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IMDbPro

Jogo de Espiões

Título original: Spy Game
  • 2001
  • 12
  • 2 h 6 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,1/10
173 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
2.715
942
Brad Pitt and Robert Redford in Jogo de Espiões (2001)
Assistir a Trailer [OV]
Reproduzir trailer1:18
8 vídeos
88 fotos
SpyActionCrimeThriller

O agente aposentado da CIA, Nathan Muir, lembra-se do treinamento de Tom Bishop enquanto trabalhava contra a política da agência de libertá-lo de seus captores chineses.O agente aposentado da CIA, Nathan Muir, lembra-se do treinamento de Tom Bishop enquanto trabalhava contra a política da agência de libertá-lo de seus captores chineses.O agente aposentado da CIA, Nathan Muir, lembra-se do treinamento de Tom Bishop enquanto trabalhava contra a política da agência de libertá-lo de seus captores chineses.

  • Direção
    • Tony Scott
  • Roteiristas
    • Michael Frost Beckner
    • David Arata
  • Artistas
    • Robert Redford
    • Brad Pitt
    • Catherine McCormack
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,1/10
    173 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    2.715
    942
    • Direção
      • Tony Scott
    • Roteiristas
      • Michael Frost Beckner
      • David Arata
    • Artistas
      • Robert Redford
      • Brad Pitt
      • Catherine McCormack
    • 441Avaliações de usuários
    • 75Avaliações da crítica
    • 63Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 3 indicações no total

    Vídeos8

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 1:18
    Trailer [OV]
    Spy Game: About To Get Benched
    Clip 0:42
    Spy Game: About To Get Benched
    Spy Game: About To Get Benched
    Clip 0:42
    Spy Game: About To Get Benched
    Spy Game: You're Going To Miss It
    Clip 0:58
    Spy Game: You're Going To Miss It
    Spy Game: Where'd You Learn To Shoot
    Clip 0:37
    Spy Game: Where'd You Learn To Shoot
    Spy Game: I Never Said He Was A She
    Clip 0:38
    Spy Game: I Never Said He Was A She
    Spy Game: Happy Birthday Nathan
    Clip 0:44
    Spy Game: Happy Birthday Nathan

    Fotos88

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    Elenco principal85

    Editar
    Robert Redford
    Robert Redford
    • Nathan Muir
    Brad Pitt
    Brad Pitt
    • Tom Bishop
    Catherine McCormack
    Catherine McCormack
    • Elizabeth Hadley
    Stephen Dillane
    Stephen Dillane
    • Charles Harker
    Larry Bryggman
    Larry Bryggman
    • Troy Folger
    Marianne Jean-Baptiste
    Marianne Jean-Baptiste
    • Gladys Jennip
    Matthew Marsh
    Matthew Marsh
    • Dr. Byars
    Todd Boyce
    Todd Boyce
    • Robert Aiken
    Michael Paul Chan
    Michael Paul Chan
    • Vincent Vy Ngo
    Garrick Hagon
    Garrick Hagon
    • Cy Wilson
    Andrew Grainger
    • Andrew Unger
    Bill Buell
    Bill Buell
    • Fred Kappler
    Colin Stinton
    Colin Stinton
    • Henry Pollard
    Ted Maynard
    • CIA Administrator
    Tom Hodgkins
    • CIA Lobby Guard
    Rufus Wright
    Rufus Wright
    • Folger's Secretary
    Demetri Goritsas
    Demetri Goritsas
    • Billy Hyland
    Quinn Collins
    • OPS Center Security Officer
    • Direção
      • Tony Scott
    • Roteiristas
      • Michael Frost Beckner
      • David Arata
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários441

    7,1172.8K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    Steve-176

    Spy Game: Robert Redford, Brad Pitt, Catherine McCormack, Stephen Dillane. High paced, boy's own Amercian spies out to save the world and maybe each other. 3 Flys Out of 5

    You can rely on Robert Redford and Brad Pitt for polished performances and action director Tony Scott (Crimson Tide, Enemy Of The State, True Romance, Top Gun) will always keep the pace of a movie galloping along, but will the mix necessary produce a quality movie?

    Spy Game is essentially about the foibles of humanity. Even seasoned hard nosed spies can have softer moments you know.

    Nathan Muir (Redford) is on his last day as a spy with the CIA when his protégéé Tom Bishop (Pitt) gets nabbed on an unauthorised mission trying to break someone out of a Chinese Prison. Bishop is going to be executed in 24 hours unless Muir can do something.

    Muir realises that the CIA is going to dump Bishop for the sake of impending trade talks. We are treated to a series of extended flashbacks to Vietnam, Berlin and Beirut which chronicle Muir and Bishop's relationship.

    Spy Game is mostly a boys own story with lots of explosions showing smart men outwitting the opposition. As Muir teaches Bishop his tradecraft we're introduced to how spies are taught to case a restaurant, fix a radio, vomit on demand.

    We're told how they are trained to be callous, to look at the big picture, to stay remote, to sell out people if that's of use. They're taught how to kill.

    And we're shown again and again the CIA assassinating people, causing civil unrest, authorising explosions, arranging murders. The film makes no apologies for this but implies that for the good of the free world, well someone has to do it. Spy Game certainly surfs sweetly on American patriotism.

    Spy Game is predictably interesting though mainly because of Robert Redford who still has that million dollar smile and Brad Pitt who mixes boyish charm with a slight degree of angst.

    Tony Scott's film making style however really needs to slow down. Relentless pace and swooping cameras are eventually tiring and they don't give time to contemplate. Still, Spy Game is slick and informative. I'm damn glad I don't live in a war zone.

    3 Blown Apart Flys
    7Movie-12

    Not just another Tony Scott action film--it's complex, thought-provoking. *** (out of four)

    SPY GAME / (2001) *** (out of four)

    Tony Scott is known for his big budget, fast-paced, action-packed extravaganzas. His latest film, "Spy Game" is no exception. He takes advantage of a massive budget, but loses sight of human comprehension. It's difficult to grasp his moral when it's awash in a superficial style where individual shots seldom last more than thirty seconds, and where dialogue never exceeds the length of a short paragraph. There's not much time to introduce characters, situations, or even locations-datelines appear on the screen to identify times and places.

    Yet, it doesn't just feel as if we are in another movie by Tony Scott-everything feels very real. The danger is real. The characters are real. Many action films are about the action, special effects, and car chase sequences. "Spy Game" does contain those things, but they are in a focused, tight, evocative thriller. This movie is about the characters, not the action. It never forgets that.

    "Spy Game" contains a complex structure. We begin in 1991. Veteran CIA officer Nathan Muir (Robert Redford) prepares for retirement. On his last day, he learns that his one-time protégé, Tom Bishop (Brad Pitt), has been captured in a foreign prison on a charge of espionage and will be executed in 24 hours. Fearing international crisis, the CIA decides it would be too risky to save him. But with a new generation in control of the agency, Nathan is no longer an insider. He must outsmart his own agency in order to save his old friend.

    Most of the film plays out in flashbacks as the CIA digests valuable information from Muir. The movie spans from the Vietnam war to the end of the Cold War, with years ranging from 1965 to about 1991 (although the characters don't seem to age much). We learn Nathan chose Tom as a sharpshooter in Vietnam. He trained with Bishop. They formed a close bond, until something came between them-a woman.

    The forty-year span in time poses no problem for "Spy Game." The engaging screenplay, by Michael Frost Beckner and David Arata, focuses on only the necessary characters. The soundtrack, by Harry Gregson-Williams, masterfully captures the various time periods, spicing the scenes with a slick sense of style and intrigue. The cinematography by Daniel Mindel makes the differences in location clear. Christian Wagner's editing gives the movie a frenzied, almost rushed emotion, that puts us right in the middle of the race against time.

    Pitt and Redford retain their ground, despite a thick style. Redford creates a character out of nothing. We know little about him at the beginning, and we know little about him at the end. But he somehow gives his character a conscience, human values, and a lot of interest. We care about him because we do not like the black and white CIA operatives. Thus, we care about Pitt's character as well. Pitt gives his character an immature nature. He is in a stereotypical young hotshot role that might have fit him better a few years ago, but he still creates a grave sense of panic and fear.

    With a structure like this, we expect subplots to evolve from the flashbacks. There is an intriguing terrorist story. A love story. Themes about betrayal, trust, position, friendship, commitment…but "Spy Game" never slows down and allows us to absorb these important details. By the end, we feel exhilarated, and we know we just watched a very smart, well-crafted film, but the most we can take from it is that it is a very smart, well-crafted film. I think, beneath all the style and surface, there is a little more to the movie than that.
    8snake77

    High quality Hollywood thriller

    Spy Game is everything we're not supposed to expect from a major Hollywood movie: engrossing, intelligent, well written, acted and directed. But that's just what it is and more, this is definitely the best thing I've seen since Memento. Although Pitt is really good and Redford plays himself as well as he has in years, I think the most credit should go to Tony Scott. In the hands of a lesser director this could have been something more like Mission Impossible. But Scott stays right on target, keeping us interested, developing the characters, and keeping the pacing nearly perfect. Scott also shows us that he's stayed with the times: he employs the full array of modern camera tricks like fast motion, reverse zooms and funky lenses but in a way that actually makes the film better instead of being an annoying distraction. The dialogue feels natural, all the actors do good work, no one tries to steal the show or be the star. The story is interesting and almost never lapses into the kind of hyper violence or sappy sentimentality one has come to associate with modern studio pictures. You get a feeling this is pretty close to how the CIA really operates, a place with fantastic technology at its disposal but who's ultimate effectiveness is determined by the fallible people who run the missions and take the chances. I really enjoyed this film, I hope it's a sign of things to come and not a rarity.
    7OneAnjel

    The Sting meets The Mechanic

    That's my big takeaway for this film. It reminds me of good old-fashioned filmmaking where there was a good script, there were good actors and there was good videography. You just can't make them like this anymore. People who have seen the Sting with Robert Redford will feel a bit nostalgic watching this film. I also put the Mechanic in my title because it reminds me of when Jan-Michael Vincent and Charles Bronson made another fabulous film about spies and espionage.

    Some people call this a spy film but I disagree, this is a film about two spies who have a deep respect for each other and know their craft well - or at least Mr Muir knows his craft so well that he fools even people he works for, anticipating their suspicions. It's about not leaving someone behind.

    Redford is such a stand out actor, he's truly one of a kind. Many reviews mentioned that Redford and Pitt seem to work well together but what a lot of people don't know is that Redford actually hand-picked Brad Pitt and his first feature chatacter was in a Redford film called A River Runs Through It in 1992. Redford is quoted as saying that Pitt reminded him of himself and he had big plans for him. So one would assume they are probably friends, which probably also answers the question someone else had which is why Pitt did not choose to star in the Bourne identity instead of Spy Game - he already had a successful working relationship with Redford. Furthermore Pitt did not need to do the Bourne identity, he had already done Oceans 11 and Ocean's 12 along with a myriad of other incredibly High grossing films, much higher grossing than those that Matt Damon did in a similar time period.

    As for people saying that the plot was confusing or poorly written, I disagree on that point as well. Because it has a beginning, it has a middle and it has an ending. The film starts out showing us how Pitt's character gets thrown into prison in a foreign country; the middle part is kind of shown along with the present activities of Muir setting up Tom's rescue while at the same time telling how he and Tom met and worked together in the past. And all this while the audience knows that Muir is planning to rescue Tom but we don't know how until really the final moments of the film, which is the sting more or less. The inserted memories were masterfully done.

    For anyone who watches AGT and wonders how those illusionists trick the panel into saying certain numbers and drawing certain pictures, you will learn a lot by watching this film because those psychological mind games of training your audience of what to chose and what to see are very real and they did, in fact, start in the spy arena.
    7ma-cortes

    Moving espionage thriller from Tony Scott with suspense , thrills , intriguing events and great performance

    Nail-biting and exciting movie about terrorism , spies and geopolitical issues . The film deals with a spy chief called Nathan Muir (Robert Redford) who's on the verge of retirement from the Central Intelligence Agency. Then the veteran spy learns that his one-time protege Tom Bishop (Brad Pitt) , a CIA operative serving in various countries , has been incarcerated. Tom has gone rogue and been taken prisoner after attempting to smuggle a prisoner out of China . Although Muir and Bishop had once been close friends , sharing long periods of thrilling adventures from Vietnam , Berlin , to Beirut where Muir schemed a plot to chase a mastermind terrorist . As in Lebanon , both of whom formed a solid and shaky alliance to break the terrorist ring which previous bombed US military targets with a lot of casualties . Things go wrong when Bishop falls in love with an aid-worker (Catherine McCormack) . As his memories of their friendship come flooding back , Muir sets about managing the rescue of his old friend from a Communist prison . Meanwhile , the super-powerful CIA uses technological-gizmo-surveillance satellites and modern surveillance systems for people spying and hound terrorists relentlessly . It's not how you play the game ... It's how the Game Plays you. It's not how you play the game. It's how the game plays you. "Poor is the pupil who does not surpass his teacher" . In the end, only friendship matters!

    Story's core is interesting and script is dense with information and drama . The ultra-brisk editing and rapid scenes movement leaves little time to consider some inadequacies . Regarding a peculiar relationship between two top-of-the-range spies whose long knowledge has developed bad blood and resentment between them , in spite of the two men haven't seen each other in years . Here Brad Pitt is reunited as a co-star with his A River Runs Through It (1992) director Robert Redford for this espionage thriller from Tony Scott , and both of them giving awesome interpretations . Engaging and twisted thriller concerning the spy-world on Middle East , China and other countries . Robert Redford and Brad Pitt sustain interest enough in this tale of friendship , betrayal , sacrifice and terrorism . Brad Pitt is good as tough super-spy as well as sniper operative and Robert Redford 's cool displaying an enjoyable performance as the elderly and regretted CIA agent . The use of geopolitical messages to add weight to a romantic subplot between the spy and the beautiful nurse , well played by Catherine McCormack , though feels a little forced , at times. They are well accompanied by a good cast , such as : Stephen Dillane , Larry Bryggman , Marianne Jean-Baptiste , Shane Rimmer, David Hemmings, Benedict Wong , Ken Leung , Matthew Marsh , Michael Paul Chan , among others .

    The film packs adequate , evocative cinematography by Dan Mindel and rousing musical score by Harry Gregson-Williams . The motion picture was well realized by Tony Scott . He was a good filmmaker whose works received some great reviews , his first big hit happened when was asked by producers Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer to direct Top Gun (1986) starring Tom Cruise . He would work again with Cruise on another high adrenaline film Days of thunder (1990) , which proved less successful . He followed the success of Top Gun with the sequel Beverly Hill cop II (1987) with Eddie Murphy , which was well received . In 1993, he directed the cult movie True Romance (1993) , which was written by emerging director Quentin Tarantino but Scott had a lot of control over the film . While Unstoppable (2010) was Tony Scott and Denzel Washington's fifth and final film collaboration. The others were Red tide (1995) , Man on fire (2004) , Déjà vu (2006) , and Pelham 123 (2009) all of them got big successes . Spy Game(2001) rating : 7/10 . Well worth watching . Above average . The picture will appeal to Robert Redford and Brad Pitt fans .

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Tony Scott asked for more money to film the rooftop scene in "Berlin" (in order to rent a helicopter for an aerial scene) but the producers refused. Scott believed that the scene was important and rented the helicopter with his own money.
    • Erros de gravação
      When Duncan is negotiating with Deng, he clearly tells Muir "Deng wants five-hundred-thousand YUAN for the power out in Su Chou." In 1991, this would have been about $95,500 U.S. dollars, so when Muir counter-offers and says "No way. Tell him $100K and I'll pay him in dollars," he is offering more than Deng asked for. The final price, $282,000USD, would have been approximately 1,500,000 yuan in 1991.
    • Citações

      Nathan Muir: [inside a CIA briefing room] When I was a kid I used to spend summers on my uncle's farm. And he had this plow horse he used to work with everyday. He really loved that plow horse. One summer she came up lame. It could barely stand. The vet offered to put her down. You know what my uncle said?

      Charles Harker: [inside a CIA briefing room] No, Muir, what did he say?

      Nathan Muir: [inside a CIA briefing room] He said, why would I ask somebody else to kill a horse that belonged to me?

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      In the opening credits, many of the credits are each preceded by a jumble of letters flickering on the screen. This may be a reference to the opening credit sequence of one of Robert Redford's earlier spy movies, Quebra de Sigilo (1992).
    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Behind Enemy Lines/Spy Game/Black Knight/The Affair of the Necklace/The Independent/Fat Girl (2001)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Rocky Mountain Way
      Written by Rocke Grace, Kenny Passarelli (as Ken Passarelli), Joe Vitale (as Joey Vitale), Joe Walsh

      Performed by Joe Walsh

      Courtesy of MCA Records

      Under license from Universal Music Enterprises

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    • How long is Spy Game?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • How many wives did Nathan Muir actually have?
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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 1 de março de 2002 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • Reino Unido
      • França
      • Alemanha
      • Japão
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Alemão
      • Árabe
      • Francês
      • Cantonês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Juego de espías
    • Locações de filme
      • Budapeste, Hungria
    • Empresas de produção
      • Universal Pictures
      • Beacon Pictures
      • Kalima Productions GmbH & Co. KG
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 115.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 62.362.560
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 21.689.125
      • 25 de nov. de 2001
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 143.049.560
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 6 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mixagem de som
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Proporção
      • 2.39 : 1

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