Adattamento del thriller poliziesco del 1963 di Akira Kurosawa.Adattamento del thriller poliziesco del 1963 di Akira Kurosawa.Adattamento del thriller poliziesco del 1963 di Akira Kurosawa.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
A$AP Rocky
- Yung Felon
- (as A$AP Rocky a.k.a. Rakim Mayers)
Ice Spice
- Marisol Cepeda
- (as Isis 'Ice Spice' Gaston)
Recensioni in evidenza
Expected more from Spike Lee. Very misfitting score that belonged in a Star Wars type film. We don't need loud distracting music over every scene. The double edited shots were also distracting and over done. Bad acting from many of the supporting cast. Slow start, could have easily tightened the edit. This film didn't seem to know what it was. No clear vision. A little preachy. And a kind of dull story line with no twist!
Spike Lee and Denzel Washington don't miss a beat in Lee's new film Highest 2 Lowest, taking Kurosawa's original film of the same name and running it straight up into Noo Yawk City. With this film, which keeps the action flowing from start to finish, Lee is unabashedly unreserved about his adoration for the greatest city in the world. In ways both overt and subtle, Lee transports the audience into 'Spike's World', weaving his personal preferences in art, music and, of course, his loyalty to the NY Yankees, with engrossing, non-stop action and a dash of humor.
This is 1000% Lee's love song to New York City. From the dazzling beauty of the NYC skyline to the grit of a Bronx tenement, Lee puts his vision on the screen. Matthew Libatique, Lee's Director of Photography, gives us a melange of visual qualities within the film. From top-of-the-line digital to the graininess of 8MM, again, highest to lowest, the artistry here is unmistakeable. Highest 2 Lowest's basic premise, the kidnapping of a wealthy man's son, is Mr. Lee's fifth collaboration with Mr. Washington, and it hits every note perfectly.
Paintings and portraits from Spike's personal collection, including Kehinde Wiley's 'Investiture of Bishop Harold as the Duke of Franconia', the depiction of a black man wearing a Brooklyn Dodger's number 42 jersey, Jackie Robinson's number, find pride of place on the walls of music mogul David King's (Denzel Washington) multi-million dollar DUMBO duplex. DUMBO, in case you're wondering, is Down Under The Manhattan Bridge Overpass, and is currently the most affluent part of Brooklyn. You can take Spike out of Brooklyn, but you'll never take Brooklyn out of Spike. The two are forever intertwined in Lee's filmography.
Other works by Jean-Michel Basquiat, Patrick Martinez, Radcliff Bailey, even a Brooklyn Dodger's scoreboard, pieces that have been exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum, some of which are certainly from Lee's own home, decorate the office and home of King, his wife Pam (Ilfenesh Hadera) and their son Trey (Aubrey Joseph).
King is in the middle of refinancing a multi-million dollar deal for his record company, Stackin' Hits. Pam is on the Board of various high-end charities that promote emerging Black artists. Trey believes himself to be an up and coming talent scout. Soon after dropping Trey off for summer basketball camp at LIU's downtown Brooklyn campus, and after successfully negotiating his business deal, King returns home in his Rolls Royce, chauffered by his oldest friend, Paul Christopher (Jeffrey Wright). Paul served time in prison, but King, believing strongly in second chances, which is a major theme in the film, has employed Christopher since his release. King is also godfather to Paul's son, Kyle (Elijah Wright). Kyle and Trey are as close as blood brothers, attending the LIU basketball camp together.
After arriving home, King receives a phonecall from a man telling him that his son, Kyle, has been kidnapped, and the 'king's ransom' is $17.5 million. The plot quickly thickens when we learn that godson Kyle is also missing and in great danger. King and some NYPD detectives attempt to follow their leads, taking us for a ride on the NYC subway systems Number 4 and 6 trains.
From the exuberance of cheering fans en route to a game at Yankee Stadium, through a Puerto Rican Day Festival featuring Brooklyn natives Rosie Perez, Anthony Ramos (yes, that's a holy crap moment right there) and Latin music legend, pianist, bandleader and Grammy winner Eddie Palmieri, the film is a celebration of the chaos, energy and diversity that make up this amazing city and all its boroughs. On a side note, Palmieri, a Harlem native, passed away just last week at the age of 88.
Lee even takes a moment to pay homage to A24, the distributor of Highest 2 Lowest. Lee and the crew must have had a blast making this film. As you watch Denzel seamlessly switch vernaculars from business mogul to street slang, depending on his audience and what he's trying to accomplish, you know you're watching a master at work. So many Kings brought to you in the county of Kings, from a man who is still a King of cinema.
This is 1000% Lee's love song to New York City. From the dazzling beauty of the NYC skyline to the grit of a Bronx tenement, Lee puts his vision on the screen. Matthew Libatique, Lee's Director of Photography, gives us a melange of visual qualities within the film. From top-of-the-line digital to the graininess of 8MM, again, highest to lowest, the artistry here is unmistakeable. Highest 2 Lowest's basic premise, the kidnapping of a wealthy man's son, is Mr. Lee's fifth collaboration with Mr. Washington, and it hits every note perfectly.
Paintings and portraits from Spike's personal collection, including Kehinde Wiley's 'Investiture of Bishop Harold as the Duke of Franconia', the depiction of a black man wearing a Brooklyn Dodger's number 42 jersey, Jackie Robinson's number, find pride of place on the walls of music mogul David King's (Denzel Washington) multi-million dollar DUMBO duplex. DUMBO, in case you're wondering, is Down Under The Manhattan Bridge Overpass, and is currently the most affluent part of Brooklyn. You can take Spike out of Brooklyn, but you'll never take Brooklyn out of Spike. The two are forever intertwined in Lee's filmography.
Other works by Jean-Michel Basquiat, Patrick Martinez, Radcliff Bailey, even a Brooklyn Dodger's scoreboard, pieces that have been exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum, some of which are certainly from Lee's own home, decorate the office and home of King, his wife Pam (Ilfenesh Hadera) and their son Trey (Aubrey Joseph).
King is in the middle of refinancing a multi-million dollar deal for his record company, Stackin' Hits. Pam is on the Board of various high-end charities that promote emerging Black artists. Trey believes himself to be an up and coming talent scout. Soon after dropping Trey off for summer basketball camp at LIU's downtown Brooklyn campus, and after successfully negotiating his business deal, King returns home in his Rolls Royce, chauffered by his oldest friend, Paul Christopher (Jeffrey Wright). Paul served time in prison, but King, believing strongly in second chances, which is a major theme in the film, has employed Christopher since his release. King is also godfather to Paul's son, Kyle (Elijah Wright). Kyle and Trey are as close as blood brothers, attending the LIU basketball camp together.
After arriving home, King receives a phonecall from a man telling him that his son, Kyle, has been kidnapped, and the 'king's ransom' is $17.5 million. The plot quickly thickens when we learn that godson Kyle is also missing and in great danger. King and some NYPD detectives attempt to follow their leads, taking us for a ride on the NYC subway systems Number 4 and 6 trains.
From the exuberance of cheering fans en route to a game at Yankee Stadium, through a Puerto Rican Day Festival featuring Brooklyn natives Rosie Perez, Anthony Ramos (yes, that's a holy crap moment right there) and Latin music legend, pianist, bandleader and Grammy winner Eddie Palmieri, the film is a celebration of the chaos, energy and diversity that make up this amazing city and all its boroughs. On a side note, Palmieri, a Harlem native, passed away just last week at the age of 88.
Lee even takes a moment to pay homage to A24, the distributor of Highest 2 Lowest. Lee and the crew must have had a blast making this film. As you watch Denzel seamlessly switch vernaculars from business mogul to street slang, depending on his audience and what he's trying to accomplish, you know you're watching a master at work. So many Kings brought to you in the county of Kings, from a man who is still a King of cinema.
The overall good reviews suckered me into giving this a chance but it was a major letdown. I haven't rolled my eyes and thought "this is so cringe" so many times in a movie before. TERRIBLE editing and pacing. Very boring...jumping around skipping crucial scenes you'd expect to see. It seemed like it was written by a 13 year old. Some very bad acting...almost walked out early on but was hoping for a payoff that never really comes. Out of the whole 2+ hours there was maybe like 5 minutes of what I would call good or interesting choices. It's so over the top and cheesy, including most of the music that is getting undeserved praise. A lot of times it doesn't fit with what's happening on the screen much at all. A24 should be ashamed of being attached to this.
If you're a big fan of spike lee, you'll probably love it. Maybe again you'll probably be disappointed. In my opinion, wasn't bad but it could've been great. It felt kinda dragged, overall you got Denzel, asap rocky did solid.
You can see asap was very into his lines, the scenes between him and Denzel were good.
Catch it at home and have a sit back on the couch with some popcorn and pizza and enjoy. It's in select theaters, feel free to try to catch it otherwise it'll be available to stream in 2 weeks.
You can see asap was very into his lines, the scenes between him and Denzel were good.
Catch it at home and have a sit back on the couch with some popcorn and pizza and enjoy. It's in select theaters, feel free to try to catch it otherwise it'll be available to stream in 2 weeks.
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.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizFifth collaboration between Spike Lee and Denzel Washington, after Mo' Better Blues (1990), Malcolm X (1992), He Got Game (1998), and Inside Man (2006).
- BlooperWhen 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.
- ConnessioniReferenced in Radio Dolin: Best Movies of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival (2025)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Del cielo al infierno
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Brooklyn, New York, Stati Uniti(on location)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 2h 13min(133 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1
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