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Sans frontière

Original title: Beyond Borders
  • 2003
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 7m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
30K
YOUR RATING
Angelina Jolie and Clive Owen in Sans frontière (2003)
Home Video Trailer from Paramount Home Entertainment
Play trailer2:36
1 Video
78 Photos
AdventureDramaRomanceWar

The world's cruelty is confronted with the love of two different people who try to save humanity from poverty and war.The world's cruelty is confronted with the love of two different people who try to save humanity from poverty and war.The world's cruelty is confronted with the love of two different people who try to save humanity from poverty and war.

  • Director
    • Martin Campbell
  • Writer
    • Caspian Tredwell-Owen
  • Stars
    • Clive Owen
    • Angelina Jolie
    • Linus Roache
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    30K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Martin Campbell
    • Writer
      • Caspian Tredwell-Owen
    • Stars
      • Clive Owen
      • Angelina Jolie
      • Linus Roache
    • 168User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
    • 32Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Beyond Borders
    Trailer 2:36
    Beyond Borders

    Photos78

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    Top cast59

    Edit
    Clive Owen
    Clive Owen
    • Nick Callahan
    Angelina Jolie
    Angelina Jolie
    • Sarah Jordan
    Linus Roache
    Linus Roache
    • Henry Bauford
    Teri Polo
    Teri Polo
    • Charlotte Jordan
    Noah Emmerich
    Noah Emmerich
    • Elliott Hauser
    Yorick van Wageningen
    Yorick van Wageningen
    • Steiger
    Timothy West
    Timothy West
    • Lawrence Bauford
    Kate Trotter
    Kate Trotter
    • Mrs. Bauford
    Jonathan Higgins
    Jonathan Higgins
    • Philip
    • (as Johnathan Higgins)
    John Gausden
    • Jimmy Bauford
    Isabelle Horler
    • Anna Bauford
    Iain Lee
    Iain Lee
    • Master of Ceremonies
    Keelan Anthony
    • Jojo
    • (as Keelan Anthony Ray Forsythe)
    John Bourgeois
    John Bourgeois
    • Rolly
    Kalyane Tea
    • Steiger's Girlfriend
    Julian Casey
    • Police Officer
    Norman Mikeal Berketa
    • Police Officer
    • (as Norm Berketa)
    Aidan Pickering
    • TV Reporter
    • Director
      • Martin Campbell
    • Writer
      • Caspian Tredwell-Owen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews168

    6.429.5K
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    Featured reviews

    10lolitaloo2000

    Definitely recommend BEYOND BORDERS to anyone who wants to be inspired beyond their own border.

    Beyond Borders brings to light the very realistic struggles of the millions of refugees created by war and the valiant efforts of aid workers who contribute to their survival in spite of overwhelming odds. The storyline of crossing your life's borders away from a comfortable life to help other struggling human beings is a story worth being told. In this type of humanitarian experience, every aid worker I have come into contact with has described the experience as extremely enriching. I'm saddened most of America did not embrace this subject matter at the box office. We, as Americans, live a very comfortable life comparatively, and perhaps it's out of fear, complacency or just selfishness that we generally do not cross borders to help fellow human beings. This attitude does not make us very popular around the world, but perhaps if more people become aware and did something to help other people in their struggles, the world would be a better and safer place to live.

    As a journalist who covered the Afghan / Soviet war, recently watching the "Making of" on the DVD was compelling to see how the filmmakers made something so realistic without putting their cast or crew in harms way. I hope this film will be embraced as a DVD so that studios will continue to make films of solid subject matter. Angelina Jolie was well-cast in this role for she (in real life) is the Ambassador for the United Nations High Commission of Refugees (UNHCR). She brought much passion into this role, and while she appeared a little "girlish" initially, the character had to grow out of her pampered life for us to follow her across the borders both real and metaphoric. I am pleased she was brave enough to embrace such a role, and hope she will continue to grow in her range of acting choices. Noah Emmerich reminded me of a very gentle Aid worker I knew killed on the job, which tugged at my heart strings. While Clive Owen's portrayal of a man who closes off his heart to survive the cruelty of every day life in the war zone is accurate, for the general public who has probably not lived through these extreme conditions, it's difficult to empathize or care. I'm sure that is why there might be a general dislike of this character. For a handful of my friends, the romantic connection was unrealistic, but in reality if you're living day to day in such extreme conditions and you're friend dies, you'll let down your guard just to feel alive. I'm sure a lot of people had sex just after the Sept. 11 attacks.

    The excellent production design, cinematography and poignant music moved the story forward, but while I loved this subject matter, I also felt the transitions between three very distant locations caused the film to feel somewhat disjointed. Perhaps that was due to "behind the scene" budget constraints (maybe some transition scenes were cut before they could shoot them) or perhaps some studio executive was pushing the film out to theaters before the cut was ready because the investors were crying out for their ROI. Who knows what the politics were...

    Either way, I liked the film, am going to buy the DVD and will definitely recommend it to anyone who wants to be inspired beyond their own border. I certainly was.
    Buddy-51

    Good intentions; appalling treatment

    No one can accuse 'Beyond Borders' of not having its heart in the right place. After all, how many mainstream American movies so much as acknowledge the existence of starving people in the world, let alone make them the centerpiece of their stories? For its willingness to do that, the film deserves a certain amount of genuine praise. Unfortunately, having gone this far, the filmmakers then cheapen it all by pasting onto the film a corny, superficial love story more appropriate to a Harlequin Romance than an ostensibly serious social drama.

    Angelina Jolie plays a United Nations relief worker who flits from one worldwide trouble spot to another - Africa, Cambodia, Chechnya - dispensing aid and carrying on an adulterous affair with a handsome field doctor (played by Clive Owen) whom she met several years earlier (the film takes place in the 1980's and '90's). It's a little hard to take seriously the extreme plight of these suffering people when Sarah and Nick are making goo-goo eyes at one another in between saving lives and delivering inspirational, we-are-the-world speeches. As with so many movies of this type, the put-upon, indigenous people become little more than extras in their own story, a mere backdrop for the trite personal drama occupying center stage. It's as if American audiences couldn't possibly find any interest or relevance in all this misery if we didn't have some well-fed, well-scrubbed white people serving as our guide to get us through it all. I'm sure that the last thing the people who made this movie intended was to in any way demean the incredible efforts done by relief workers around the world, yet that is exactly what they end up doing by forcing all this heartbreaking human tragedy through the funnel of a hackneyed love story.

    The moments of highest interest come when we see the incredible amount of power politics that goes on even when it comes to delivering food and medicine to dying people - although the filmmakers don't always make those complicated logistics entirely clear for the lay audience. We often can't tell what exactly is happening on a socio political level that's preventing the aid from getting through. A little less time spent on the romance and a little more on the behind-the-scenes aspects of the story would have gone a long way towards redeeming the film. Unfortunately, there's something almost comical about the sight of Sarah and Nick, nattily dressed and perfectly coiffed, making passionate love amidst the rubble and ruin of war torn Chechnya.

    Jolie and Owen turn in relatively lackluster performances, not entirely their fault given the stock characters they play and the bland dialogue they've been assigned to deliver. Jolie has one basic expression throughout - that of teary-eyed sympathy and concern - that wears awfully thin after awhile.

    The filmmakers are highly critical of all those well-off people who merely pay lip service to helping Third World causes but who are really only concerned with salving their own guilty consciences (the film begins at one of those lavish fund raising dinners with everyone dressed to the nines and enjoying a sumptuous banquet while they're giving one another awards for great humanitarian achievements for helping to eradicate poverty and hunger). Yet, by treating the material as if it were some sort of bourgeois romantic fantasy, the movie makers are, in many ways, doing the very same thing they accuse the elite snobs of doing - which is making misery palatable and easily digestible for the complacent, self-satisfied masses.

    'Beyond Borders' is, obviously, a labor of love for all those involved in its making. That is turns out to be a misfire of almost laughably bad proportions is, perhaps, the greatest tragedy of all.
    OldDogLrngNuTrx

    Redemption

    This movie might not have been deemed the best movie in the world; and we here in America certainly are in a position to critique; we have access to more movies, etc. then probably any other country in the world: Hollywood rules the cinema! With that said, I would like to interject, that although this movie may not have been a cinemographic great, hopefully it did accomplish one thing; and in doing that, only that redemption may needed: To get 'Fat Americans' to --Think. We are a country of "Comfort Zone Couch Potatoes." If something is unpleasant, we can employ the remote to sustain our comfort zone--we can turn the channel. Those places that were depicted in the film DO actually exist, and human suffering and atrocities REALLY DO go on. In a genre such as film, if even for a moment, perhaps long enough that even those who would chose to 'critique' said film, even those individuals had to have had watched enough to realize that, yes, such things really do go on--today, now. And for those of us who read of such atrocities, but otherwise are insulated from such horrors, have our consciences jarred, if only for a moment, but hopefully, even if only momentarily, long enough that we don't have our consciences--Seared. If any movie can say that it has performed such a public service, I would say that it has redeemed itself of any other shortcomings; creative or otherwise.
    10marieelise0928

    Powerful, affecting, and lingering...

    Perhaps lingering is the wrong word, since as I write this, I only left the theater about 30 minutes ago... But I can still feel my heart clenched in my chest, and my mind is still rolling back and forth over what I've just seen. In my experience, those are the kinds of films that stay with you.

    There have been a lot of reviews on both sides as far as Beyond Borders goes, and I think it comes down to knowing yourself as a movie viewer. Beyond Borders presents you with a glimpse of the world, and it asks you to believe in it, to internalize it. If you're the kind of person who can EXPERIENCE a film, rather than just kick back and watch it, than you'll be brushing flies out of your eyes, and jumping at every sudden burst of gunfire. You'll be overwhelmed by the desperation around you, and you'll feel despair, and helplessness, and you'll think "Good for those people who go to Ethiopia/to Chechnya/to Cambodia. I'm so glad someone's helping," and then deep down, you'll be ashamed to realize that you think that just because you elected to see a movie about Relief Workers rather than The Texas Chainsaw Massacres, you deserve some sort of gold star.

    And yes, there is the love story. And if you love love stories (as do I) you'll love this one. Again, it comes down to how much you'll let your self believe in a movie, and how much you expect to be convinced. Certainly, I would NEVER accuse Angelina Jolie and Clive Owens of sharing no chemistry, as I was completely unable to breathe during most of the scenes they shared. Both actors excelled in their roles, together and separately.

    No, it wasn't fast-paced. It wasn't full of witty acerbic dialogue, or fantastic car chases. There were no jokes about bodily functions. It was just sincere, and powerful, and good (in every sense of the world). Though it was by no means perfect, I gladly rated it a 10 for excellence.
    instance28

    Excellent review by Mentalcritic

    I agree 98% with what Mentalcritic has to say about this film. I, too, felt that Jolie's character is quite selfish and though she did what she thought was the most helpful and self-sacrificing it was in fact pointless and irresponsible. There is, however, some good that comes of films like these.

    The general public who would never know of the situations portrayed in the film are now introduced to a world they may never have known existed. I have been honored to serve overseas for aid purposes and was amazed when several friends(even those who know of my experience) would ask unbelievingly "The movie is a bit extreme. Things like that don't actually happen, right?" Sadly, what Beyond Borders showed us was the milder side of the world's human rights issues. It stimulates the humanitarian in an otherwise ignorant audience.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      All the villages in exotic locations were authentic. The crews installed real running water for the grateful villagers. Some of them had never even seen a white man until then.
    • Goofs
      Jimmy Bauford is 4 years old in the 1989 segment and 10 years old in the 1995 segment. He is played by the same child actor in both segments, and he does not age a day.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Sarah Jordan: You have always been with me. Your courage, your smile, your damned stubbornness. There has never been any distance between us, and there never will be. I love you Nick. I love you.

    • Crazy credits
      This film is dedicated to all relief workers and the millions of people who are victims of war and persecution. They continue to inspire us all with their courage and will to survive.
    • Connections
      Featured in Six pieds sous terre: The Rainbow of Her Reasons (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Traumerei
      Written by Robert Schumann

      Performed by Angelina Jolie

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Beyond Borders?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 24, 2003 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Germany
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Amharic
      • Central Khmer
      • German
      • Chechen
    • Also known as
      • Beyond Borders
    • Filming locations
      • Kanchanaburi, Thailand
    • Production companies
      • Mandalay Pictures
      • CP Medien AG
      • Camelot Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $35,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,430,101
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $2,076,402
      • Oct 26, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $11,705,002
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 7m(127 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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