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IMDbPro

Prova de Vida

Título original: Proof of Life
  • 2000
  • 12
  • 2 h 15 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,3/10
60 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Russell Crowe and Meg Ryan in Prova de Vida (2000)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Reproduzir trailer2:17
1 vídeo
36 fotos
Political ThrillerActionDramaThriller

Alice contrata um negociador profissional para obter a libertação de seu marido engenheiro que foi sequestrado por guerrilheiros antigovernamentais na América do Sul.Alice contrata um negociador profissional para obter a libertação de seu marido engenheiro que foi sequestrado por guerrilheiros antigovernamentais na América do Sul.Alice contrata um negociador profissional para obter a libertação de seu marido engenheiro que foi sequestrado por guerrilheiros antigovernamentais na América do Sul.

  • Direção
    • Taylor Hackford
  • Roteiristas
    • Tony Gilroy
    • William Prochnau
    • Thomas Hargrove
  • Artistas
    • Meg Ryan
    • Russell Crowe
    • David Morse
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,3/10
    60 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Taylor Hackford
    • Roteiristas
      • Tony Gilroy
      • William Prochnau
      • Thomas Hargrove
    • Artistas
      • Meg Ryan
      • Russell Crowe
      • David Morse
    • 284Avaliações de usuários
    • 84Avaliações da crítica
    • 45Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 5 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Proof of Life
    Trailer 2:17
    Proof of Life

    Fotos36

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    + 29
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    Elenco principal48

    Editar
    Meg Ryan
    Meg Ryan
    • Alice Bowman
    Russell Crowe
    Russell Crowe
    • Terry Thorne
    David Morse
    David Morse
    • Peter Bowman
    Pamela Reed
    Pamela Reed
    • Janis Goodman
    David Caruso
    David Caruso
    • Dino
    Anthony Heald
    Anthony Heald
    • Ted Fellner
    Stanley Anderson
    Stanley Anderson
    • Jerry
    Gottfried John
    Gottfried John
    • Eric Kessler
    Alun Armstrong
    Alun Armstrong
    • Wyatt
    Michael Kitchen
    Michael Kitchen
    • Ian Havery
    Margo Martindale
    Margo Martindale
    • Ivy
    Mario Ernesto Sánchez
    Mario Ernesto Sánchez
    • Arturo Fernandez
    • (as Mario Ernesto Sanchez)
    Pietro Sibille
    • Juaco
    Vicky Hernández
    • Maria
    • (as Vicky Hernandez)
    Norma Martínez
    Norma Martínez
    • Norma
    • (as Norma Martinez)
    Diego Trujillo
    Diego Trujillo
    • Eliodoro
    Aristóteles Picho
    • Sandro
    Sarahi Echeverria
    • Cinta
    • (as Sarahi Echeverría)
    • Direção
      • Taylor Hackford
    • Roteiristas
      • Tony Gilroy
      • William Prochnau
      • Thomas Hargrove
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários284

    6,360.1K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    bob the moo

    At it's heart it is a dramatic and enjoyable film - the padding is the problem

    Peter and Alice Bowman are working on a dam in South America in the employment of a large oil company. When Peter is kidnapped the company bring in expert negotiator Terry Thorne. However when the oil company runs out of money due to no insurance, they take Terry off the case and he leaves for another job. However a pang of conscience brings him back to help Alice and he replaces the corrupt locals. As he tries to help get her husband back he also falls for Alice.

    As a fan of David Caruso, I was annoyed that I missed this film at the cinema (I blinked and I missed it!) and by the time the video came out it had slipped my mind. Shown of tv last night was the perfect time for me to see it and, despite negative reviews, I actually quite enjoyed it. I think the problem is that the critics struggled to get past the handful of problems (more later) to find that the film was an effective, if talky, drama with a thriller edge. The premise is good and it allows tense scenes where Terry tough talks as well as scenes with Peter with his captors. It's not perfect in this regard as it is a bit talky but for me it was engaging - I got the impression from other comments that people had expected raging gun battles all the way through the film.

    However what does damage the film is Alice Bowman. I can see the potential behind Terry and Alice's romance - it could have been another layer of drama. In reality it doesn't work a bit and only serves to take away from the main thrust of the film - their relationship never convinces and nothing of interest is actually done with it. Likewise the character of Alice doesn't really work either - I never believed she was emotionally going through the wringers to the degree the script suggested she would be. A big part of the blame for this must lie with Meg Ryan herself. She is miscast in the first place, but on top of that she is too pristine throughout the film - hair and makeup perfect no matter what and a stupid little hippie-girl personality that stops her being a real person. It is a bad performance and the film would have benefited from a shorter running time which lost the romance subplot and scaled back on Ryan's time.

    However she is carried by a real star turn from Crowe. It may not be that clever a role but he does `tough' really well and he helps improve the tension of several scenes. Morse is a good actor and he does well here. The only downside of his performance is that he seemed fit and well outside of his makeup; I was looking for him to look thinner and mentally battered as the film progressed but he didn't - it's not his fault, I guess the film had no time to do this. Caruso gives the same tough performance he does in every thing he ever does so if you like that then you'll like him here - I do!

    Overall this is an enjoyable film if you can get past it's major problems surrounding Alice and Terry's relationship. Script-wise this aspect was weak on paper, but a comparatively rubbish turn from the miscast Meg Ryan just makes it all the weaker. Thank god that the basic premise is tense and the male leads' tough talking is good fun.
    Shiva-11

    Proof that you can follow up a blockbuster with another good film

    "Globalization" is one of those catchy buzzwords that shares the stage with the likes of "abortion", and "capital punishment"- while one group of people thinks it is a good thing that just might save the world, another thinks it is on par with the plague. There is however no dispute that with advancements in technology and the search for new capital markets, businesses are expanding abroad at a phenomenal rate into countries with little infrastructure or wealth and the ever-present danger of war. This expansion has also been the catalyst for a lucrative sideline business - kidnapping.

    Peter Bowman is a man trying to do the right thing. In order to build a dam to stop the killer floods in the South American country of Teclac he must work under the auspices of a large oil concern. As with any overseas project, Peter has to deal with many problems: lack of supplies, red tape, feelings of isolation, a crumbling marriage and living with the threat of terrorist activity. While on his way to work Terry is stopped at a roadblock and taken hostage by a band of guerrillas who demand a huge ransom for his release. Enter Terry Thorne, an insurance investigator whose specialty is "K and R" - kidnapping and ransom. Terry's job is to negotiate the release of kidnapped foreign nationals. And he is a very busy man.

    This movie really piqued my interest and not because of the off-screen romance between Meg Ryan and Russell Crowe: the father of a good friend of mine is an international financial consultant, and he was almost kidnapped while working in SouthEast Asia. The attempt was foiled by the quick actions of the special security detail that intercepted details of the plan and whisked him out of the country. I spoke with him after seeing the trailers for the movie and he said that in country he is currently working in you do not anywhere without heavily armed escorts. The possibility of being kidnapped is viewed as the cost of doing business. I forgot to ask him if they had the appropriate insurance.

    "Proof of Life" grew out of a story in Vanity Fair and is loosely based on the kidnapping of an American businessman by Colombian guerillas. Taylor Hackford is a director who eschews the safety of studios, and opts for that extra touch of realism. In keeping with this goal, he took the cast and crew down to Ecuador, where he was met with erupting volcanoes, blizzards, a cast beset with altitude sickness, a coup in Quito, muggings, heart attacks on the set and the death of a stand-in. The final cut is an apt homage to those involved.

    Typically cast as the funny, quirky, girlfriend afflicted with endless mini-crises, Meg Ryan has been afforded few opportunities to demonstrate acting abilities. As Alice Bowman, she has the chance to flesh out a multidimensional character that doesn't spend her onscreen time whining, crying or laughing insipidly. And she does so admirably. Russell Crowe, riding high after the success of "Gladiator", once again delivers a solid performance. Crowe draws heavily on his own quiet, severe introspection to create a character conflicted between loyalties, expectations and realities and the feelings he tries to suppress for Ryan's character. Their real life tryst helped to establish the tone for the powerful, yet subtle scenes they share onscreen. David Morse is excellent as Terry, a man trying to hang onto his sanity in an insane situation. As he is marched across country, and endures humiliation, and beatings, he never loses sight of his goal to stay alive and escape. His transformation from clean cut businessman (I've never seen him with such a close shave) to disheveled captive is done slowly and deliberately, and the viewer appreciates what he's experiencing. Finally, it was interesting to see David Caruso - who has floated in the acting netherworld since he left "NYPD Blue" almost six years ago - as a rival K&R specialist who assists Terry with his mission. Caruso reminds us why he has not graced many marquees - he's not very funny, action is not his forte, and he is an average actor at best. The other star of the film is the location.

    With most of the film having been shot in the mountains of Ecuador, (the guerrillas camp was literally carved out of the jungle) it is not surprising that the film looks gorgeous: tumbling waterfalls, plunging ravines and flourishing jungles are stock backdrops for the story and you begin to take them for granted. One of my favorite scenes was when the infinite expanse of greenery is broken by a band of camouflaged rebels who were totally invisible only moments earlier. I was surprised how tight the cinematography was given the expansive vistas, but nothing is sacrificed in the process. In addition to a well-written script that avoids most cliches, and contains palpable suspense, I was impressed with the way the relationship between Alice and Terry was handled. Rather than have the characters jumping into bed for a sweatfest the writers opted for an undercurrent of subtle tension with the characters exchanging occasional confused glances and moments of awkward silence when their hands brush.

    The first entertaining intelligent film to come out of Tinseltown in a long while - maybe it bodes well for the Christmas rush.
    8DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: (DVD) Proof of Life (2000)

    What happens in real life will inevitably have an effect on the reel one. Tom Cruise learnt that with his strange antics in real life - his screen one suffered with a less than expected stellar box office for M:I:3 despite positive critical reviews. Way back in 2000, Russell Crowe and Meg Ryan learnt that too, with their rumoured romance while shooting this movie, one of the many reasons resulting in this becoming a box office bomb.

    I felt that it was not a bad movie actually, given the story which I found interesting in the first place, for its extremely distant relation to what I'm doing, and being an action adventure movie, it works with its fair share of big action sequences.

    Russell Crowe plays Terry Thorne, a consultant in the Security and Crisis Response Unit of Luthan Risk International. His job is to negotiate the safe return of Kidnap and Ransom (K&R) victims around the world, and of course, this brings him frequently to where the action is, during the payment of ransoms and the extraction of hostages. He yearns for a management role, but as always, if you're an excellent field operative, you're played to your strengths out there.

    Which brings him to his latest client, Meg Ryan's Alice Bowman, whose husband Peter Bowman (David Morse), an employee with the biggest international oil firmed, gets kidnapped by chance during a raid in Ecuador. There are numerous scenes in the movie to perk your interest in this much behind-the-scenes industry of K&R, the terrorist(?) groups' motivation, and how the entire business is conducted, with the engagement of peers as well as the involvement of shady government personnel.

    There are many fine touches that might go unnoticed, like how network of contacts and peers are milked, cooperation extended, the wheelings and dealings of large multinational corporations, and politics in general. But the focus moves quickly towards a micro one, that between Thorne and Alice Bowman, as he accomplishes to build her trust in him that he's the best in the business and knows what he's doing.

    Perhaps this is one of the rare movies that allowed Crowe to be an Australian (and keep the accent) in a Hollywood production. His Thorne is oozes enough machismo to carry the action through and is credible enough to be believed as a veteran in the business. Meg Ryan this time round has a more serious character to play, albeit at times a weepie one, steering well clear of the pretty ditzy blonde comedic roles she has become accustomed to. They had probably shot some love scenes for this movie, but I suppose the bad press resulted in those scenes ending up on the cutting room floor. The romance between the character was also almost squashed out, save for the out of place suggestion of a strong physical attraction which rears its ugly head in the second half of the movie, slowing the pace down a little without much mature development. I thought that should it had been removed entirely, it'll probably end up a stronger movie, with Thorne more in character as a mission driven individual.

    The first David, David Caruso, is finding a new lease of life back in television with CSI, since branching off to movies after NYPD Blue didn't augur too well for him. I thought his performance here was nothing much to shout about though. However David Morse, who usually plays supporting roles, put up an adequately engaging Peter Bowman as an executive caught in the wrong place at the wrong time, and examines the fear and desperation of a man kidnapped and constantly at the wrong end of a gun barrel.

    The theme song by Danny Elfman is addictive (time to hunt it down), and the end credits was played over a helicopter view of the entire Ecuadorian landscape, just beautiful to look at. Clocking at just over 2 hours, it provided some good entertainment for a lazy Sunday afternoon.

    Code 3 DVD contains the behind the scenes making-of documentary (13" 40'), the theatrical trailer, and the feature length audio commentary by director Taylor Hackford.
    6Theo Robertson

    Maybe A Little Old Fashioned To Be Truly Effective

    Maureen O'Hara stars in a movie where her husband gets kidnapped those damn commies in South East Asia so she hires tough and dashing soldier of fortune Clark Gable to save the day

    That's not the cast or the location of PROOF OF LIFE but it does have a very similar plot . Did someone mention this was a 1940s matinée blockbuster ? Just curious because while I was watching the movie I was struck by how old fashioned everything felt . Russell Crowe plays an Aussie who served in the SAS and saves a Frenchman from the Chechens in the opening sequence , but you could have had Gable playing an American paratrooper saving someone from the Red Army on the River Elbe in May 1945 . Different actor , different period of history , different enemy but still the same basic story with the action switching from Europe to say South East Asia in 1950

    That's not to say PROOF OF LIFE is a bad film . It's not and I found it mainly entertaining though perhaps a little too long . It's just that it is so old fashioned that you can see where the predictable story threads are going to begin and end . You can't deny that both the cast and action scenes are good , it's just that you also can't stop thinking it would have been better if it'd been filmed in monochrome and directed by Michael Curtiz with no bad language or sexual references
    8JesNollie

    More believable than your average action film.

    I like this film. I must admit that a part of me was hoping for the typical chick flic ending, but if I'd actually gotten it I'm sure I wouldn't have liked the movie as much. The movie was more believable than I've come to expect from action films, with the possible exception of the bravado of the captive husband. I find it hard to believe that someone in that situation would be so constantly antagonistic to their captors. Sure, you might have a moment or two where you'd just had enough and had to push back, but I find it hard to believe that you'd be that way ALL the time.

    But the negotiations were believable for the most part, and the growing attraction between the leads was done nicely.

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    • Curiosidades
      During a break in filming at Stowe School in Buckinghamshire (where Russell Crowe's character watches his son play rugby union), one of the extras asked Russell Crowe for some acting advice. After their conversation, Crowe remembered the student's serious interest in acting and sent him autographed posters and photos from his film, Gladiador (2000), and wrote a letter saying, "A journey of thousand miles begins with a single step." The extra, Henry Cavill, went on to pursue his acting career and ultimately landed the role of Superman in O Homem de Aço (2013), with Crowe playing his father.
    • Erros de gravação
      Even though the movie takes place in a fictional South American country, the Ecuadorian flag can be seen flying in many places.
    • Citações

      Dino: [sarcastically] So basically we just call the army, schedule a battle. How would Wednesday around 3 be for you?

    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Proof of Life/Vertical Limit/The Emperor's New Groove/State and Main/Pollock/Dungeons and Dragons (2000)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Mala Suerte
      Written by Christian Valencia

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    Perguntas frequentes19

    • How long is Proof of Life?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 6 de abril de 2001 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • Filmymen
      • Warner Bros. (US)
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Espanhol
      • Russo
      • Italiano
      • Francês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Proof of Life
    • Locações de filme
      • Quito, Equador
    • Empresas de produção
      • Castle Rock Entertainment
      • Bel Air Entertainment
      • Anvil Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 65.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 32.598.931
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 10.207.869
      • 10 de dez. de 2000
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 62.761.005
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 15 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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