees and must to solve the weird happenings from the creator of the clones, Michael Drucken(Tony Goldwyn), whose experiments is working Dr. Griffin(Robert Duvall).

    This is a gripping sci-fi story plenty of action, thrills, suspense,tension, plot-twists and quite entertaining. It's a clichéd thriller with noisy and agreeable fun . It builds gradually with an interesting premise leading an impressive and breathtaking highlights, thanks to involving plot is interesting enough to keep the movie going on. Action set pieces are well made and amusingly mixed with humor, the picture delivers just what we have come expecting.It's one of the best of those years generally inappropriate crop of blockbusters, but this one contains lots of action and enjoyable humor. A sympathetic and as corpulent as always, Arnold Schwarzenegger as the good father of family plunged into a sinister scenery he tries to find out but doesn't understand. Adequate musical score fitting perfectly to action by Trevor Rabin and colorful cinematography by Pierre Mignot.The motion picture is acceptably directed by Robert Spottiswoode. He's a successful director from TV movies and cinema, as terror genre(Terror train), adventures(Air America,Shoot to kill),drama(Children of Hang Shi), James Bond film(Tomorrow never dies), and his best movie is ¨Under fire¨.Rating: Passable and good fun film. The pic will like to California governor's fans

    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      (at around 1 min) The intro to the film gives us a history of breakthroughs in cloning tech. There is an entry on the cloning of a sheep, which is credited to "Two pioneering scientists Drs. Lerrad Yarg and Phillip Slanigan, both of the Rosaritio Institute." In real life, the two pioneering scientists were Keith Campbell and Ian Wilmut, of the Roslin Institute in Scotland. The year was 1996, not 1997. The name of the sheep, 'Dolly', is correct. Dolly lived until 2003, having been euthanized due to lung disease and severe arthritis, which were said to be unrelated to the cloning process.
    • Blooper
      (at around 1h 26 mins) When Adam lands his whisper craft on the roof of the building, a security guard comes out to stop him. Adam provides his clearance to be there by presenting him with the contract he signed earlier in the movie. When the guard looks at it, you can clearly see that none of the lines are filled out.
    • Citazioni

      Adam Gibson: [1:33:22] If you really believe that then you should clone yourself while you're still alive.

      Drucker: Why is that? So I can understand your unique perspective?

      Adam Gibson: No. So you can go fuck yourself!

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      On the Region 1 DVD release, in "The Future Is Coming" making-of featurette, a member of the production crew (Nancy Tate) is credited as a "Cloned Consultant".
    • Versioni alternative
      On the Region 6 China DVD by Excel Media, the flirting scene is cut.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Charlie's Angels/Loving Jezebel/Bootmen/The Legend of Bagger Vance/A Time For Drunken Horses (2000)
    • Colonne sonore
      Happy Birthday to You
      Written by Mildred J. Hill and Patty S. Hill

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    The Amazing Arnold

    The Amazing Arnold

    Whether he's bodybuilding in the gym or obliterating baddies on screen, Arnold Schwarzenegger has been delighting audiences for decades. Take a look at some of the amazing moments in his career so far.
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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 26 gennaio 2001 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Filmymen
      • Sony Pictures
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Il sesto giorno
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Cleveland Dam, Capilano River Regional Park, North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada(where Cadillac goes over top of dam.)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Phoenix Pictures
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Budget
      • 82.000.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 34.604.280 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 13.020.883 USD
      • 19 nov 2000
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 96.085.477 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      2 ore 3 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.39 : 1

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