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Subway

  • 1985
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
17K
YOUR RATING
Isabelle Adjani and Christopher Lambert in Subway (1985)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer1:59
1 Video
99+ Photos
Thriller

On improvising a burglary at a shady tycoon's home, Fred takes refuge in the hip and surreal universe of the Paris Metro and encounters its assorted denizens, the tycoon's henchmen and his d... Read allOn improvising a burglary at a shady tycoon's home, Fred takes refuge in the hip and surreal universe of the Paris Metro and encounters its assorted denizens, the tycoon's henchmen and his disenchanted young wife.On improvising a burglary at a shady tycoon's home, Fred takes refuge in the hip and surreal universe of the Paris Metro and encounters its assorted denizens, the tycoon's henchmen and his disenchanted young wife.

  • Director
    • Luc Besson
  • Writers
    • Luc Besson
    • Alain Le Henry
    • Pierre Jolivet
  • Stars
    • Christopher Lambert
    • Isabelle Adjani
    • Richard Bohringer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    17K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Luc Besson
    • Writers
      • Luc Besson
      • Alain Le Henry
      • Pierre Jolivet
    • Stars
      • Christopher Lambert
      • Isabelle Adjani
      • Richard Bohringer
    • 63User reviews
    • 33Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 3 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:59
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos124

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    Top cast53

    Edit
    Christopher Lambert
    Christopher Lambert
    • Fred
    • (as Christophe Lambert)
    Isabelle Adjani
    Isabelle Adjani
    • Héléna
    Richard Bohringer
    Richard Bohringer
    • Le Fleuriste
    Michel Galabru
    Michel Galabru
    • Le Commissaire Gesberg
    Jean-Hugues Anglade
    Jean-Hugues Anglade
    • Le Roller
    Jean Bouise
    Jean Bouise
    • Le Chef de Station
    Jean-Pierre Bacri
    Jean-Pierre Bacri
    • Batman
    Jean-Claude Lecas
    Jean-Claude Lecas
    • Robin
    Pierre-Ange Le Pogam
    • Jean
    • (as Pierre-Ange Le Pogan)
    Jean Reno
    Jean Reno
    • Le Batteur
    Éric Serra
    Éric Serra
    • Le Bassiste
    • (as Eric Serra)
    Arthur Simms
    • Le Chanteur
    Michel D'Oz
    • Le Guitariste
    Alain Guillard
    • Le Saxophoniste
    Jimmy Blanche
    • Le Percussioniste
    Benoît Régent
    • Le Vendeur
    • (as Benoit Regent)
    Christian Gomba
    • Big Bill
    Konstantin Aleksandrov
    • Le Mari
    • (as Constantin Alexandrov)
    • Director
      • Luc Besson
    • Writers
      • Luc Besson
      • Alain Le Henry
      • Pierre Jolivet
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews63

    6.517.2K
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    Featured reviews

    Lloyd_Dobbler

    pointless, plotless, putrid

    I love French cinema, just so you know. However... This movie has no plot, no character development, no vision, and no coherence. It starts nowhere and goes nowhere. It doesn't so much "end" as much as it just "stops". I own this film on DVD, and I can't even give it away because I'd feel responsible for whoever else would watch it. Besson is a master. Even the masters can craft some dreck. This is a terrible, terrible, terrible film.
    RealLiveClaude

    Promising at first, boring at the end...

    When I saw Subway, I wanted to see mostly the talent of Isabelle Adjani, one of my favorites.

    As this movie starts, it seems promising with the dark Paris Metro atmosphere, which is a bit similar to our Subway system in Montreal. The weird caracters, the forbidden passageways and of course the hideout, that subway security can't detect nor approach.

    But the story is slow despite good performances and the up-going suspence, that if security can snatch those guys. And by the middle of the movie, mostly the last half hour, it is boring.

    Too bad for a story which started so well with such a offbeat caracter like Christophe Lambert (in blond, clad in a dark trenchcoat and bearing a neon stick) falling in love with a rich, sultry woman like Isabelle Adjani...

    See it for curiosity only...
    ThreeSadTigers

    A flawed, though no less interesting experiment, in ultra-chic visual film-making.

    At the time, a huge box-office hit in its native France - and as a result of the rising popularity of lead actors Christopher Lambert and Isabelle Adjani, something of a cult film in the UK - Subway (1985) was seen as a companion piece to Jean Jacques Beineix's earlier art-house classic, Diva (1981). Together, these two films can be seen as both the development and the continuation of the concerns and preoccupations of the then-newly dubbed "cinema du look" movement; a brief cinematic resurgence in French cinema that saw a younger generation of filmmakers looking back to the days of Godard, Truffaut and the Nouvelle Vague, and combining that sense of playful experimentation with elements of early 80's pop culture. It would be the film that finally introduced director Luc Besson to a wider commercial audience outside of the confines of the French art-house, and really - when looked at as part of the natural progression of his career - seems light years away from his first film, the wordless science fiction parable, Le Dernier Combat/The Last Battle (1983).

    The characteristics of the cinema du look movement involved preoccupations with doomed love and alienated Parisian youth, applied to a plot that was both cool and iconic. This can be seen quite clearly in Subway, with its mixture of film noir conventions, pop music, subterranean youth-culture, action and broad attempts at humour. As others have previously noted, the film and the style that it employs are very much of their time; presenting a very 80's take on listless youth replete with a central character that looks like Sting, a synthesiser heavy soundtrack that manages to work-in two specially composted New Wave pop songs, some shocking fashion choices (though most of these are admittedly back in vogue) and that general unique, indescribable feeling that you often get from many French films from this era; in particular Buffet Froid (1981), One Deadly Summer (1983), The Moon in the Gutter (1983), First Name: Carmen (1983) Hail Mary (1985), Betty Blue (1986), Mauvais Sang (1986), Jean de Florette/Manon des Sources (1986) and Besson's own subsequent picture, Le Grand Bleu (1988). Subway doesn't necessarily have much in common with these particular films in terms of style or content, but it does have a similar languid feeling, bizarre eclecticism or eccentricity, and an atmosphere that feels very much true to the country and the time it was produced.

    Overall, the film could be seen by many viewers as something worryingly lightweight; with the knockabout plot, colourful caricatures and continual bombardment of cinematic style perhaps being seen as a smokescreen to the thin plot and ironic characterisations. Like Le Dernier Combat, the ultimate problem with the film is that it can't quite decide whether or not it wants to be an action film or art film; with the combination of the two very different styles never quite gelling in perfect harmony. The opening car chase and initial descent into the bowels of this subterranean underworld hidden deep beneath the Parisian Metro system seem to suggests that the film will be all high-style and high-energy. Subsequent scenes however take a step back, giving us some cool, neo-noir like interaction between Lambert's laconic safe-cracker and Adjani's bored trophy wife, while the opposing forces of police and gangsters begin closing in around them. It is the kind of film that will definitely appeal to a certain kind of viewer, perhaps a more mature audience who are open minded to cult European art cinema, or perhaps maybe a dedicated audience interested in seeing how the director of such highly acclaimed action thrillers, such Nikita (1991) or Leon/The Professional (1994), started out.

    After first seeing the film a few years ago I wrote "This has no heart. It is an experiment in cinematic formalism; obsessed with technicality but also consumed by the self-indulgence", which to some extent still stands, but I think, with repeated viewings, I've come to enjoy the film and see more of an allure and attraction to the characters of Fred and Héléna, who, quite clearly, struggle throughout to maintain face and make the right decisions in a world that neither of them truly understands. As a result, it might just be the kind of film that takes a few viewings to truly captivate the audience, especially after drawing us in with that aforementioned car chase (which nods to Claude Lelouch's iconic 1974 short film C'était un rendez-vous, whilst simultaneously prefiguring much of the Besson-produced film series, Taxi). Subway clearly isn't a masterpiece. Like his first film, Le Dernier Combat, and the recent Angel-A (2005), it shows Besson at his most inventive and experimental, sampling from a variety of different genres and producing something that is chic and stylish, without ever being truly captivating. It is however an interesting film and one that will no doubt appeal to fans of some of the films aforementioned, chiefly Diva, Buffet Froid and Mauvais Sang, as well as some of Besson's own lesser-known works.
    5allyjack

    Doesn't look much better fifteen years on

    I watched this again to see if the integration of flashy Hollywood values into French cinema looked any better fifteen years on, and it really didn't. The movie's extremely loose plot and visual restlessness have their engaging elements, although more in theory than practice: I wish, for example, that the contrast between the initial elegance of the spiky-haired tuxedoed Lambert suggesting a punkish James Bond, and his ultimate incarnation as a doomed Robin Hood, were more interesting. The movie also contains traces of anarchy (Adjani disrupting a constipated upper-class dinner party); conventional send-up (the ineffectual cops); scattered cultural references; and apparent unapologetic self-indulgence. It occasionally makes it as a kind of scrapbook of high-concept images and impressions, but is probably best summed up by Lambert's ineffectual, smirking central void of a protagonist. The final delivery of a would-be significant message through an utterly trashy song doesn't cap it off much.
    7lost-in-limbo

    The subway blues.

    Truly I had no clue about what was going on in French director Luc Besson's offbeat, but terribly jerky story involving a sly safe cracker fleeing to the underground Paris Metro, after stealing some important documents off a millionaire that he would try to ransom off to. The bubblegum romantic-crime-drama premise is a washing machine filled with ideas, which are hanging off a very loose, but unpredictable plot. There's not much groundwork, but its impulsive nature, trivial gimmicks and interesting urban environment just gets you caught in the disjointed whirlwind of these strenuously adventurous situations, melancholy despair and eccentric characters. The delirious script never takes itself seriously (the humour is strong) and feels insignificant, but it sure had many awkward and lumpy exchanges. Some passages feel quite useless, and have poor continuity, but there's a certain charm that's hard to resist. The English dubbed version sounds quite terrible though.

    It's like Besson has thrown caution to the wind, and is experimenting with his visually sharp prowess and stylish verve to get any sort of impact and details through. His placement, pacing and overall enthusiasm is impeccable. Some action sequences, mainly the opening car chase scene is very well delivered. He draws so much form very little and never seems bounded by logic. From the get-go he storms right in and never lets the smoking composition, slick atmosphere sway off course. Brimming in is an electrifying tacky electronic / rock soundtrack (by Eric Serra) and Carlo Varini's camera-work beautifully illustrates Besson's characteristically moody framings. The worthwhile cast do an admirable job. Christopher Lambert's broodingly dry and grasping performance has an immensely hypnotic ambiance to it. An alluring Isabelle Adjani draws up an infectiously collected, and classy performance. There's enjoyably fine kooky support from Jean-Hughes Anglade, Richard Bohringer, Jean-Pierre Barcri, Michel Galabru and the always delightful Besson regular Jean Reno.

    Besson's "Subway" is resourcefully fun and colourful pulp, if a rather jaded experience.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Luc Besson: is the train operator in the hold-up scene.
    • Quotes

      The Drummer: Who's that chick?

      Fred: Cinderella.

      The Drummer: Well, your Cinderella's got a pistol this big in her bag.

      Fred: It's her magic wand.

    • Alternate versions
      An alternate version has been shown on television in the UK. During the car chase sequence, the music (titled "Speedway" on the soundtrack album) has been replaced with the song "The Murder Of Love" by German band Propaganda.
    • Connections
      Edited into Biomechanical Toy (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Guns and People
      Written by Corine Marienneau and Éric Serra

      Performed by Arthur Simms

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 10, 1985 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Prohibido pasar
    • Filming locations
      • Porte des Lilas, Le Métro, Paris, France
    • Production companies
      • Les Films du Loup
      • TSF Productions
      • Gaumont
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • FRF 17,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $390,659
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,332
      • Nov 10, 1985
    • Gross worldwide
      • $390,659
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 44 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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