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IMDbPro

Nikita: Criada para Matar

Título original: Nikita
  • 1990
  • 14
  • 1 h 57 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,2/10
80 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
3.413
715
Anne Parillaud in Nikita: Criada para Matar (1990)
Assistir a Bande-annonce [OV]
Reproduzir trailer2:30
1 vídeo
99+ fotos
AçãoCrimeDramaEspiãoSuspense

A criminosa condenada Nikita, ao invés de ir para a cadeia, recebe uma nova identidade e é treinada como uma espiã ultra-secreta.A criminosa condenada Nikita, ao invés de ir para a cadeia, recebe uma nova identidade e é treinada como uma espiã ultra-secreta.A criminosa condenada Nikita, ao invés de ir para a cadeia, recebe uma nova identidade e é treinada como uma espiã ultra-secreta.

  • Direção
    • Luc Besson
  • Roteirista
    • Luc Besson
  • Artistas
    • Anne Parillaud
    • Marc Duret
    • Patrick Fontana
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,2/10
    80 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    3.413
    715
    • Direção
      • Luc Besson
    • Roteirista
      • Luc Besson
    • Artistas
      • Anne Parillaud
      • Marc Duret
      • Patrick Fontana
    • 197Avaliações de usuários
    • 82Avaliações da crítica
    • 65Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 6 vitórias e 17 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 2:30
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Fotos220

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    Elenco principal61

    Editar
    Anne Parillaud
    Anne Parillaud
    • Nikita…
    Marc Duret
    Marc Duret
    • Rico
    Patrick Fontana
    • Coyotte
    Alain Lathière
    • Zap
    Laura Chéron
    • La punk
    Jacques Boudet
    Jacques Boudet
    • Le pharmacien
    Helene Aligier
    • La pharmacienne
    Pierre-Alain de Garrigues
    • Flic pharmacie
    Patrick Pérez
    • Flic pharmacie
    • (as Patrick Perez)
    Bruno Randon
    • Flic pharmacie
    Vincent Skimenti
    • Flic pharmacie
    Roland Blanche
    • Flic interrogatoire
    Joseph Teruel
    • Stagiaire flic
    Jacques Disses
    • Avocat
    Stéphane Fey
    • Président tribunal
    • (as Stephane Fey)
    Philippe Dehesdin
    • 1er magistrat
    Michel Brunot
    • 2ème magistrat
    Rodolph Freytt
    • 1er infirmier
    • Direção
      • Luc Besson
    • Roteirista
      • Luc Besson
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários197

    7,279.7K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9Quinoa1984

    plenty of verve and style, and a (rightfully) perennial favorite of French spy thrillers

    Luc Besson was on a hot streak in the late 80s/early 90s, and La Femme Nikita (or just Nikita for short) is almost as good as he got at putting his own distinctive stamp on a genre that many auteurs have trouble molding. The spy thriller is great for blockbuster audiences, but to make it into a strong romantic drama is always tricky, as there's the chance for too much one-dimensional theatrics or more attention paid to the plot convolutions than actual human emotions. Nikita squares this problem away just with the protagonist: a young punk (Anne Parillaud, in her most recognizable, near star-making performance) who kills a cop in the midst of a shoot-out is sentenced to life, but then sort of resurrected following the lead of a member of a covert spy organization, and given an ultimatum: become a spy/assassin, or die. She complies, and in a few years time turns into Josephine, who gets orders on the outside from time to time to do tasks like dress up in a maid's outfit to serve potential targets, or to ready herself to kill someone long-range at a moment's notice.

    Besson crafts his main story by creating a sort of love triangle between Nikita/Josephine/Marie, her boss Bob, and her conventional lover Marco, a grocery store cashier who doesn't know what she really does. Besson tools with the elements for a much more conventional thriller, and from time to time it could appear like La Femme Nikita will veer into that realm and not return. But Besson is smart; he crafts the first hour like a kind of 'Taming of the Shrew' saga (or 'Taming of a Shrill Bad-ass'), filled with juicy, dark humor ranging from the ultra-violent (pencil in the hand anyone?) to the silly and playful (training with karate instructors). And as pure director of action sequences Besson shows himself as one of the more distinct masters; it's succinctly fresh and tense while holding the ingredients for what mainstream audiences crave, chiefly in that centerpiece as she is told to kill someone on the night of a seemingly hot date with Bob. Even in the little things, like the scene where she watches the spy put together the concoction for the target in the hotel, works on the purest technical terms.

    But La Femme Nikita, for the most part, also works on emotional levels too. Besson won't be above throwing in a hard-boiled killer in the midst (Jean Reno's Victor, my favorite supporting character if only for a few pivotal scenes, and a precursor to Leon), but he'll also subvert it just a tinge for good measure. I loved seeing when Josephine has to take out the woman in Venice, her shot in sight, and is moved to tears through the words that Marco speaks to her, truthfully, not in any terms that deem him as the boring "safe" character, but as her kind of salvation from a life that she's been forced into as a final alternative. As happens often in Besson's work, in fact, the female character is put into a realm of personal chaos that is created by or leads to murder and, at the least, harrowing times with the one she cares for or about (i.e. Portman in Leon, Leeloo in Fifth Element, Joan of Arc, even Angela in Angel-A). It's not simply a gimmick in having the character be a woman- it's essential to Besson's track as a filmmaker, and Praillaud is excellent for the sort of ups and downs the character goes through, sometimes in the same scene!

    This isn't to say there are a few minor liabilities, if only from my perspective: the music is usually effective in that early electronic-techno beat style for a modern thriller, yet sometimes it's also a cross between a soft-core porn and Weather channel muzak; the ending felt abrupt, or at least on a first viewing (albeit it's hard to top the scene at the ambassador's HQ); and, as a minor criticism, what happened to showing how Nikita learns how to smile? (Seems a little crucial as something of her personality that's skipped over, when made to seem like a big stepping stone by Jeanne Moreau's enigmatic character.) Otherwise, a must-see, and one of Besson's best films.
    8DennisLittrell

    Accept no substitutes

    This, the French La Femme Nikita, directed by Luc Besson, is one of the strangest, most bizarre, yet psychologically truest movies ever made. The story on the surface is absurd and something you'd expect from a grade 'B' international intrigue thriller. Anne Parillaud plays Nikita, a bitter, drug-dependent, unsocialized child of the streets who is faster than a kung fu fighter and packs more punch than a Mike Tyson bite. She's killed some people and is given a choice between death and becoming an assassin for the French government.

    This premise should lead to the usual action/adventure yarn, with lots of fists flying, guns going off, people jumping off of buildings, roaring through the streets in souped up vehicles, spraying bullets, etc., as blood flows and bones shatter. And something like that does happen. However there is a second level in which Nitika becomes the embodiment of something beyond an action adventure heroine. She is coerced and managed by society. Her individuality is beaten out of her so that she can be molded into what the society demands. She comes out of her 'training' with her individuality compromised, her free and natural spirit cowed, but undefeated and alive, and she sets out to do what she has been taught to do. And then she falls in love. And she notices, somewhere along the way, amid the murder and the mayhem, that there is something better than and more important than, and closer to her soul in this world than killing and being killed. She finds that she prefers love to hate, tenderness to brutality. She sees herself and who she is for the first time, but it is too late. She cannot escape. Or can she?

    Parillaud brings a wild animal persona tinged with beauty and unself-conscious grace to the role of Nikita. Marc Duret plays Rico, the tender man she loves, and Tchéky Karyo is her mentor, Bob, whom she also loves. Jeanne Moreau, the legend, has a small part as Amande, who teaches Nikita lipstick application and how to be attractive.

    Now compare this to the US remake called Point of No Return (1993), starring Bridget Fonda. (Please, do not even consider the vapid TV Nikita.) What's the difference? Well, Fonda's flashier, I suppose, but nowhere is there anything like the psychological depth and raw animal magnetism found in the original. The Fonda vehicle is simply a one-dimensional action flick stylishly done in a predictable manner. Besson's Nikita is a work of art that explores the human predicament and even suggests something close to salvation.

    As always with a French film, get the subtitled version. The dubbing is always atrocious, and anyway there's really not that much dialogue.

    (Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon!)
    8bowmanblue

    Ground-breaking assassin flick

    I think I probably watched this film at the wrong time. I first saw the American-language remake 'Assassin' back in the early nineties and have only just got round to watching the film it was based on, 'Nikita' (or 'La Femme Nikita' to be precise). Therefore, it's hard to accept that the French version is the original source material and not the remake. Both stay pretty much on the same story-telling path, telling the tale of a down-and-out, drug-addled young woman, killing a police officer in a burglary gone wrong, but eluding the death penalty in favour of working for a secret government agency to 'off' those who need disappearing. Yes, the plot is possibly a little far-fetched, but, if you can suspend your disbelief long enough, you'll find that it's well worth it.

    What you get is the story of a tortured soul who's trying to make a fresh start of her life and yet keeps finding herself dragged back into the covert ways of the spy agency to do their dirty work. You will definitely feel for the lead and the writing is pretty solid for her and all those she encounters. It's one of those rare films where there isn't a discernible 'baddie' to take on. The 'bad-guy' (if it can be considered so) is the situation she's found herself in and her attempts to - once again - change her life for the better and truly escape the shackles she's found herself in - whether a slave to drug abuse or the government's whims.

    I think the best thing about Nikita is its realism (yes, I know I've already said you have to suspend your disbelief to appreciate it, but hear me out...) - in many modern films where the lead is a female action hero who spends her time beating up dozens of burly men who stand in her way, you feel that - although cool to look at - it may not happen that way in real life. However, in Nikita she never uses her physical strength to overpower and take-down her targets. Instead, she uses her wits and deadeye with a sniper's rifle to get the dirty job done (and get home in time for tea with her new fella).

    I'm glad I've watched the original. It's a decent film which blends action with genuine emotion for the characters, plus it's worth noting that it was good enough to inspire whoever greenlit its American remake NOT to change it so much that it's barely recognisable and remained true to what made it great in the first place.
    7ma-cortes

    French thriller finely directed by Luc Besson about a violent junkie who becomes undercover assassin

    Exciting and stirring movie that is remade in American style by John Badham (1993) . A gang of armed drug-addicts break into a shop to try and steal drugs to fuel their habit and then takes place a bloody tour of force . However, the police arrive too fast and all addicts but one are killed .The hardened criminal (Anne Parillaud , role subsequently played by Bridget Fonda) , a punk-junkie sociopath acts with consistence violence, even in police custody and is given a life sentence .But after being drugged by her captors she wakes up to find that she has been spared in order to train her as a government assassin . However, top-secret agency official (a Svengali alike ,Tcheky Karyo , character interpreted in the American version by Gabriel Byrne))arranges a stage , so she can be elaborately trained as phantom killer and subdued into obedience. After a dramatic transformation, she is allowed to leave and start a new life for herself .On her eventual release she turns into a sophisticated girl thanks to an old lady (Jeanne Moreau , role also acted by Anne Bancroft) . As a cover, she gets a new identity . And with a wonderful house-mate, a broad-minded, gentle boyfriend (Jean Hugues Anglade , posteriorly performed by Dermot Mulroney) . The two fall in love, but that complicates jobs. His good influence extends to breeding her a conscience that puts love over business, alas unlike agency. However, she begins to discover that there is more to life than she previously thought and soon begins to wish she could escape from her obligation. But the government aren't so easy to evade .

    This exciting noir-thriller is packed with thrills , tension , suspense and lots of noisy action .From the start to the ending the action pace is fast moving, provides fast and furious entertainment with spectacular scenes. Displays nonstop action and is extremely entertaining and thrilling . Some scenes are brutal and with a load of violence. Still it's a good movie, I think furthermore the incredible chemistry between Parillaud and Karyo ,the plot was moving and intense , it makes you want to know what happens after . Anne Parillaud is pretty good as the heroine who turns in violent tendencies to patriotic use , both as the anti-social rebel of the early scenes and the sophisticated, seductive young lady of the later ones . It benefits enormously from a memorably assured performances from veteran as Jeanne Moreau , Jean Reno , Philippe Leroy and Jean Bouise whom is dedicated the movie . Atmospheric musical score by Eric Serra , though with excessive use of synthesizer . Colorful cinematography by Thierry Arbogast and perfectly remastered . The motion picture is lavishly produced and well directed by Luc Besson with his ordinary visual pyrotechnics . He often casts Jean Reno and music always by Eric Serra. Besson is the greatest producer and director from France with hits as ¨Leon¨ , ¨Joan of Arc¨ , ¨The fifth element¨ , the ¨Taxi¨ series , ¨Big blue¨ , ¨Arthur and the Minimois¨ , of course ¨Nikita¨ and many others .
    9mstomaso

    Brilliant, tense and artful

    Anne Parillaud is phenomenal as a terrifyingly vulnerable, beautiful and human young anti-hero with an incredible talent for violence. A drug-addict murderous teen is given a second chance by a government agency looking to exploit her penchant for conscience-less killing. Mentored by a man whose compassion for her is only matched by his ambition and Machiavellian sadism, Nikita ventures on a roller-coaster ride leading a double-life as assassin and clean-living young woman in love. Her passionate affair with Marco and the clarity of her un-drugged consciousness, combine to promote the development of a conscience - a dangerous thing in her line of work. Nikita is, nevertheless, a victim of her circumstances, and like the rest of the characters on both sides, seems stuck in a very bad situation. In addition to the artistry with which this story is told, this film has a very nihilistic sense of justice and not-so-subtly points out the fact that state authorized murder is still murder.

    Jean Reno fans will enjoy his brief typecast cameo as "the cleaner".

    This is one of the best, if not the best, of Besson's films. It is extremely well paced, starkly and beautifully shot, and features some of the best acting and writing of the entire action genre. The script is just a little better in French than English. Nikita does not have the feel of an action film, but rather, feels like a fatalistic drama riddled with almost continuous tragedy and heartbreak, and spiced with just a tad of hope. Parillaud's multi-layered and complex construction of her character is so mesmerizing that it is frankly difficult to think of anything else while attempting to reflect on this film.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The first scene Nikita appears in was the first one Anne Parillaud shot. Despite having only one line, Luc Besson had Parillaud deliver nearly a hundred takes. She later found out that he used the second take in the movie.
    • Erros de gravação
      The cameraman is reflected in the bathtub when Marie takes a bath after returning from the embassy.
    • Citações

      Bob: You died Saturday at 5:00 p.m. The prison doctor confirmed suicide after an overdose of tranquillizers. You're buried in Maisons-Alfort, row 8, plot 30.

      Nikita: [looking at pictures of her funeral] Titi... That's Titi!

      Bob: I work, let's say, for the government. We've decided to give you another chance.

      Nikita: What do I do?

      Bob: Learn. Learn to read, walk, talk, smile and even fight. Learn to do everything.

      Nikita: What for?

      Bob: To serve your country.

      Nikita: What if I don't want to?

      Bob: Row 8, Plot 30.

    • Versões alternativas
      The English dubbed version featured John Tremaine as the voice of Tchéky Karyo's character Bob.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze/The Comfort of Strangers/Defending Your Life/Mister Johnson/La Femme Nikita (1991)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Little Night Music
      (translated as "La Petite Musique de Nuit")

      Music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (as Mozart)

      Performed by the Scottish Chamber Orchestra / Conducted by Raymond Leppard

      Courtesy of Erato

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    Perguntas frequentes19

    • How long is La Femme Nikita?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 30 de agosto de 1991 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • França
      • Itália
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Apple TV Store (MENA)
    • Idiomas
      • Francês
      • Italiano
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Nikita
    • Locações de filme
      • Restaurant Le Train Bleu, Gare de Lyon, Paris 12, Paris, França(first mission)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Gaumont
      • Les Films du Loup
      • Cecchi Gori Group Tiger Cinematografica
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • FRF 50.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 5.017.971
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 44.047
      • 10 de mar. de 1991
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 5.018.604
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 57 min(117 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby SR
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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