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Fenêtre secrète

Original title: Secret Window
  • 2004
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
217K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,465
57
Johnny Depp in Fenêtre secrète (2004)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:07
8 Videos
99+ Photos
Psychological ThrillerWhodunnitDramaMysteryThriller

A successful writer in the midst of a painful divorce is stalked at his remote lake house by a would-be scribe who accuses him of plagiarism.A successful writer in the midst of a painful divorce is stalked at his remote lake house by a would-be scribe who accuses him of plagiarism.A successful writer in the midst of a painful divorce is stalked at his remote lake house by a would-be scribe who accuses him of plagiarism.

  • Director
    • David Koepp
  • Writers
    • Stephen King
    • David Koepp
  • Stars
    • Johnny Depp
    • Maria Bello
    • John Turturro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    217K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,465
    57
    • Director
      • David Koepp
    • Writers
      • Stephen King
      • David Koepp
    • Stars
      • Johnny Depp
      • Maria Bello
      • John Turturro
    • 642User reviews
    • 85Critic reviews
    • 46Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos8

    Secret Window
    Trailer 2:07
    Secret Window
    Secret Window
    Trailer 2:10
    Secret Window
    Secret Window
    Trailer 2:10
    Secret Window
    Secret Window
    Trailer 2:11
    Secret Window
    Secret Window Scene: You Stole My Story
    Clip 1:05
    Secret Window Scene: You Stole My Story
    Secret Window Scene: Secret Window
    Clip 1:03
    Secret Window Scene: Secret Window
    Secret Window Scene: Come In Swinging
    Clip 1:11
    Secret Window Scene: Come In Swinging

    Photos200

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    + 194
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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Johnny Depp
    Johnny Depp
    • Mort Rainey
    Maria Bello
    Maria Bello
    • Amy Rainey
    John Turturro
    John Turturro
    • John Shooter
    Timothy Hutton
    Timothy Hutton
    • Ted Milner
    Charles S. Dutton
    Charles S. Dutton
    • Ken Karsch
    Len Cariou
    Len Cariou
    • Sheriff Dave Newsome
    Joan Heney
    • Mrs. Garvey
    John Dunn-Hill
    John Dunn-Hill
    • Tom Greenleaf
    • (as John Dunn Hill)
    Vlasta Vrana
    Vlasta Vrana
    • Fire Chief Wickersham
    Matt Holland
    Matt Holland
    • Detective Bradley
    Gillian Ferrabee
    • Fran Evans
    Bronwen Mantel
    • Greta Bowie
    Elizabeth Marleau
    Elizabeth Marleau
    • Juliet Stoker
    Kyle Allatt
    • Busboy
    Richard Jutras
    Richard Jutras
    • Motel Manager
    Kevin Woodhouse
    Kevin Woodhouse
    • Public Works Guy
    Vito DeFilippo
    • Public Works Guy
    Sarah Allen
    Sarah Allen
    • Sheriff's Niece
    • Director
      • David Koepp
    • Writers
      • Stephen King
      • David Koepp
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews642

    6.5217.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8rjsuno

    More to appreciate than some people realize.

    This is one of the few movies that you will either love or hate. There is no middle ground. The people that have slammed this movie must not have understood a lot of the symbolism. Seriously, some of it is obvious but a lot of it would require you listen to the Director's commentary to catch.

    While aspects of the story are predictable, you will never see the last couple minutes coming. Koepp made a film that HE believed in, with a finale that may not sit well with the general public. For this, I applaud him.

    As I've noted on the message board, Koepp borrowed a page from Hitchcock's book and relied on our imagination to fill in the gaps during the violent sequences. Some of it is shown but certainly not all. Without question this film tested the limits of the PG-13 rating but Koepp did not take the easy way out and turn this film into an R-rated gore fest. This film proves that PG-13 films can be gritty and poignant.

    Depp's performance is amazing, as can be expected. The cinematography is awesome. Watch this film with an open mind, taking to heart each character's motivations.

    If you've already seen the film I would strongly suggest you watch the Featurettes and listen to the Director's commentary on the DVD. You may find this to be quite an eye opener.

    My Score: 8/10 stars
    Lechuguilla

    A Writer With Problems

    Johnny Depp plays Mort Rainey, a writer with wife problems. Mort secludes himself in a wilderness cabin to write. Soon, he gets a visit from a strange Southern mountain man named John Shooter (John Turturro). Throughout most of the plot, Mort tries to deal with this threatening man who won't go away, and confronts his wife and her new lover.

    "Secret Window" is a moody, Hitchcockian thriller with a major story twist. Pacing is slow. There's lots of waiting for something to happen, which enhances a sense of foreboding. And Depp's performance is terrific.

    With hair that looks like a mop, and a delightfully slovenly appearance, Mort mopes around the cabin, talks to his nearly blind dog, and tries to placate Mr. Shooter. He also spends a lot of time on the phone, mostly with Shooter and with his disconsolate wife.

    Casting and acting are fine. Production design is great; love that cabin where Mort lives. Camera work, lighting, special effects, CGI, and editing are all quite good.

    Although I liked the film's twist, some viewers will be disappointed with it, perhaps because the underlying idea is not terribly original. The risk for the director is that the entire story hinges on this one twist. If a viewer discovers the twist ahead of time, or finds it unsatisfying for any reason, the viewer likely will render a negative verdict on the entire film.

    My only serious complaint with the film is that, at times, the plot discards logic so as to maximize gratuitous violence, the result no doubt of the film's source material, a horror story by Stephen King.

    Overall, "Secret Window" is a generally fine thriller, enhanced especially by the splendid performance of Johnny Depp. Just be aware that one's reaction to this film likely will depend on one's perception of the story's major plot twist.
    MovieAddict2016

    Nothing special but made enjoyable by a fun(ny) performance by Depp and capable direction

    "Secret Window" is another one of those eerie thrillers where danger lurks within the shadows. We can almost feel it, and so can the hero, as he walks through his house, armed with a weapon, ready to defend himself at all costs. He hears a noise from somewhere behind him, spins around, and suddenly realizes it was just his imagination. He sighs, puts down the weapon, turns around, and BOO! There's the bad guy, who has somehow managed to enter the locked home and avoid being detected. What if, I wonder, one of these times, the bad guy was seen as he entered? What if the Fisherman from "I Know What You Did Last Summer" had been spotted, and confronted, by one of the teenagers? What if Norman Bates' "Mother" had been exposed from the start? Then there presumably would be no movie, of course.

    Although we know where "Secret Window" is headed quite early on, David Koepp (writer of "Panic Room" and director of the well-made "Stir of Echoes") manages to sustain the audience's interest through a series of suspenseful camera shots. Some are inventive, while others are merely fun to watch because we can guess where Koepp got his inspiration.

    Mort Rainey (Johnny Depp) is a successful author who lives up north with his beloved dog and a laptop. He apparently abandons his social life, never gets a haircut, and wears quite silly-looking glasses. He has a sarcastic personality and presumably does not get along very well with the local residents, who generally keep to themselves anyway.

    Mort's life is changed forever when a strange man named John Shooter (John Turturro) shows up at his doorstep claiming that Mort has "stolen" his story. Mort is handed a dirty manuscript. Within the pages are passages literally identical to those from Mort's own book, "Secret Window," published in 1994, three years before John claims he wrote his. "Secret Window," the novel, is about a man whose wife cheats on him. Fueled by rage, the fictional character murders his own wife and buries her in the "secret garden" located outside of the "secret window" of their home.

    It is said that art imitates life, and through a series of flashbacks we learn that Mort's novel bears an eerie similarity to his own problems -- "six months ago" his wife (Maria Bello) had an affair with Ted (Timothy Hutton). Mort assumes that John Shooter has some sort of connection to his past, and hires a detective (Charles S. Dutton) to find the mysterious man, who always seems to appear out of nowhere when Mort is alone.

    Depp's performance is the highlight of the film -- if Depp is imitating Stephen King (the author of the short story "Secret Window" is based on), he succeeds. Barely recognizable hidden underneath a layer of geeky clothing and a generally disheveled appearance, Depp once again proves that he can tackle any sort of role as an actor -- from a scared teenager who has to stay up ("A Nightmare on Elm Street") to a Hunter S. Thompson lookalike ("Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas").

    Koepp, who wrote the screenplay for the film, realizes that the key to the story is Depp's performance wisely allows his primary actor to let loose. Meanwhile the co-stars all deliver fine, convincing performances and although the grand finale is a bit of a let-down, and terribly predictable, the movie's style is interesting. "Secret Window" is better than most in its genre, although by no means is it a masterpiece of any sort. Just an enjoyable Friday/Saturday night matinée, and worthy of recommendation if you're not looking for anything special.

    I could criticize the "twist" of the movie and say that it has become one of the most overused solutions to Hollywood film thriller/mysteries of the past decade, but I won't spoil it, and let you decide for yourself whether it does the story justice.
    DUKEJBM

    overrated ridiculously overwrought psychothriller

    Secret Window's tag line – "Some windows should never be opened" – is so snarkily appropriate in its unintentional damning of this ridiculously overwrought psychothriller that it's a wonder some smart underling at Columbia hasn't leapfrogged up the studio ladder by pointing it out to the powers that be. Their error is the critics' gain, though, and even the presence of Johnny Depp, as novelist Mort Rainey, can't save this film from its own unintended melodramatics. Secret Window lacks a B-movie sucker punch, and by the final reel it degenerates into a hackneyed mishmash of obvious revelations and cheap, ineffective horror theatrics despite Depp's mangy fun. There's no car crash in this one as in his current television project Kingdom Hospital and much of his recent writing – King penned it before that wayward van almost took him out of the running forever – but the film itself is an effective enough metaphor for out-of-control bs that frankly was part and parcel of King's novella from page one.
    Chrysanthepop

    No Secret Here

    Not exactly a memorable or path-breaking movie of its genre, 'Secret Window' does manage to be fun to an extent. The story is easily predictable and there are plenty of unintentionally funny moments (which were supposed to provide thrills). It is pretty much just another thriller but the locations (especially the landscape and nature round the lake house) are very pleasing to look at and the cinematography is quite impressive, even though it's highly overdone in the end sequence. The way the 'revelation' is displayed towards the end is hilarious and overly dramatic. Perhaps 'Secret Window' would have worked better had it been more subtle. The plot holes do not provide much advantage to the film. Johnny Depp is great at what he's given to do but the role itself suffers from poor writing. Torturro is adequate. The supporting cast are just there. They don't contribute much and the actors are just okay. If it weren't for Depp and the nice lakeside view, this would be just another mediocre thriller

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the scene where Johnny Depp bursts in on Maria Bello and Timothy Hutton in the motel, David Koepp wanted Bello and Hutton to look shocked and scared. He made them both lie in the bed for fifteen minutes before Depp rushed in. The production crew set up large speakers that blared static noise when the script called for them to be scared. The lights in the room were also rigged to go on when Johnny Depp opened the door, startling the actors further. No one knew exactly how to act.
    • Goofs
      After Mort gets out of his car to confront his wife and her lover at the motel, he closes the car door. It is both heard and can be seen in the rear view mirror. When he returns to leave a moment later, the car door is open.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Mort: [voiceover] "I know I can do it," Todd Downey said, helping himself to another ear of corn from the steaming bowl. "I'm sure that in time, every bit of her will be gone and her death will be a mystery... even to me."

    • Crazy credits
      At the end of the credits Johnny Depp can be briefly heard singing "Shortnin' Bread".
    • Alternate versions
      The camera pans down to the garden, fading to black when it reaches the dirt. The alternate ending continues underground to the roots of the cornstalks, where Ted and Amy's bodies lay.
    • Connections
      Edited from Le Monde perdu : Jurassic Park (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Chico and the Man
      Written by José Feliciano

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 14, 2004 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La ventana secreta
    • Filming locations
      • Bromont Sur Le Lac, Québec, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Grand Slam Productions
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Mel's Cite du Cinema
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $40,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $48,022,900
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $18,237,568
      • Mar 14, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $92,913,171
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 36 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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