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IMDbPro

O Comboio do Medo

Título original: Sorcerer
  • 1977
  • PG
  • 2 h 1 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,7/10
32 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
1.246
831
O Comboio do Medo (1977)
Theatrical Trailer from Universal Pictures
Reproduzir trailer2:53
2 vídeos
99+ fotos
AventuraAventura na selvaDramaSuspenseViagem de carro

Quatro homens concordam em arriscar suas vidas transportando galões de nitroglicerina através da perigosa selva latino-americana.Quatro homens concordam em arriscar suas vidas transportando galões de nitroglicerina através da perigosa selva latino-americana.Quatro homens concordam em arriscar suas vidas transportando galões de nitroglicerina através da perigosa selva latino-americana.

  • Direção
    • William Friedkin
  • Roteiristas
    • Walon Green
    • Georges Arnaud
    • William Friedkin
  • Artistas
    • Roy Scheider
    • Bruno Cremer
    • Francisco Rabal
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,7/10
    32 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    1.246
    831
    • Direção
      • William Friedkin
    • Roteiristas
      • Walon Green
      • Georges Arnaud
      • William Friedkin
    • Artistas
      • Roy Scheider
      • Bruno Cremer
      • Francisco Rabal
    • 217Avaliações de usuários
    • 129Avaliações da crítica
    • 68Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado a 1 Oscar
      • 3 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    Sorcerer
    Trailer 2:53
    Sorcerer
    Sorcerer
    Clip 2:50
    Sorcerer
    Sorcerer
    Clip 2:50
    Sorcerer

    Fotos163

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    Elenco principal26

    Editar
    Roy Scheider
    Roy Scheider
    • Scanlon…
    Bruno Cremer
    Bruno Cremer
    • Victor Manzon…
    Francisco Rabal
    Francisco Rabal
    • Nilo
    Amidou
    Amidou
    • Kassem…
    Ramon Bieri
    Ramon Bieri
    • Corlette
    Peter Capell
    Peter Capell
    • Lartigue
    Karl John
    Karl John
    • 'Marquez'
    Friedrich von Ledebur
    Friedrich von Ledebur
    • 'Carlos'
    • (as Fredrick Ledebur)
    Chico Martínez
    • Bobby Del Rios
    • (as Chico Martinez)
    Joe Spinell
    Joe Spinell
    • Spider
    Rosario Almontes
    Rosario Almontes
    • Agrippa
    Richard Holley
    • Billy White
    Anne-Marie Deschodt
    Anne-Marie Deschodt
    • Blanche
    • (as Anne Marie Descott)
    Jean-Luc Bideau
    Jean-Luc Bideau
    • Pascal
    Jacques François
    Jacques François
    • Lefevre
    • (as Jacques Francois)
    André Falcon
    • Guillot
    Gerard Murphy
    • Donnelly
    Desmond Crofton
    • Boyle
    • Direção
      • William Friedkin
    • Roteiristas
      • Walon Green
      • Georges Arnaud
      • William Friedkin
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários217

    7,731.8K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    DB-08-DB

    Lost Classic

    Sorcerer is a unique, brutal, brilliant film burdened underneath a terrible, wholly unappropriate title. Watching this film, it is not only easy to see why the film was both a huge financial and commercial disaster, it is downright obvious. This is the most un-american/ hollywood/ commercial film backed by a major studio I have ever seen. It is a tough, gruelling 126 minutes that goes nowhere fast, yet holds you firm in its tight grip and beats you senseless throughout. I was exhausted when the film finally arrived at it's rather downbeat ending. The multi-national cast is faultless. Scheider is magnificent. This is an exceptionally demanding, difficult role and he hits it head on, creating an anti-hero who is very, very real: desperate, frightened and desructable. Taking this role, at the height of his fame, was either very brave or very stupid. I'm going with brave. His performance here is a million miles away from his work on Jaws and Jaws 2, yet equally compelling. The photography is in a league of it's own (I only wish the DVD came with an original 2:35:1 print, assuming there is one, as the current disc is presented in a 4:3 full frame), and the music from Tangerine Dream complements the vision perfectly. This is a brilliant piece of film making from the most daring decade of cinema, made by one of cinema's true unpredictable's. Tense, dazzling, dark and fresh, this is an underated film that deserves to be re-evaluated.
    8TOMASBBloodhound

    Just getting this one filmed was a huge accomplishment.

    Friedkin claims this was the toughest film to make of his career, and it isn't hard to see why. The balance of this film takes place in some woe begotten Latin American country. You can just feel the poverty and desperation in the air as the only work is for an oil drilling firm who doesn't exactly seem bent on worker safety. The elements are intentionally brutal and they only add to the tension. And thats even before this story really gets going.

    Early on, we are introduced to four characters who are all guilty of doing something terrible in one corner of the world or another. Roughly a half hour into the film, all four find themselves in a tiny impoverished Latin American village trying to eek out a living and forget the troubles they left behind. Not only is the local economy weak, but the place is socially on the verge of revolution. It's amazing the kind of jobs men will volunteer for to get out of these circumstances. Anyway, these four men are given the chance of transporting some highly explosive dynamite through rugged terrain in crappy old trucks so it can be used to put out a massive oil fire some 200 miles away. It is noted by one of the men that more than enough explosives are being transported. Obviously, at least one of the trucks is not expected to make it! Not only do you have an explosive cargo with unreliable trucks, but also there are armed rebels along the way who probably won't just let you pass right on through. Still, the reward for completing this job is just too much to pass on.

    The film is very, very good. In fact the skill that it took to make the film is responsible for most of the stars I'm giving it. The story itself is often just not believable. The journey these four men take is ludicrously perilous. They drive their vehicles over rickety bridges that nobody in real life would have tried to get over in those trucks. Like in other Friedken films, no character is completely likable, but that only makes it tougher to figure out who will live and who will die. There are a few nice twists here and there, right up to the very end to keep you guessing. The acting is exceptional. Scheider was Friedkin's fourth or fifth choice for the main character. Steve McQueen originally wanted it badly, but he demanded a part included for then wife Ali McGraw. Friedkin balked at this and then later regretted the decision. He later stated that he never thought Scheider was a good enough leading man. This is an error, however. Scheider is a terrific actor and his performance here is outstanding.

    The film bombed badly at the box office. Heck, if you weren't in line to see Star Wars that year, you were in line to see Smokey and the Bandit! This is definitely one of Friedkin's best, and it has somehow almost been completely forgotten. The film apparently got a PG rating but it is filled with violence and all manner of evil goings on. You'll have to suspend your disbelief for some of the scenes, but you'll be glad you did. I'll give it 8 of 10 stars.

    The Hound.

    Added Feb 14, 2008: RIP Roy Scheider!
    Jeremiad222

    Friedkin's 3rd best film

    An underrated film with a typically stellar Roy Scheider performance, an eerie Tangerine Dream soundtrack, and brilliant visuals. This film's reputation suffers from its inexplicable title and unfavorable comparisons to the original. But it's useless to compare since this film is an altogether different beast. Friedkin gives it his usual nihilist/fatalist/existential stamp, making it a much darker film than the French version. Very suspenseful and well-made. Made by Friedkin at the height of his powers. His third best film after Exorcist and French Connection.
    7gavin6942

    Strange Title

    Four unfortunate men from different parts of the globe agree to risk their lives transporting gallons of nitroglycerin across dangerous South American jungle.

    As others have noticed, this film suffers from having a strange title. The original book is "The Wages of Fear", and the film was released under this title in some territories. I suspect that if it had this title today, it might be better remembered. A name like "Sorcerer" clearly suggests a fantasy film, which this is not.

    That major hurdle aside, it is a good movie and a very ambitious one. With four different prologues, a casual viewer might gt lost or bored or just not know what to think. It pays off as the story progresses, however, and we get a film that is a war movie, a mob movie, an action thriller... it has a little something for everyone.
    10jzappa

    "No One Is Just Anything."

    Sorcerer's keynote is epitomized early on when introducing Bruno Cremer's wealthy character, living an ivory tower existence, with no reason yet to feel insecure about much. His wife reads to him a war article. He comments, "Just another soldier." She replies, "No one is just anything." Indeed, in William Friedkin's merciless adventures, heroic characters tend to be defined by any and everything contemptible, villains are unknowable, the lines between them are exceedingly vague…and arbitrary. The French Connection, man-versus-man. The Exorcist, man-versus-unexplained. With Sorcerer, man-versus-chance, an indefinable, undetected competitor. The realm of Friedkin's visualization is a perilous, brutal, ethically insolvent one where there bluntly is no God, just randomness, meaninglessness, pure survival.

    Unlike Clouzot's incredible original film, Friedkin doesn't allow for easy identification with any of the central figures, and despite Roy Scheider's impressively physical central performance, it remains emotionally aloof. But that doesn't matter. Seeing each man's prior exploits tells so much, voyeuristically, about their behavior when they happen upon each other in the thirsty alien setting where they're all out of their elements. We also see how regular joes can be monsters.

    Also, throughout their respective prefaces, Friedkin foretells the boiling dangers awaiting our scandalous foursome, with sardonic counterpoint. Francisco Rabal abandons the hotel in a wrought-iron elevator decorated green, as are the hotel walls. As Amidou and his co-conspirators plan their getaway, they hurriedly study a map. When he chooses "the long way," the suggestion's far more poignant than he realizes. It's also in the early New Jersey fast-sketch that Friedkin's murky jesting emerges: In a church cellar, various priests calculate thousands of dollars, wearing visors, more like bookies than Christ's followes. Armed robbers break in. At the wedding upstairs, the ceremony's priest declares, "Christ abundantly blesses this love." Back to the basement as dollars gush from canvas bags, robbers jam their pouches. Upstairs, "You've strengthened your consent before the Church." Friedkin pushes into bride and groom. The bride has a black eye.

    In a Paris café comprising close-ups of enticing culinary delights, Cremer, his wife and their friend babble about substandard lobster in humid South American waters, while Cremer merely half-listens. The truck Scheider runs into has a Meridian Freight insignia. Friedkin's pessimistic joking could be doubled here: Scheider zigzags off a "meridian" in a manufacturing district, a massive water tower dwarfing everything else. He'll eventually find himself in a manufacturing gutter of the world. During his getaway, he passes big color signs promoting things he won't see, have or enjoy again.

    A handful of exiles and fugitives from starkly different backgrounds, cultures, nationalities are driven by desperation to go into hiding, working in an obscure oil drilling operation in South America. When fire breaks out of control, they each seize a chance to earn enough money to escape their hellholes, earn citizenship, feel as if they might restore honor, by transporting crates of unstable dynamite through miles of perilous jungle in rusty, rickety old trucks. But this dynamite, negligently stored, literally oozes nitro. Any shock, any vibration, they detonate. Somehow, driving in pairs, these men must carry their cargo past a crumbling rope-suspension bridge, swinging ferociously in a savage storm over a flood-heaving river, a colossal tree blocking the road, and a flock of forlorn, vicious bandits.

    The cash sum being rewarded to the drivers is erratic all through the film. The oil company first says they will pay 8,000 pesos to each driver. Later the demand doubles. Later one boasts that he and another one will get double shares of 20,000 each. By the end, a check reads 40,000 pesos which would be just 10,000 each. This seems like one of Friedkin's sadistic impositions of his thematic intentions. We're drawn into circumstances so desperate, so reckless, any amount sounds beautiful, any amount will do, then eventually, returning to any semblance of relatable civilization is all that matters.

    Friedkin and screenwriter Walon Green strip the source story's existential themes to the core. Driven by a series of striking images, it ultimately goes one step further than Clouzot by suggesting that humankind is subject not only to the vagaries of fate and nature but to its own vengeful, venal essence. What's so enrapturing about Sorcerer is that the needs and situations that occur, one after another, are so primal, these characters are hairpin turns between murderously divided and collaborating with implicit trust. Friedkin exemplifies the seduction of voyeurism in the very close, detailed but utterly omniscient way we follow each unrelated character to this godforsaken place, where they know absolutely nothing of each other, but we've seen them all in their respective realms of normalcy, the shameful predicaments that got them here. But just as well, we're ever so subtly implicated in the vengeful, venal, not in what we see but what we find ourselves expecting. Take for example the riot that erupts in the street after the oil explosion. The townspeople are violent, frenzied, relentless, but Friedkin leaves out the authorities' retaliation. And we expect it…indeed, we begin to want it, relate to it. It's a disturbing feeling.

    Friedkin loves to show mechanisms, the down and dirty way things work, as in the montage with minor-key synth music showing the rag-tag bunch preparing trucks. It makes us that much more conscious of the threadbare fragility of the utterly extraordinary ensuing action sequences, most notably the hazardous rainstorm crossing of the fragile rope-bridge. No matter how much these men exert themselves to cover every corner, suspect everyone, spot every detail, do whatever they can to ensure their survival, they never have any control over their own fates, not how they got into this mess or how or if they get out of it. They don't all speak the same language, none of them trust or even understand one another, or even use their real names. Even if they do succeed, or some, or none, they have about as much control over their deaths as they do their births.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

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    • Curiosidades
      Besides internal on-set conflicts, William Friedkin said that approximately fifty people "had to leave the film for either injury or gangrene," as well as food poisoning and malaria. In The Friedkin Connection he added that "almost half the crew went into the hospital or had to be sent home." Friedkin himself lost fifty pounds (23 kg) and was stricken with malaria, which was diagnosed after the film's premiere.
    • Erros de gravação
      During the tree sequence, after the dynamite is lifted out of the wooden crate, it is kicked to the side and (apparently) falls off the tree. Weeping dynamite is leaking out the nitroglycerin as a liquid which will readily soak through untreated materials such as the wooden case, shelves upon which they sit and so on.

      As illustrated in this scene, and earlier in the film when the boxes are being inspected, each wooden box has a lining of insulating paper, which the film shows to be watertight. When it is inspected early in the film, the worker places his hand within this paper barrier to get nitroglycerin on his fingers, and at the felled tree, this wrapping is not soaked through and is in fact strong enough to support the weight of the dynamite and liquid inside. Kassem uses a sharp stick to poke a hole in it, whereupon liquid nitroglycerin begins to flow out.
    • Citações

      Scanlon: Where am I going?

      Vinnie: All I can say is it's a good place to lay low.

      Scanlon: Why?

      Vinnie: It's the kind of place nobody wants to go looking.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      At the end of the film as the last of the end credits scroll up, the music fades away and is replaced by the sound of an idling truck.
    • Versões alternativas
      The European version of the film was re-edited and shortened by CIC, the European distributor, without director William Friedkin's permission. The prologue sequences set in New York, Paris, Vera Cruz and Israel that show what happened to the main characters and why they had to flee to South America, were changed to flashbacks running throughout the film.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Take 2: Overlooked Classics: Great Movies of the 70's That Nearly Everybody Missed (1980)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Spheres (Movement 3)
      Performed by Keith Jarrett

      Used under license from Polydor Incorporated and through the courtesy of ECM Records

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    • How long is Sorcerer?
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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 4 de setembro de 1978 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
      • México
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Espanhol
      • Francês
      • Alemão
    • Também conhecido como
      • El salario del miedo
    • Locações de filme
      • Papaloapan River, Veracruz, México(bridge crossing scene)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Estudios Churubusco Azteca S.A.
      • Film Properties International N.V.
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

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    • Orçamento
      • US$ 22.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 12.480
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 1 minuto
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
      • 4-Track Stereo
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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