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Blackout

Título original: The Blackout
  • 1997
  • R
  • 1 h 38 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,4/10
3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Dennis Hopper, Matthew Modine, Claudia Schiffer, and Béatrice Dalle in Blackout (1997)
Home Video Trailer from Trimark
Reproduzir trailer1:39
1 vídeo
15 fotos
DramaMistérioSuspense

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA debauched Hollywood movie actor tries to piece together one wild night in Miami years earlier which remains a drug-induced blur, and soon finds out that some questions about his past are b... Ler tudoA debauched Hollywood movie actor tries to piece together one wild night in Miami years earlier which remains a drug-induced blur, and soon finds out that some questions about his past are best left unanswered.A debauched Hollywood movie actor tries to piece together one wild night in Miami years earlier which remains a drug-induced blur, and soon finds out that some questions about his past are best left unanswered.

  • Direção
    • Abel Ferrara
  • Roteiristas
    • Abel Ferrara
    • Marla Hanson
    • Christ Zois
  • Artistas
    • Matthew Modine
    • Claudia Schiffer
    • Béatrice Dalle
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,4/10
    3 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Abel Ferrara
    • Roteiristas
      • Abel Ferrara
      • Marla Hanson
      • Christ Zois
    • Artistas
      • Matthew Modine
      • Claudia Schiffer
      • Béatrice Dalle
    • 29Avaliações de usuários
    • 20Avaliações da crítica
    • 37Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 4 vitórias e 1 indicação no total

    Vídeos1

    The Blackout (1973)
    Trailer 1:39
    The Blackout (1973)

    Fotos15

    Ver pôster
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    + 10
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    Elenco principal21

    Editar
    Matthew Modine
    Matthew Modine
    • Matty
    Claudia Schiffer
    Claudia Schiffer
    • Susan
    Béatrice Dalle
    Béatrice Dalle
    • Annie 1
    Sarah Lassez
    Sarah Lassez
    • Annie 2
    Dennis Hopper
    Dennis Hopper
    • Mickey Wayne
    Steven Bauer
    Steven Bauer
    • Mickey's Studio Actor
    Laura Bailey
    Laura Bailey
    • Mickey's Studio Actress
    Nancy Ferrara
    • Mickey's Studio Actress
    Andrew Fiscella
    • Mickey's Studio Actor
    • (as Andy Fiscella)
    • …
    Vincent Lamberti
    • Benedict Arnold Mickey's Studio Actor
    Victoria Duffy
    Victoria Duffy
    • Script Girl
    Nicholas De Cegli
    • Miami Drug Dealer
    Daphnee Duplaix
    Daphnee Duplaix
    • Fly Girl (Daphne)
    • (as Daphne Duplaix)
    Mercy Lopez
    • Fly Girl (Jasmine)
    Lori Eastside
    • That Girl
    • (as Lori A. Eastside)
    Shareef Malnik
    • Gold Carder…
    Peter Cannold
    • Movie Investor
    John Cimillo
    • Passenger Boarding Plane
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Abel Ferrara
    • Roteiristas
      • Abel Ferrara
      • Marla Hanson
      • Christ Zois
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários29

    5,43K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    stephen niz

    Another walk on the dark side with Abel Ferrara

    Neurosis and character antipathy do not make for commercial success. THE BLACKOUT bypassed cinemas in the US, and here in Australia. The multiplex monster has no room for mavericks like Ferrara.

    As there are no others quite like the rebellious Ferrara, he takes liberties from his own catalogue. This time, there are shades of SNAKE EYES (1993), and it pre-empts NEW ROSE HOTEL (1998). In form though, it owes much more to Hitchcock, and VERTIGO.

    Like VERTIGO, THE BLACKOUT masquerades as a thriller, but is more concerned with the nature of identity. Relocating to Miami, the film is aesthetically great, though Modine looks (justifiably) clueless. The axis of the film is the concept rather than plot and the clash of high-art pretension with low-brow sleaze is conscious.

    Some ideas don't come off, and the form of THE BLACKOUT is awkward. But if it is too cold and removed for most filmgoers tastes, it is still a showcase for an uncompromising, daring director, willing to upset accepted conventions.

    The biggest disappointment is that his invention is left in this case to an unheralded release, and will go largely unnoticed.
    Infofreak

    A mixed bag from America's most interesting director. Half compelling, half an embarrassing failure. Not recommended for newcomers to Abel Ferrara.

    Abel Ferrara to me is the most interesting and uncompromising American director working in movies today. He has had a career like no other, and one that even his fans would have to admit has been extremely uneven. For every brilliant movie he has made ('Bad Lieutenant', 'King Of New York') he has made some stinkers ('Fear City', 'Dangerous Game'). 'The Blackout' is somewhere between the two, half compelling, half embarrassing failure. Newcomers to Ferrara's work should probably avoid this one until they have sampled a few of his more successful works. One of my big problems with this movie is the casting of Matthew Modine. Modine is a pretty good actor but doesn't have the acting chops (of say, Harvey Keitel or Christopher Walken, previous Ferrara leading men) to really make his role here totally convincing. Modine plays a young Hollywood star who is out of control on booze, sex and drugs ala the real life escapades of Christian Slater or Robert Downey, Jr. A few of his scenes were excellent, but overall I just didn't believe him. The rest of the cast is a little shaky too. Beatrice Dalle ('Betty Blue') and supermodel Claudia Schiffer are both adequate but not that compelling, and Dennis Hopper, who I am a major fan of, just hams it up in what my friends call a "hey, maaaaaaan!" role. It was good to see Steven Bauer ('Scarface') in this movie, an underrated actor who hasn't received the roles he deserves, but then he is only given a few lines, and then he's gone. I'm also really taken by the beautiful Sarah Lassez who starred in Gregg Araki's weird and wonderful 'Nowhere', released the same year as this. I was hoping she became a major star, but sadly it looks like that isn't going to happen. 'The Blackout' is by no means Ferrara's worst movie but it is also far from his best. As uneven as it is fans will get enough out of it to justify watching it, but he can do so much better than this! A very frustrating movie this one.
    tieman64

    Gaps and relapses

    Abel Ferrara's "Blackout" stars Matthew Modine as Matty, a self-loathing addict and Hollywood actor. Essentially a feature length short story, the film watches as Matty attempts to both crawl his way out of addiction and atone for an event which happened during a memory blackout. To say any more would be to spoil Ferrara's plot.

    Suffice to say that Ferrara's aesthetic perfectly echoes Matty's hallucinatory mindset. Hazy and trance-like, and set in the slime-world of a neon-lit Miami, the film moves like a lava lamp. When he's not salivating over drugs and booze, Matty's knee deep in strippers, beautiful women and pornography. This, of course, all echoes Ferrara's own life; he was himself once an addict and pornographer.

    "Blackout's" plot eventually becomes something akin to Hitchcock's "Vertigo". Here Matty is revealed to be a deeply disturbed man who chases doubles and who hungers irrationally for ghostly women. Unsurprisingly, Ferrara's portrayal of an addict/alcoholic is sympathetic and crackles with authenticity; Ferrara knows his material well. Strange for a film which features copious female nudity, the film sympathises with its women. Ferrara's nudity may be gratuitous, but is rarely erotic. The film co-stars a mostly inept Dennis Hopper and a occasionally raw and powerful Mathew Modine.

    7.9/10 – Worth one viewing.
    chaos-rampant

    Mood piece

    We're all stuck with narrow selves through the day, doing our best to mind our part in the noisy, incoherent narrative of life, organizing a myriad worries with one eye at the clock. At nights however, some nights, we dream, have passionate sex or watch truly mind-bending movies, drawing fresh water from the well of deep, mysterious non-self which is the great dancefloor where lovers meet their dragon.

    So here's a film about a man haunted by a half-remembered night from his past, who wakes up inside a dream to find himself. The film begins and ends with shots of the protagonist in his own primordial sea, the sea of clarity and dissolved self. He is a famous actor, to stress the roles and guises of that weekday showbiz self we carry with us everywhere. A lot of time is spent around film sets and cameras.

    The film is split in two very clear halves, a usual trope of films about memory since Vertigo; the long, blurry Miami night of sexual obsession and going back 18 months later. Overt drugging and boozing insert the dazedness of mind. The meta-aspects of the work involving a sex video being made and 'looking back' through cameras are thin and obvious. And Ferrara's attempt at a script-less improvised feel among the actors does not pan out in the least, not solely Modine's fault this.

    My guess is that it does not pan out because Ferrara is not a genuinely curious, patient person like Altman who takes pleasure in the tentative brushing of characters, Ferrara is eager to get to the bleeding soul. I don't have to reach out to his other films to confirm this, here's a film about yearnings but only as acknowledged through an overbearing sense of misery and self-pity.

    The obvious self-reference. The emotional bluntness. The shouting and partying as some acidic edge. These are all the same, short narrative distance away from the viewer. The film can be described as David Lynch films Le Mepris but all that French, Godardian baggage are as cumbersome now as thirty years prior. So in narrative terms, it is a modest failure.

    And yet I recommend this to you on its power to enchant with its visual fabrics. There are all sorts of those:

    1) the sex video as in-sight of our guy's hallucinative desires, and grainy handcamera footage as memory, fixing the mind. Dennis Hopper anchors this part as director, channeling both his Blue Velvet and Last Movie chaotic selves. 2) raw, cutting intimacy around the lovely Dalle. 3) warm coziness in New York, with smart usage of Claudia Schiffer as token of bloodless normalcy. 4) the b/w, Nouvelle Vague- inspired interlude at the beach.

    You may settle in one or more of those. I settle in the Miami reverie, not the pleasure-seeking itself but those fleeting drive-by shots of nightlife and cloudy views from balconies, the gauzy loss of self and story. Marvelous, marvelous mood. If you mute the drama, it can sink into you.
    JudyBlue

    Guilt trippin'

    No one can make guilt look as beautiful as Abel Ferrara. In 'The Blackout' he drags you down into a mud of obsession, self-loathing and substance-abuse, showing you that anxiety can be a trip in itself. The timeline is torn and bent out of shape, and it feels like half the movie is a flashback. Combine that with several layers of superimposed tripping and artistic handheld video footage of erotic dancers and you have something resembling 'The Blackout'. The acting is almost as excellent as the direction. Matthew Modine plays surprisingly well as the tortured Hollywood actor, and both Beatrice Dalle and Claudia Schiffer play their (albeit flat) characters flawlessly. I feel however that Dennis Hopper has started regurgitating what has become his only personality, and it wears thin. I usually love his performance, but in this film I could have done without him. Some will stress the need for a clearly defined plot, thereby completely dismissing efforts like this. A shame, since Ferrara is one of the few directors who can convincingly create a view into the depths of human depravation. The film is filled with great visuals, and carries a very recognizable Ferrara-look, feel and theme.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      When Matthew Modine first read the script, he told Abel Ferrara that he thought it was horrifying.
    • Citações

      Mickey Wayne: It's not a question of "Did I"? It's "Do I remember"?

    • Conexões
      Featured in Especial Cannes: 50 Anos de Festival (1997)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Miami
      Written by Bono (as Paul Hewson), Adam Clayton, The Edge (as Dave Evans), Larry Mullen Jr.

      Performed by U2

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes16

    • How long is The Blackout?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 11 de junho de 1997 (França)
    • Países de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
      • França
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Francês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Oculto na Memória
    • Locações de filme
      • Miami, Flórida, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • Cipa
      • Les Films Number One
      • MDP Worldwide
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 38 min(98 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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