Un tiratore scelto in esilio viene convinto a tornare in servizio quando apprende di un complotto per uccidere il presidente. Dopo essere stato ingiustamente accusato di essere responsabile ... Leggi tuttoUn tiratore scelto in esilio viene convinto a tornare in servizio quando apprende di un complotto per uccidere il presidente. Dopo essere stato ingiustamente accusato di essere responsabile per l'attentato, dovrà trovare il vero assassino ed il motivo per cui è stato tradito.Un tiratore scelto in esilio viene convinto a tornare in servizio quando apprende di un complotto per uccidere il presidente. Dopo essere stato ingiustamente accusato di essere responsabile per l'attentato, dovrà trovare il vero assassino ed il motivo per cui è stato tradito.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 2 candidature totali
- Howard Purnell
- (as Justin Louis)
- Michael Sandor
- (as Rade Sherbedgia)
- Officer Stanley Timmons
- (as Alan C. Peterson)
Recensioni in evidenza
"Bob Lee Swagger" (Mark Wahlberg) is an Army sniper, one of the best, who is given the assignment of planning--but not executing--an assassination. That's all I'll say about the plot because the fun part is riding all the twists & turns that follow. Danny Glover plays his government liaison while at the top is Ned Beatty playing a questionable senator.
What follows is an action packed political conspiracy thriller along the lines of a Tom Clancy story ("Clear and Present Danger", "Patriot Games") but with the noticeable difference that our hero Bob is a total badass, sort of like a dash of "First Blood". And that's what makes this movie really fun when he starts to take things on the offensive.
My only criticism is, as I implied in my title, a few preposterous things happen so be prepared. You know, stuff like when a person gets shot multiple times but is still able to swim across the Delaware River. (I mean bullets, sure, but all that Jersey waste'll kill ya faster than battery acid.) But if you can go along for the ride without raising too many eyebrows, this flick will definitely keep you riveted from start to finish. Bonus points for being shot in Philadelphia, the perfect city for a story like this.
Mark Whalberg plays the role of Bob Lee Swagger, a former military sniper who quit the army following a disastrous mission where his best friend and spotter is killed when they are left behind. Three years later he is hired by a Colonel (played with gusto by Danny Glover) to figure out how a suspected assassin is going to attempt to kill the President from over a mile away, a shot that few could make. Swagger figures out how it is going to be done and is asked to supervise locating the sniper on site. But on the day of the supposed assassination, Swagger is set up with the assassination attempt that kills a visiting diplomat. Swagger is then left on the hunt while trying to prove his innocence.
Shooter twists and turns with an elaborate conspiracy that is very convincing, though of course the writers wimp out and take the cheap road of drawing international oil into the plot (can't writers think of an original plot device?). However, this is hardly a drawback since the rest of the film is solid as a rock. The film really puts you into the shoes of a sniper and gives an impressive overview of the mindset that it takes to be as accurate as someone of the character of Swagger.
The only real distractions in the film would be Elias Koteas, whose psycho performance is heavy-handed and does not fit the film, and Kate Mara who has little to do throughout the film but appear upset or in distress. The film could have done without either characters or their respective actors. As well, some of the character relations seem forced at time, particularly in the relationship between Michael Peña's character of Nick Memphis and his FBI confidante Lourdes, played by Rhona Mitra. Their almost effortless camaraderie comes off as less than convincing.
Overall, Shooter certainly delivers as an entertaining thrill-ride that is certainly not dumbed down in the least. If you want an intelligent action film with lots of impressive gun play and several elaborate, thrilling action sequences to boot, Shooter is right up your alley and will not disappoint. 7.6 out of 10
To me this had Eastwood written all over it. At times I thought I was watching Line of Fire at others Unforgiven, but in the end it was just really good entertainment, much like The Bourne movies.
I think it's worth the watch and the story although not new was presented in a fresh manner. This one will go in my collection when available. I'm sure it will have a host of deleted scenes and alternate endings.
Solid film!
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAccording to the movie's script doctor William Goldman, Clint Eastwood, Robert Redford, and Harrison Ford passed on the movie. These men would have fit the literary Bob Lee Swagger's age a bit more closely than Mark Wahlberg (born in 1971). Author Stephen Hunter introduced Swagger as a Vietnam veteran in a 1993 novel, taking place in 1992; however, to accommodate Wahlberg's age, this film has Swagger active in Africa in the 1990s, instead of Vietnam in the 1970s.
- BlooperWhen the "Ethiopian" archbishop appears with the President and is subsequently shot, the flag on the stage is actually the flag of Senegal rather than Ethiopia.
The above is not true. There are several flags surrounding the stage, e.g. the ones of Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Cameroon, Angola, Somalia... The ones closest to the lectern are the American flag, the Ethiopian flag, the flag of Pennsylvania, and indeed the one of Senegal. When Bob Lee Swagger (Mark Wahlberg) looks at archbishop Mutumbo through binoculars, and he says, "And it is our responsibility," three flags can be spotted in the (16:9) frame: Stars and Stripes, Pennsylvania and Ethiopia, recognizable by its blue circle. There's no blue in the Senegalese flag.
- Citazioni
Bob Lee Swagger: I don't think you understand. These boys killed my dog.
- Versioni alternativeSome television airings use alternate takes with less blood and gore. For example, when Swagger shoots Payne in the hand, it is shown in a wide shot, instead of the bloody closeup in the theatrical release. And when Swagger shoots Payne again, instead of Payne's arm being blown off, as in the theatrical release, he is hit in the shoulder and simply falls down in a wide shot.
- Colonne sonoreNasty Letter
Written and Performed by Otis Taylor
Courtesy of Telarc International Corporation
By Arrangement with Music for the Masses
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Tirador
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Cache Creek, British Columbia, Canada(Exterior)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 61.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 47.003.582 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 14.523.571 USD
- 25 mar 2007
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 95.696.996 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 2h 4min(124 min)
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1