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La fugue

Original title: Night Moves
  • 1975
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
20K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,389
1,329
Gene Hackman in La fugue (1975)
Former footballer and present private detective Harry Moseby gets hired on to what seems a standard missing person case...
Play trailer2:14
1 Video
85 Photos
Hard-boiled DetectiveTragedyCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

Los Angeles private investigator Harry Moseby is hired by a client to find her runaway teenage daughter. Moseby tracks the daughter down, only to stumble upon something much more intriguing ... Read allLos Angeles private investigator Harry Moseby is hired by a client to find her runaway teenage daughter. Moseby tracks the daughter down, only to stumble upon something much more intriguing and sinister.Los Angeles private investigator Harry Moseby is hired by a client to find her runaway teenage daughter. Moseby tracks the daughter down, only to stumble upon something much more intriguing and sinister.

  • Director
    • Arthur Penn
  • Writer
    • Alan Sharp
  • Stars
    • Gene Hackman
    • Jennifer Warren
    • Edward Binns
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    20K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,389
    1,329
    • Director
      • Arthur Penn
    • Writer
      • Alan Sharp
    • Stars
      • Gene Hackman
      • Jennifer Warren
      • Edward Binns
    • 127User reviews
    • 67Critic reviews
    • 82Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Night Moves
    Trailer 2:14
    Night Moves

    Photos85

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Gene Hackman
    Gene Hackman
    • Harry Moseby
    Jennifer Warren
    Jennifer Warren
    • Paula
    Edward Binns
    Edward Binns
    • Joey Ziegler
    Harris Yulin
    Harris Yulin
    • Marty Heller
    Kenneth Mars
    Kenneth Mars
    • Nick
    Janet Ward
    Janet Ward
    • Arlene Iverson
    James Woods
    James Woods
    • Quentin
    Anthony Costello
    Anthony Costello
    • Marv Ellman
    John Crawford
    John Crawford
    • Tom Iverson
    Melanie Griffith
    Melanie Griffith
    • Delly Grastner
    Ben Archibek
    • Charles
    Dennis Dugan
    Dennis Dugan
    • Boy
    C.J. Hincks
    C.J. Hincks
    • Girl
    Max Gail
    Max Gail
    • Stud
    • (as Maxwell Gail Jr.)
    Susan Barrister
    • Ticket Clerk
    Larry Mitchell
    • Ticket Clerk
    Susan Clark
    Susan Clark
    • Ellen
    Phil Altman
    • Crewman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Arthur Penn
    • Writer
      • Alan Sharp
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews127

    7.120K
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    Featured reviews

    d_stores

    Hackman's greatest role

    This is the perfect role for Hackman as the aging sports star unable to find his role in life once the playing days are over. He is the accidental jock, too sensitive to play the stereotype and so finding no sense of belonging. He has become a detective but he is a bumbling amateur compared to a Philip Marlowe type. He is shy and hestitant and is frequently made to feel discomfort by the seedy, untrustworthy people he comes into contact with. He has none of Marlowe's self assurance. It begs the question why has he become a detective? Maybe it is partly due to his abandonment by his father who years later Hackman tracks down only to fail in confronting him. He is condemned to search for people to whom he is of no importance.

    This idea of the lonely seeker is Hackman's own turf. His affable charm conveys a sense of a lifetime's wrongheaded idealism. In the wrong job, deluding himself, looking for a way out. Eventually, he is able to see clearly and see how his drifting has allowed the people around him to manipulate him in their games. Unlike many of this film's peers such as 'Chinatown', 'Taxi Driver', 'The Long Goodbye', we are not left to be slightly repulsed by the lead actor's ways. Hackman plays the everyman character as an affable, amateur sleuth whose hestitancy and chronic lack of commitment give him a fallibility more recognizable to an audience.
    8claudio_carvalho

    A Different and Complex Detective Story

    In Los Angeles, the private detective and former athlete Harry Moseby (Gene Hackman) is hired by the retired obscure Hollywood actress Arlene Iverson (Janet Ward) to find her 16 year-old missing daughter Delly Grastner (Melanie Griffith). Harry discovers that the runaway girl has a promiscuous life and uses drugs, and he tracks down her last boyfriend Quinten (James Woods), who works as a mechanic on the sets. Meanwhile, Harry finds that his wife Ellen Moseby (Susan Clark) is cheating him and he has difficulties to handle the situation. Then he visits the stuntman Marv Ellman (Anthony Costello) and the stunt coordinator Joey Ziegler (Ed Binn) and follows the new lead, heading to Florida Keys, where Delly would be living with her stepfather Tom Iverson (John Crawford). Harry is welcomed by Paula (Jennifer Warren), who works with Tom in a boat and has an open relationship with him. After seeing an accident in the sea, the reluctant Delly surprisingly accepts to return to Los Angeles with Harry to live with her mother. Harry and Ellen have a long conversation trying to solve their marriage problems. When Harry learns that Delly has died in a car crash, he suspects of Quinten. But sooner he finds that the initially missing person case is actually a complex smuggling operation of a valuable artifact.

    With the recent death of Arthur Penn, I decide to see again "Night Moves", a movie that I watched in the 80's and was forgotten in my collection. "Night Moves" is a different and complex detective story, supported by an engaging and flawed screenplay and great characters development. The top-notch actor Gene Hackman in the top of his successful career performs a detective that snoops the lives of other people and is incapable to see that his marriage is deteriorating. The 18 year-old Melanie Griffith in her first credited role is extremely sexy and beautiful, undressing easily along the film. It is also interesting to see James Woods also in the beginning of career in a supporting role. It is also great to see again the gorgeous vanished actresses Jennifer Warren and Susan Clark. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "Um Lance no Escuro" ("A Bid in the Dark")

    Note: On 26 October 2014 I saw this movie again on DVD and now my vote is eight.
    Mozjoukine

    Imbroglio thriller still resonates.

    Coming back to NIGHT MOVES a quarter of a century later is a confronting experience. I was admirer of Alan Sharp's (HIRED HAND and LAST RUN) and now it's easier to see how he'd distorted the American crime movie with the influence of the European art cinema. Much the same thing is happening in Sam Mendes' current films.

    The process is knowing and resonant and the film shows Arthur Penn at the top of his game, though it didn't find the same public his most famous work. This dark intrigue stuff works, partly because it's too dense to be immediately absorbed and because the characters are so vivid - even if it is hard to believe that all these great women want to take off their shirts for Gene Hackman in his tan rug. It is however one of Hackman's best outings - whether he liked it or not.

    Lots of great detail - the contrast between Hackman's study with the black and white TV where sports will kill his eyes and Yullin's tasteful home, which makes us share Hackman's loathing of the character, feeding dolphins, the glass bottom boat or the theatre viewing (which respects the different format of the two cameras for once.) The performances are consistently vivid, reflecting well on Penn, with soon to be stars Griffith (particularly memorable) and Woods running level with largely forgotten character people. Janet Ward, for one, really registers.

    Even if it needs theatrical viewing to be appreciated, Bruce Surtees' dim lighting, characteristically shading eyes, is atmospheric but the post "New Wave" fad of dispensing with establishing shots and opticals is now confusing and jerky. The score irritates too.

    The line about paint drying has now passed into common usage but I like "blind, Albino, s**t-eating alligators" as much.

    I used to use this one to teach screen writing decades back. I rate that a good call.
    8Kar-2

    Excellent Film Noir, Superbly acted and well directed

    Night Moves is an underrated Film Noir. Directed by Arthur Penn (Bonnie & Clyde) it is an absolutely outstanding genre piece. Gene Hackman plays an L.A. gumshoe who is hired by a well to do ex-actress to find and bring home her runaway daughter (Melanie Griffith in her first role!). What seems to be routine detective work soon turns out to be a complicated case which finally ends in murder and mayhem. There are some remarkable stunt and underwater sequences, well photographed by Bruce Surtees (Director of Photography of many Clint Eastwood action movies). Not only Melanie Griffith but also another of today's stars, James Woods, gave his screen debut in this film. See it, it is worth the while!
    6izzynfrank

    Good film by a very good director with a great actor

    NIght Moves falls into that category of movies that was not so loved when it came it but since time has passed, people have come around to it. It also benefits from being from that new golden era of cinema, the 70s, where the films showcase a gritty side to characters, often played by some of the best anti-hero actors of all time -- Hackman, in this case. Night Moves is a good movie and a lot of fun but it has some limitations which keep it from being more than that.

    First of which, the story really doesn't make sense. It's clear when the case is more or less solved about an hour in that the movie is really going to be about something else. In this case, it's more about Hackman's character, a guy who despite his love of things like chess, can't seem to really figure stuff out. So we are taken through his marriage, his wife's infidelity. an attempted reconciliation, etc. All that stuff is great for a great actor like Hackman who makes you feel how lost he is.

    The problem is that the ties that connect that to the real story, that of the art smuggling, which is the real mystery, are very thin. Also, the ties that connect the plot points of the smuggling story are very week. Too much coincidence, too many people happen to be exactly where they need to be. Too much crossing the country - - LA to Florida in the blink of an eye. One second Gene Hackman is chasing James Woods around LA on a motorcycle. The next scene, he finds him in Florida.

    I read that the film was shot in 1973 and then shelved until 1975, meaning that there must have been issues with it then. There must have also been a lot scenes cut, because a lot is in there, it's just hidden very deeply with no way to get at it. I think this is a film to check out and enjoy for some very good elements. I just don't think we can put our blinders on and make it a 70s classic. Good film. Worth a watch.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Debut credited film role of Melanie Griffith and her first nude scenes. It's been reported that she was 17 when she appeared in this film, but if the film started filming in Oct. 1973 as reports state, that means Griffith turned 16 two months before, in August 1973.
    • Goofs
      A considerable amount of time had passed between when Harry brought Delly home and when he had Paula return to the crash site to retrieve some of the treasure. It makes no sense that Tom and Paula wouldn't have already retrieved the treasure.
    • Quotes

      Ellen Moseby: [of a football game] Who's winning?

      Harry Moseby: Nobody. One side is just losing slower than the other.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Day of the Director (1975)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 17, 1975 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Secreto oculto en el mar
    • Filming locations
      • Sanibel Island, Florida, USA(Florida scenes.)
    • Production companies
      • Warner Bros.
      • Hiller Productions
      • Layton Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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