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Coup d'État

Original title: Sleeping Dogs
  • 1977
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Coup d'État (1977)
ActionDramaThriller

A New Zealand man recently estranged from his family gets unwittingly caught up in a revolution.A New Zealand man recently estranged from his family gets unwittingly caught up in a revolution.A New Zealand man recently estranged from his family gets unwittingly caught up in a revolution.

  • Director
    • Roger Donaldson
  • Writers
    • Christian K. Stead
    • Ian Mune
    • Arthur Baysting
  • Stars
    • Sam Neill
    • Nevan Rowe
    • Ian Mune
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roger Donaldson
    • Writers
      • Christian K. Stead
      • Ian Mune
      • Arthur Baysting
    • Stars
      • Sam Neill
      • Nevan Rowe
      • Ian Mune
    • 20User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos35

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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Sam Neill
    Sam Neill
    • Smith
    Nevan Rowe
    Nevan Rowe
    • Gloria
    Ian Mune
    Ian Mune
    • Bullen
    Warren Oates
    Warren Oates
    • Col. Willoughby
    Ian Watkin
    • Dudley
    Clyde Scott
    • Jesperson
    Donna Akersten
    • Mary
    William Johnson
    • Cousins
    • (as Bill Johnson)
    Don Selwyn
    • Taupiri
    Davina Whitehouse
    Davina Whitehouse
    • Elsie
    Melissa Donaldson
    • Melissa
    Dougal Stevenson
    • News Reader
    Bernard Kearns
    • Prime Minister
    Raf Irving
    • Reporter
    Cass Donaldson
    • Cass
    Tommy Tinirau
    • Old Maori Man
    Snuffles
    • Dog
    Roger Oakley
    Roger Oakley
    • Assassin Leader
    • Director
      • Roger Donaldson
    • Writers
      • Christian K. Stead
      • Ian Mune
      • Arthur Baysting
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.31.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8rdoyle29

    Crackerjack early NZ action film

    Sam Neill stars, in his 2nd feature film, as Smith, a man who leaves his family when his wife takes up with another man, and moves to an island where he is the only resident. While he's on the island, political turmoil in New Zealand worsens and a form of martial law is declared. Smith is framed as a terrorist and arrested. Facing certain execution, he escapes and goes on the run, eventually hooking up with Bullen (Ian Mune), the man who had stolen his wife. This is the first feature made in New Zealand that received international distribution, and it's readily apparent why. Neill is a magnetic screen presence, and the film has the ramshackle appeal of the best small action films of the 70's. Warren Oates even appears in a small role as a US army officer.
    6stekelmoll

    Solid if not spectacular

    Based on the novel Smith's Dream by academic C. K. Stead, Sleeping Dogs is set in a totalitarian New Zealand. Smith moves to the country to escape trouble but is framed by the state as a terrorist.The rest of the film involves his attempts to avoid arrest and his eventual fate.

    Released in 1977, the film possessed a poignancy for New Zealanders, who at the time viewed the then Muldoon National Government with some suspicion. A scene involving riot police in an Auckland street was a chilling portent of events during the 1981 Springbok rugby tour to New Zealand, and indeed on its release in the USA, some Americans confused the film's images with media reports of the tour protests.

    Notable for Sam Neill's role as Smith, the movie started a late 1970s revival in the New Zealand film industry, including movies such as The Scarecrow, Skin Deep, and Smash Palace.
    Tamaal

    Nearly Famous

    As far as I'm aware, Sam Neill's first film - and what a start!

    Starring a Kiwi, directed by a Kiwi and packed to the gunwales with Kiwi talent, this is definitely no Hollywood hyperbole extravaganza.Its sole concession to the 'star power' syndrome is the presence of Warren Oates ("Dillinger") as an armed subversive type (I didn't dare to use the dreaded 'T' word!).

    The film is under the very capable guidance of the now-also-well-known Roger Donaldson, who was also responsible for another powerful home-grown effort, "Smash Palace". Impressionable youngsters like Peter Jackson may have seen this and decided their futures.

    Like Jackson's LOTR trilogy, "Sleeping Dogs" is filmed on location in New Zealand. As such, the sets and scenery give a fair idea of life in provincial and metropolitan NZ in the mid-70's (but there's no stunning vistas of the majestic Southern Alps here, I'm afraid).

    "Sleeping Dogs" is an adaptation of a story by New Zealand author C.K.Stead and pits an increasingly autocratic government of the near-future against a group of resistance fighters. Smith (Neill), very recently separated from a cheating wife, pretty much accidentally and quite reluctantly, gets involved with this group.

    One scene in the movie was (and still is) something of a talking point here in NZ because it seemed, in hindsight, so chillingly prescient - life imitating art.

    In the scene, a large group of protesters have clashed violently with unyielding, merciless, baton-wielding riot police; blood is flowing, injures are rife.

    Some five years after the film had been released, in 1981, the then-internationally-banned Springbok rugby team from South Africa were allowed to tour here, despite clamorous local and global opposition.

    New Zealand experienced the horrors and scarring of civil division. Wherever the Springboks played and also in the capital, Wellington, violence erupted. And it seemed to many of us at the time that the scenes that Donaldson had shot many years ago were now being replayed almost nightly on the news. Spooky.
    7tomgillespie2002

    Like George Orwell, only far more strange

    With Sleeping Dogs, director Roger Donaldson near enough single-handedly cemented New Zealand's place on the cinematic map. It was, at the time, the biggest box-office hit the country had seen, and also boasted what is only the second big-screen appearance by Sam Neill. With Ozplotation in full swing just across the water, Sleeping Dogs kicked off a New Wave in New Zealand, with the likes of Donaldson's Smash Palace and Vincent Ward's Vigil following in the subsequent years. The film is odd and off-kilter, but never less than fascinating. Donaldson clearly looked at Adolf Hitler's own rise to power in post-World War I Germany for inspiration, as he depicts a New Zealand of the near future falling foul of a rising dictatorship who are eager to hunt down anybody they believe could belong to a growing band of freedom fighters. It all starts with television reports of fuel strikes across the country, and quickly spirals out of control from there.

    The report is being watched by Smith (Neill) as his children write him goodbye letters and his wife sobs in the kitchen. He is the victim of infidelity, so decides to pack up and live off the grid for a while, but not before his wife's new lover Bullen (Ian Mune) arrives before he has even left the house. He spots an island on the Coromandel peninsula, arranging with the Maori owners to live out there untroubled, even exchanging his expensive car for their rusty old boat. He fishes, listens to the radio, and befriends the locals nearby, but his idyllic existence is soon interrupted when the government goes into full crackdown mode, arresting anybody on suspicion of assisting the revolution. He is taken in by the police to be interrogated and tortured, and likely sentenced to death. Seeing no other alternative, Smith takes his chance and escapes his captors, fleeing to a quiet camping ground where he meets a nice local girl. Smith is no guerilla revolutionary and is quite happy to live in ignorant bliss, but when US Army Colonel Willoughby (Warren Oates) arrives with more on his mind than policing the country, it becomes clear that Smith's destiny lies with the uprising, whether he likes it or not.

    Donaldson deliberately holds back certain pieces of information to keep the goings-on away from Smith a mystery, making Sleeping Dogs a rather frustrating experience. But frustrating isn't always bad, and here the loose, drifting storyline gives the film a unique style and atmosphere. You're never quite sure where the story will go next, and when Warren Oates arrives with a smile and willingness to party, there's a disorientating sense of unease as the beads of sweat drip off his quivering moustache. Cinematographer Michael Seresin, who would go on to work on the likes of Midnight Express, Angel Heart and the third Harry Potter, captures the country beautifully, imbuing the scenery with a sense of beauty and peace one minute, and a sense of terror the next. It all sounds a bit George Orwell, but it really isn't. It's actually much stranger than that, and has a rich vein of humour throughout, usually stemming from Smith's frustration as he unwillingly grows into a revolutionary leader. In many ways, it mirrors Gary Bond's experience trapped in the small, violent town of Ted Kotcheff's masterpiece Wake in Fright, only with less booze, more humour, and some bizarre turns along the way.
    mattkratz

    i was confused

    I was slightly confused by the content of this movie. From what I gathered, Sam Neill's character was a family man whose wife had an affair, and he was then mistaken for a guerrilla. There was plenty of guerrilla warfare on the streets who were trying to protest something. I couldn't quite gather what it was. There were plenty of shoot-em-up scenes on the streets and in the wilderness when Neil was trying to escape and clear his name. Other than that, I thought the movie was decent. The scene where he was imprisoned in a dank jail cell was harrowing and unforgettable, and I loved the part where he vomits on the guards to escape from the transport car. I sort of liked the movie and might recommend it.

    ** 1/2 out of ****

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Included among the "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die", edited by Steven Schneider.
    • Goofs
      After Bullen crashes the red car, the front left headlight is alternately damaged/undamaged in subsequent shots.
    • Quotes

      Col. Willoughby: [to Smith] I got my eye on you, boy. I got my eye on you really good.

    • Connections
      Featured in Cowboys of Culture (1990)
    • Soundtracks
      Going to Coromandel
      Ariel Railway

      Courtesy of EMI New Zealand

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Sleeping Dogs?Powered by Alexa
    • Is this movie based on a book?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 13, 1978 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • New Zealand
    • Languages
      • English
      • Maori
    • Also known as
      • Sleeping Dogs
    • Filming locations
      • Coromandel Peninsula, New Zealand
    • Production companies
      • Aardvark Films
      • Broadbank Investments
      • New Zealand Film Commission
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • NZ$450,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 47 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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