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Le Fugitif

Original title: The Fugitive
  • 1993
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 10m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
338K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,101
96
Harrison Ford in Le Fugitif (1993)
Watch 20th Anniversary Trailer
Play trailer1:28
5 Videos
99+ Photos
Conspiracy ThrillerActionCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

Dr. Richard Kimble, unjustly accused of murdering his wife, must find the real killer while being the target of a nationwide manhunt led by a seasoned U.S. Marshal.Dr. Richard Kimble, unjustly accused of murdering his wife, must find the real killer while being the target of a nationwide manhunt led by a seasoned U.S. Marshal.Dr. Richard Kimble, unjustly accused of murdering his wife, must find the real killer while being the target of a nationwide manhunt led by a seasoned U.S. Marshal.

  • Director
    • Andrew Davis
  • Writers
    • Jeb Stuart
    • David Twohy
    • Roy Huggins
  • Stars
    • Harrison Ford
    • Tommy Lee Jones
    • Sela Ward
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    338K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,101
    96
    • Director
      • Andrew Davis
    • Writers
      • Jeb Stuart
      • David Twohy
      • Roy Huggins
    • Stars
      • Harrison Ford
      • Tommy Lee Jones
      • Sela Ward
    • 452User reviews
    • 129Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 13 wins & 37 nominations total

    Videos5

    20th Anniversary Trailer
    Trailer 1:28
    20th Anniversary Trailer
    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Theatrical Trailer
    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Theatrical Trailer
    The Fugitive
    Trailer 1:54
    The Fugitive
    What Roles Has Harrison Ford Turned Down?
    Video 4:33
    What Roles Has Harrison Ford Turned Down?
    The Fugitive | Anniversary Mashup
    Video 1:01
    The Fugitive | Anniversary Mashup

    Photos201

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    + 194
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    Top cast99+

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    Harrison Ford
    Harrison Ford
    • Dr. Richard Kimble
    Tommy Lee Jones
    Tommy Lee Jones
    • Samuel Gerard
    Sela Ward
    Sela Ward
    • Helen Kimble
    Julianne Moore
    Julianne Moore
    • Dr. Anne Eastman
    Joe Pantoliano
    Joe Pantoliano
    • Cosmo Renfro
    Andreas Katsulas
    Andreas Katsulas
    • Sykes
    Jeroen Krabbé
    Jeroen Krabbé
    • Dr. Charles Nichols
    • (as Jeroen Krabbe)
    Daniel Roebuck
    Daniel Roebuck
    • Biggs
    L. Scott Caldwell
    L. Scott Caldwell
    • Poole
    Tom Wood
    Tom Wood
    • Newman
    Ron Dean
    Ron Dean
    • Detective Kelly
    Joseph F. Kosala
    • Detective Rosetti
    • (as Joseph Kosala)
    Miguel Nino
    • Chicago Cop #1
    John Drummond
    • Newscaster
    Tony Fosco
    • Chicago Cop #2
    Joseph F. Fisher
    • Otto Sloan
    James Liautaud
    • Paul
    David Darlow
    David Darlow
    • Dr. Lentz
    • Director
      • Andrew Davis
    • Writers
      • Jeb Stuart
      • David Twohy
      • Roy Huggins
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews452

    7.8337.5K
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    Featured reviews

    cariart

    One of the Great Thrillers!

    There is a kind of magic when a superb cast, a truly gifted director, and a literate script with equal parts 'over-the-top' action, riveting suspense, and rich characterization, come together. The end result attains a luster that only grows through the years, as new audiences, through DVD and VHS, experience the same excitement we felt, viewing it on a theater screen. In the last decade, only a handful of suspense films could be called 'great'...and on top of the list is THE FUGITIVE.

    Based on the popular David Janssen TV series, the film faithfully follows the same premise; a doctor is accused of his wife's death, but escapes before his execution, and tracks down the 'one-armed man' responsible for the murder, as a driven law officer attempts to recapture him. Being a big-budget film, however, the scale of everything is expanded...Dr. Richard Kimble is now a brilliant vascular surgeon, at a major Chicago hospital; the handicapped killer is a dirty ex-cop working on orders from crooked board members of a billion-dollar pharmaceutical firm; and the lawman is no longer a solitary police lieutenant, but a deputy United States Marshal, and his team of agents! While some fans of the original series complained that the 'intimacy' the series had was lost, director Andrew Davis only used the 'bigger' aspects as plot elements, placing the focus, wisely, on the dual stories of Kimble's search, and Gerard's pursuit.

    Despite the esteem the film has achieved over the years, Harrison Ford has gotten a bad rap for his very understated performance as Richard Kimble. While Tommy Lee Jones certainly had a far flashier role (earning him an Oscar as 'Best Supporting Actor'), Ford's intent wasn't to play 'Indiana Jones', but a man whose whole life was dedicated to his career as a surgeon, and his wife (played, in flashbacks, by the lovely Sela Ward). Seeing his wife brutally murdered devastated him (his scene in the police interrogation room, going to pieces, was largely improvised on the set, and displays some of his finest acting). His search for the killer was not the confident quest of an action hero, but based on uncertain, spur-of-the-moment decisions made by a desperate man, whose medical background was his only tool. Fear does not lend itself to flashy theatrics...

    Jones, as Marshal Sam Gerard, on the other hand, was a seasoned veteran, the best at what he did, and pursuing a fugitive was 'old hat' for him. With a confidence bordering on arrogance, he ordered people about like chess pieces, multi-tasked without breaking a sweat, and still could charm with a wicked smile and sarcastic remark. Of COURSE he wins the audience's heart!

    Featuring some of the most spectacular action scenes ever recorded on film (the train/bus wreck that frees Kimble, the dive off a dam into the churning maelstrom of the reservoir), as well as two slam-bang fistfights when Kimble finally gets 'justice', THE FUGITIVE still is remembered primarily for the suspenseful Jones/Ford 'cat-and-mouse' chase, cross-country, and the grudging respect that grows between them...which, ultimately, was what the TV series was best remembered for, as well.

    There is magic, here!
    10baumer

    Pure action and Tommy Lee Jones make this an unforgettable masterpiece

    Arnold and Sly are great action heroes. Their characters are always larger than life. Rambo and Rocky are household names and The Terminator and films like Commando are great partly because of Arnold's physical presence. But as good as they are, I don't think they can hold a candle to Harrison Ford. Sure he is in great shape, but have you ever seen an actor take average guys and make them so real that you want to know them? Take your pick, Han Solo, Indy and even his character in Six Days and Seven Nights was an adventurer. Add Richard Kimble to that list. As Kimble, Ford is perfect. He is the wronged man that has to avenge his wife's death and clear his name at the same time. He is so great in this film and I'm sure that's why so many people went to see this film at first. But I think what kept them coming back was Tommy Lee Jones. We'll get to him in a minute.

    Andrew Davis proved here that he is one of the best action directors in the business today. Along with Under Siege, he showed us that he is an efficient artist that knows how to keep the action flowing. He never seems to let up with his relentless pursuit of the perfect scene. But since the film did so well and everyone pretty much knows what it is about, let's talk about the true strength of the film, and that would be Tommy Lee Jones.

    " I don't bargain." " Well that's odd!"

    His portrayal of Samuel Girard is an exercise in how to make the audience relate and understand a character. He starts off as a manic perfectionist. He is obsessed with capturing Kimble and that is all that matters. But as the film proceeds, you can sense his unease, his wonder and his ethos. You can tell by a simple expression that he is beginning to solve a crime and not just chase a criminal. And the turning point to me was his simple scene where he says " You know Devlin and McGregor made 4 and one half billion dollars last year? That company's a monster. " It is all in his face. He knows that Ford is innocent but he still has a job to do. It is Jones that makes this film so much fun. And I didn't think that there would be a more worthy recipient of best supporting actor in '93 than Kilmer in Tombstone, but Jones' work here was well deserving of his Oscar.

    The Fugitive belongs on every top 100 list and if the AFI wasn't so enthralled with older movies, they would see that films like this are more worthy than some of the mediocrity that graces their findings. This is an incredible film.
    8NewEnglandPat

    A great chase thriller with star power

    This excellent film details the adventure of a man's search for his wife's killer and to clear himself of her murder. Harrison Ford is the hero and wanted man and on the run to escape capture by a determined U.S. Marshal in one thrilling scene after another. A spectacular train wreck with a bus of prison-bound felons gets the action underway at which point Tommy Lee Jones enters the picture and takes over the film by sheer force of personality and doesn't let go. Harrison, a resourceful type, stays just ahead of Jones in this taut cat-and-mouse thriller and adroitly leaves just enough clues for the police as he closes in on the killer. Ford and Jones are well matched here in one of the best urban crime mysteries ever filmed. Cast and Chicago locations add realism to a great story.
    7DennisLittrell

    Excellent thriller

    This is a fine vehicle for Harrison Ford made even more agreeable by a clever, somewhat tongue in cheek performance by Tommy Lee Jones as a US Marshall out to have a good time getting the bad guy, even though the bad guy might not be so bad, and even though that's irrelevant, but hey, don't think so much and get me some coffee and a chocolate donut with those sprinkles on top, ya hear?

    This is also a Hollywood producer's orgasmic dream with a chase scene beginning in the first reel and lasting throughout. It is based on the 60s TV show of the same name, but gets its premise from a true crime story, that of Ohioan Dr. Sam Shepherd who actually went to jail for murdering his wife in the 50s. He too claimed to have fought off the real killer, but the forensic evidence and his personality were against him. Here we have Harrison Ford as the good doctor, and it doesn't take a Hollywood genius to tell you that the most popular leading man of the late twentieth century ain't about to play the kind of guy who murders his loving wife.

    Ford does a stand-up, competent job, saving lives and patting kids on the head as he plunges through sewers and off the top of a towering waterfall, steals an ambulance, survives a bullet wound and a bus wreck, etc. His fans will be pleased, but Tommy Lee Jones steals the show (and got a Best Supporting Oscar for his trouble) as a clever, wise-cracking good ole boy who has a lot of fun leading the posse. I wonder if he or director Andrew Davis invented the spin because without it, this wouldn't be half so good.

    This is not to be confused with, nor is it a remake of The Fugitive from 1947 starring Henry Fonda and directed by John Ford, a cinematic gem of an entirely different sort.

    See this for Tommy Lee Jones who has made a career out of turning oh-hum parts into something special.
    10movieman9

    One of the best action movies of the decade; Ford and Jones are in top form.

    Nothing is more thrilling to see than two characters with superior intelligences, pitting their wits against each other. A thriller does not require a great deal of plot or techno-babble to be involving or complex, although many distributors of blockbusters today seem to think so. For these reasons, "The Fugitive" is a huge blessing for a movie critic such as I. I was just thrilled by the excitement, the performances by Harrison Ford and Tommy Lee Jones, and the whole Hitchcockian aura that this sensational film delivered. Even though we have been seeing too many films based on television series come out lately, "The Fugitive" is certainly not one of those that we can add to that routine bushel.

    Ford is Dr. Richard Kimble, a vascular surgeon who is wrongfully accused for the brutal murder of his wife (Sela Ward), and therefore sentenced to be executed. After escaping from a bus crash/trash collision, he finds himself running from the Chicago police and especially the U.S. Marshall service, led by Lt. Gerard (Oscar-winner Tommy Lee Jones). At the same time, Kimble attempts to prove his innocence and in turn discover who did kill his wife. What ensues is a tangled web of medical conspiracies, along with a search for a notorious "one-armed man." As I have stated, this is a simple plot that requires no superficial decoration.

    Ford, who has always been a less dramatic presence in movies and more of a subtle but affected persona, fits the part of Kimble perfectly. With this role, the last thing required is a melodramatic actor that sticks out like a sore thumb. Ford casually settles into the role of the man on the run, bringing intelligence and style to a less ostentatious character. Jones, who has never really been considered a headliner until now, creates a character that is extremely humorous but also calmly diligent. His only goal is to carry out the task he is assigned to, and nothing will stand in his way, least of all a rivaling police force or Richard Kimble himself. One of the fascinating Hitchcockian elements of the film is how it allows its audience to not be able to take sides. We are constantly rooting for both Ford and Jones when either of them come into perspective. We familiarize with both of them and are amused by both equally. The film's finale, which I won't dare give away, satisfies both sides of this rooting coin.

    I have not previously been a fan of the director Andrew Davis's work, but with this entry, he certainly has sparked my interest. With such films as "Under Siege," "Code of Silence," and "Above the Law," he has been able to work with action stars that are both larger than life (Seagal, Norris). Here, he uses more intrigue and atmosphere to reach his audience, building suspense and excitement through simple film tools rather than things blowing up or guns going off (However, there is a phenomenal opening crash scene to boot). With quick pacing, a never-a-dull-moment storyline, and great actors, "The Fugitive" ranks itself as one of the best action films of this decade, and definitely one of the best films of 1993. Rating: Four stars.

    The Life and Times of Harrison Ford

    The Life and Times of Harrison Ford

    Take a look back at Harrison Ford's movie career in photos.
    See more Harrison
    Harrison Ford in Indiana Jones et le Temple maudit (1984)
    Photos

    Related interests

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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Harrison Ford damaged some ligaments in his leg during the filming of the scenes in the woods. He refused to take surgery until the end of filming so that his character would keep the limp. The limp can be seen in any subsequent scene where Richard Kimble is running.
    • Goofs
      Kimble's attorney had many opportunities to suppress or refute evidence that may have helped Kimble's case. For example, Kimble's fingerprints being found on his own lamp and his own gun should not have raised any suspicion, yet it's implied that the defense never used this evidence. Also, Kimble's attorney should have looked into alternate explanations as to why there was no forced entry into the Kimbles' home the night of the murder; the question of to whom Richard lent his keys would have brought up. And no matter how incompetent his attorney might have been, there would have been more than enough evidence to establish reasonable doubt, which most films of this nature often ignore for plot purposes.
    • Quotes

      Dr. Richard Kimble: [Holding Gerard at gunpoint] I didn't kill my wife!

      Deputy Marshal Samuel Gerard: I don't care!

    • Crazy credits
      Near the end of the end credits, there is a scene showing fireworks going off over the Chicago skyline.
    • Alternate versions
      The Warner Bros. Pictures logo is plastered with the 2003 logo in the 20th anniversary Blu-ray version.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Fugitive/The Meteor Man/Manhattan Murder Mystery/The Secret Garden/The Wedding Banquet (1993)
    • Soundtracks
      The Thrill is Gone
      Written by Roy Hawkins and Rick Darnell

      Performed by B.B. King and Bobby Bland

      Courtesy of MCA Records

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    FAQ33

    • How long is The Fugitive?Powered by Alexa
    • When Kimble visits an inmate, he shows an ID to an officer. Since it cannot be his own ID, where did he get it from?
    • Is it really possible to survive a waterfall jump like that?
    • What is the name of the actor who was arrested alongside Lonnie Sima's character?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 1, 1993 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Facebook
    • Languages
      • English
      • Polish
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • El fugitivo
    • Filming locations
      • Bryson City, North Carolina, USA
    • Production companies
      • Warner Bros.
      • Kopelson Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $44,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $183,875,760
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $23,758,855
      • Aug 8, 1993
    • Gross worldwide
      • $368,875,760
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 10m(130 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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