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IMDbPro

Couvre-feu

Original title: The Siege
  • 1998
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
81K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,181
239
Denzel Washington, Bruce Willis, and Annette Bening in Couvre-feu (1998)
Trailer for The Siege
Play trailer2:06
2 Videos
55 Photos
Political DramaPolitical ThrillerActionThriller

The secret U.S. abduction of a suspected terrorist leads to a wave of terrorist attacks in New York City, which leads to the declaration of martial-law.The secret U.S. abduction of a suspected terrorist leads to a wave of terrorist attacks in New York City, which leads to the declaration of martial-law.The secret U.S. abduction of a suspected terrorist leads to a wave of terrorist attacks in New York City, which leads to the declaration of martial-law.

  • Director
    • Edward Zwick
  • Writers
    • Lawrence Wright
    • Menno Meyjes
    • Edward Zwick
  • Stars
    • Denzel Washington
    • Bruce Willis
    • Annette Bening
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    81K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,181
    239
    • Director
      • Edward Zwick
    • Writers
      • Lawrence Wright
      • Menno Meyjes
      • Edward Zwick
    • Stars
      • Denzel Washington
      • Bruce Willis
      • Annette Bening
    • 310User reviews
    • 90Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Siege
    Trailer 2:06
    The Siege
    Lance Reddick Rolls Our Dice on His Career
    Video 3:22
    Lance Reddick Rolls Our Dice on His Career
    Lance Reddick Rolls Our Dice on His Career
    Video 3:22
    Lance Reddick Rolls Our Dice on His Career

    Photos55

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    + 49
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Denzel Washington
    Denzel Washington
    • Anthony Hubbard
    Bruce Willis
    Bruce Willis
    • General William Devereaux
    Annette Bening
    Annette Bening
    • Elise Kraft…
    Tony Shalhoub
    Tony Shalhoub
    • Frank Haddad
    Sami Bouajila
    Sami Bouajila
    • Samir Nazhde
    Ahmed Ben Larby
    • Sheik Achmed Bin Talal
    Mosleh Mohamed
    • Muezzin
    Lianna Pai
    Lianna Pai
    • Tina Osu
    • (as Liana Pai)
    Mark Valley
    Mark Valley
    • Mike Johanssen
    Jack Gwaltney
    Jack Gwaltney
    • Fred Darius
    David Proval
    David Proval
    • Danny Sussman
    Lance Reddick
    Lance Reddick
    • FBI Agent Floyd Rose
    Jeremy Knaster
    • INS Official
    William Hill
    William Hill
    • INS Uniform
    Aasif Mandvi
    Aasif Mandvi
    • Khalil Saleh
    Frank DiElsi
    • Officer Williams
    Wood Harris
    Wood Harris
    • Officer Henderson
    Ellen Bethea
    • Anita
    • Director
      • Edward Zwick
    • Writers
      • Lawrence Wright
      • Menno Meyjes
      • Edward Zwick
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews310

    6.481.2K
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    Featured reviews

    handle1

    An amazing movie, especially in light of recent events

    Warning: Contains minor plot spoilage

    When I first watched the movie a year or so ago, the first thing that really caught my attention in the beginning of the movie was the first explosion. There was no ludicrous running from the explosion like you see in most action movies. Washington's character blinked because of the explosion flash and then was thrown on his tail by the force of the detonation. Because he was facing the explosion he received a bloody noise from the air concussion (before even hitting the ground), and he couldn't hear after the explosion. They also showed him in shock right after the explosion. The impact of the explosion on inanimate objects was also more accurate. You could clearly see the inverse falling off effect of distance from the explosion.

    Glass shattering was shown in slow motion at the same slow mention speed as the fireball moving in the background. These are details of things that happen in real life that I haven't seen in any other movie, action or otherwise. And that was a very small thing about the movie that impressed me.

    I think the story line is extremely plausible and appropriately complex (which I thought before 9/11). The analysis of the culture of the terrorists was very accurate compared to most movies dealing with the topic. The terrorists weren't demonized and their motives were examined and explained in a well balanced way.

    I think Bruce Willis does the movie a disservice, although it is his history of action and mediocre characters that hurts the movie, not his actual acting in the movie. The complexity of his character is interesting. The movie leaves it up to interpretation whether General Devereaux is really reluctant to impose martial law on New York, or whether he just tells the congressional committee what they want to hear in order to get himself in. Devereaux is definitely the "bad guy" in the movie, but not because he is portrayed as the nexus of evil, but because his world-view allows him to rationalize actions that are un-American.

    One of the biggest criticisms that I have seen of the movie is that the end of the movie is not believable because of the martial law that is imposed on New York City. But if two or three more significant attacks happen to New York City, I won't be surprised at all if martial law is declared there.

    I always thought the movie was excellent, but with the events in recent days, the impact of the movie has definitely ratcheted up a few notches.
    gorillasuitguy

    A bizarre prediction of 9/11/2001 ???

    The movie won't get any nomination or prize, but it's worth seeing if you want to meditate about a time when US talked about the 'Greatest Terrorist Attack in America' only in a movie.

    The first time I saw this movie I really got immersed into the plot, it was a great drama displaying the deployment of Army forces to protect the US integrity versus the struggle of the reason and the law to protect it's citizens rights... evidently the Arab-Americans would be angry about the stereotypes displayed, but also the Hispanic have been portrayed at Hollywood with the same old stereotypes thousands of times (which BTW it's boring), anyway, at the end it's all for the show and to make the movie believable... however it was ALL fiction.

    But in the morning of Sept 11, 2001. The first thought that came to my mind (yet in disbelief), as I saw on CNN, planes falling all over NYC and in DC, was.. 'that' movie!

    Days after the WTC Attack I saw this movie again and obviously (to my regret) I found many new things to meditate about, this movie makes an interesting remark about what almost every US government have done at least one time, the so called 'shift of policy', and this is the key to the whole mess (in the movie and in real life), US government can't pretend to look after some 'groups, organizations or people' when they are useful to their interest and when they no longer need them just dispose then like trash, remember, 'what goes around, comes around...', sure, I totally condemn terrorism, but as we can learn from the movie, this kind of behavior gives birth to extreme hate and enemies, and this is (or was) NO fiction.

    You can't develop relations on a double moral standard, like the character played by Bening, sooner or later the price has to be paid, so, it's better to stand beside those who help you always, not only for pure convenience, because no one wants a 'friend' like that, right? This can be the great moral of the movie.

    Be honest, construct relations on loyalty, learn to be tolerant, please stop thinking that US is the world, and tear down to the stereotypes, but mainly, be humble!

    Personally I think it's a great movie that sadly portrays some similar events that a few years later (2001) became real, one can't be blame if at one point it's mistakenly thinking that this movie was an inspiration to the WTC Attacks.

    Mr. Denzel Washington's (FBI Agent Anthony 'Hub' Hubbard) performance is powerful (as usual), the rest of the supporting cast did a good job too, Annette Bening's (Elise Kraft/Sharon Bridger) seems a little 'old' for the role but does an excellent job though.
    mlhenry-1

    The Siege raised questions that we should have been asking before the tragedy of 9/11.

    I seem to remember that this film was looked down upon by the Arab Americans. I don't understand that considering the bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993 and some of the perpetrators who were eventually apprehended. My husband and I found The Siege frighteningly entertaining. Once more Denzel Washington gave a tour-de-force performance. The rest of the cast was excellent. The script was prophetic. The writer understood what might happen if the war on terror resided in New York City. Where is Lawrence Wright now?
    9baumer

    What if....

    At first glance, The Siege looks to be a jingoistic, typically heroic American patriot film. But upon further review, and if you honestly give this movie a chance and listen to what it has to say, you'll see that it wants us to listen, it wants us to learn and it wants us to just look at the possibilities of " what if? ".

    This is one of the best movies that I have seen in recent years and what kind of stumps me is the negative criticism surrounding the film, not just the complaint of racism ( I'll get into that later ) but about the film in general. And I have come to a conclusion that not everybody will agree with and certainly many will dislike.

    The positive reviews that have been in the IMDb have been, at least a great many of them, from people that are nationalities other than American. And perhaps the reason for that is that we can sit back and look at the U.S. from afar and it may be easier for us ( as non Americans ) to understand more clearly what this movie is trying to say. And it may be easier for us ( whatever nationality we happen to be ) to understand what is wrong with America and why a film like this is just trying to give one possible reason for the decay of American society. That is not to say that our own countries don't have problems, because they do, but we can just see what is wrong with America a little easier, we are not blinded by our own patriotism. It may be easier still for perhaps Europeans to appreciate the movie even more than others because maybe their own countries have been under siege at one point or another. And maybe the relevance is that much more prevalent when you have been that close to something.

    And what this movie has to say perhaps should not be taken lightly.

    Steve Martin's character in " The Grand Canyon " uttered the line " watch the movies, they have all of life's answers. " Perhaps that has never been more true than what this film's message is. And I believe that message is that sooner or later if there is always going to be that one watch dog, that one Big Brother that is known as the United States, then something like this may happen. What if....

    I truly believe this movie has been unfairly criticized about it's apparent racist tones. Every time there is a bombing by terrorists that are Arab in heritage, there is always a scene that follows where the Arab leagues lend their support and let the FBI know that they want these criminals brought to justice just as much as anyone does. " They love this country just as much as we do. " Denzel says in one of his speeches to the people in charge. Is it really racism when a movie tries to explore what could happen when one body of government takes matters in their own hands and breaks international law? To me every effort was made to show Arabs as normal, family loving, law abiding, peaceful citizens that they are. A bunch of Arab terrorists does not mean that all Arabs are fanatics that are bent on destroying America. That perception is like believing that all we as Canadians do is play hockey, drink beer and play in the snow.

    The movie itself is so well acted and it is so well written that I really can't understand why Washington did not get a nod for best actor. He is mesmerizing. And I think his final confrontation with the general is tense, and brilliant.

    Washington plays Hub, a very patriotic, by the book FBI agent that is personally affected by all the chaos that has ensued in his city, and he plays him brilliantly. Bening and Shaloub are also wonderful in their roles and the music in the film is haunting. Willis is a little weak in the film but that is minor in comparison to the rest of the movie.

    If you haven't seen this film because of what you have heard, give it a chance, it is well worth it. And try to watch it and listen to what it has to say. You may be surprised. I'm not sure if something like this could ever happen to the US, but it is not out of the realm of possibility.
    7Surecure

    Still stands up

    I remember hearing about this film before its release. It had caught a great deal of flack for its use of Arabs and Muslims in particular as violent extremists. Even at that time I knew that the protests against this film were nothing more than politically correct nonsense, as even then the only trans-oceanic terrorists that existed were of the fake-Muslim variety that today we hear about every hour.

    When I saw the film, I was impressed by the fair nature of the film, in that it portrayed the truth: these extremists exist in the overwhelming minority of Muslims, and that it is unwise and unfair to paint them all with the same brush. With a very good script, excellent performances and exciting action pieces, I was impressed.

    Jump ahead a few years, and we see what we have learned. This film was not just an intelligent story. It was a warning sign. It examined things that people did not want to talk about. It examined things that people thought it more politically correct to ignore. It portrayed events realistically and in fact far less devastating than what was possible. If there is one thing that can be learned by examining a film such as this in retrospective of recent events, it is that our species chooses to ignore that which it does not want to accept.

    Those who do not learn from their history are doomed to repeat it. Perhaps there are other subjects we should stop being so PC about and actually talk about instead of worrying about "how it will look."

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to an interview that screenwriter Lawrence Wright gave to CBS in 2007, the film was a box-office failure upon its theatrical release, "but it was the most-rented movie in America after 9/11." Wright also claimed that the initial release bombed because "Muslim and Arab protesters picketed the theaters. They were furious at being stereotyped as terrorists."
    • Goofs
      Sheik Ahmed Bin Talal is shown the be abducted in Lebanon, and a desert is shown. Lebanon is the only Arab country without a desert.
    • Quotes

      [Frank Haddad's son is among those who have been rounded up by the Army]

      General William Devereaux: And his name is Haddad?

      Anthony 'Hub' Hubbard: Frank Haddad, Junior.

      Colonel Hardwick, Army Intelligence: His father's a Shiite. We're checking him out.

      Anthony 'Hub' Hubbard: Check this out, pal. His father's a federal agent for ten years.

      Colonel Hardwick, Army Intelligence: Don't get in my face, Hubbard. I might decide you're an Ethiopian.

      Anthony 'Hub' Hubbard: And you're just stupid enough to think that's an insult.

    • Alternate versions
      Some post-2001 versions have the World Trade Center digitally removed from the New York skyline.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Living Out Loud/Unmade Beds/American History X/John Carpenter's Vampires/The Celebration (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      First You Cry
      Written by Buddy Flett and David Egan

      Performed by Little Buster And The Soul Brothers

      Courtesy of Rounder Records

      by arrangement with Ocean Park Music Group

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    FAQ22

    • How long is The Siege?Powered by Alexa
    • Who played the man that delivered the pizza bomb (the guy who acted as a decoy)?
    • So, was Brooklyn locked down under martial law?
    • How was subway service affected by martial law?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 16, 1998 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Arabic
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Contra el enemigo
    • Filming locations
      • Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Twentieth Century Fox
      • Lynda Obst Productions
      • The Bedford Falls Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $70,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $40,981,289
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,931,285
      • Nov 8, 1998
    • Gross worldwide
      • $116,672,912
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 56m(116 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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