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État d'alerte

Original title: The Grid
  • TV Mini Series
  • 2004
  • 4h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
856
YOUR RATING
Julianna Margulies and Dylan McDermott in État d'alerte (2004)
Home Video Trailer from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Play trailer0:16
1 Video
3 Photos
ActionCrimeDramaThriller

A team of American and British counter-terrorists are tasked with stopping a terrorist cell who's operating on a global level.A team of American and British counter-terrorists are tasked with stopping a terrorist cell who's operating on a global level.A team of American and British counter-terrorists are tasked with stopping a terrorist cell who's operating on a global level.

  • Stars
    • Jemma Redgrave
    • James Remar
    • Piter Marek
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    856
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Jemma Redgrave
      • James Remar
      • Piter Marek
    • 24User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 5 nominations total

    Episodes6

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2004

    Videos1

    The Grid
    Trailer 0:16
    The Grid

    Photos2

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    Top cast74

    Edit
    Jemma Redgrave
    Jemma Redgrave
    • MI6 Agent Emily Tuthill
    • 2004
    James Remar
    James Remar
    • Hudson 'Hud' Benoit
    • 2004
    Piter Marek
    Piter Marek
    • CIA Agent Raza Michaels
    • 2004
    Silas Carson
    Silas Carson
    • Dr. Raghib Mutar
    • 2004
    Olek Krupa
    Olek Krupa
    • Stana Moore
    • 2004
    Barna Moricz
    Barna Moricz
    • Kaz Moore
    • 2004
    Emil Marwa
    • Akil Samoudi
    • 2004
    Robert Forster
    Robert Forster
    • Jay Aldrich
    • 2004
    Tom Skerritt
    Tom Skerritt
    • CIA Deputy Director Acton Sandman
    • 2004
    Imran Ali
    • Kahil
    • 2004
    Carol Anderson
    • NSC Staffer
    • 2004
    Sarkis Bekmezian
    • Samud Amallah
    • 2004
    Suzanne Bertish
    Suzanne Bertish
    • Sarah Camfield
    • 2004
    Marc Casabani
    Marc Casabani
    • English Voice Replacement…
    • 2004
    Luke Dejahang
    Luke Dejahang
    • Masir
    • 2004
    Houda Echouafni
    Houda Echouafni
    • Nazira
    • 2004
    David Hunt
    David Hunt
    • Gregor
    • 2004
    Chapelle Jaffe
    Chapelle Jaffe
    • Catherine Cross
    • 2004
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    6.7856
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    Featured reviews

    spaha424a

    Great entertainment

    the grid is fabulous -- beautifully written: Raza to Emily "Sex like love is an act of devotion," beautifully acted -- wonderful television. Go TNT! By the way, I believe that Raza Michael's name is Piter Marek. The casting is diverse as are the locations. The Grid could have very easily been a theatrical movie, albeit, it would have had to be shorten. But that is why television is great, especially when it is allowed to be great. TNT but together an intelligent piece of entertainment. The characters are very well drawn out. We are already seeing the many different shades of people that live in this vast world of ours. The Grid lets us see that not everyone of a particular culture or ethnicity is bad. And please Raza Michaels is Piter Marek.
    cableaddict

    Worth seeing, but not as good as it could have been

    I'll start by saying that I definitely enjoyed the first episode. The two hours pretty much flew by. I highly recommend this to anyone.

    However, there are a few glaring flaws:

    With two exceptions, virtually all the main characters are young and beautiful. , they are all supposed to be highly seasoned veterans in extremely high

    positions within their respective agencies, Yeah, right.

    At least most of them are terrific actors. The one GLARING exception is Julianna Margulies. She was fine in her TV role as a nurse, and I liked her a lot in "Elysian fields." However, she is PAINFULLY miscast in this series. She's so non-believable (not to mention wooden) that everytime she was on-screen I got jolted out of the action with a blaring

    reminder that I was watching a tv series. Awful. Maybe she's battling a drug addiction or alcohol, who knows....

    OK, but other than the above, the premier episode was terrific. Excellent

    cinematography, excellent screenplay, editing, etc. Also, as others have said, the "bad guys" aren't presented as one-dimensional. Rather, both sides of the conflict are presented with equal respect, and that's really something. There's a lot in this series to make you think.

    HIGHLY recommended.
    Nylind

    The DVD

    This was a powerful series. Well-acted, Well-written. I disagree with people who say Julianna Margulies was out of her element, her character Merrin was just the type of woman you want in the government tough, smart, and strong-willed. Dylan McDermot was good as the Special Agent in-charge of New York's Joint terrorism taskforce. My favorite character was Jemma Redgrave's Emily Tuthill. Jemma was an actress I had never seen before she gave a very powerful performance especially toward the end in her scenes with the actor who played Reza, the CIA analyst turned field agent. Anyone that feels that Emily and Reza's scenes were out of place in a serious drama, I say well love, intimacy, and the beginnings of a strong relationship can be born under stranger circumstances.

    In terms of Screen writing the strongest character relationship were the scenes between Maren and under mentor Former Secretary of State Jay Aldrich played by Robert Forester. When Aldrich describes Maren as being cool under pressure and well suited for chaos, the audience gets the feeling that Maren was both highly trained and well suited for her position but, written as well as it was, it also communicates that Maren's skills are both battle worn and still highly effective.

    The DVD is reasonably priced at 14.00 dollars or so on two discs, with great extras about film and actor's discussing the mindset needed to work in Counterterrorism, buy this powerful miniseries. I would call this a must for anyone interested in Counterterrorism work for the government. I realize that television dramas like "The Agency" and "The Grid" are fictional and not really how working in Counterterrorism is, but "The Grid" made the journey both mildly realistic and entertaining.

    At least it gets one interested in learning about the subject matter from non-fiction sources. To begin I suggest reading "Against All Enemies" by former NSC Manager Richard A. Clarke.
    6=G=

    A nominal overview of 21 century international terrorism

    "The Grid" (we never really know to what the title refers) is a 6x45 min miniseries action/drama about international terrorism. The bad guys are a rogue terror cell operating out of Yemen, deploying operatives to the UK and the US where they are to attack with sarin nerve gas. The good guys are a joint task force of Brits and US Federal agents who are out to stop the bad guys. The film leapfrogs incessantly from Yemen to London to Washington to Saudi Arabia to Chicago, etc. globe trotting in a surprisingly well orchestrated conglomeration of good vs evil Muslims, interagency wrangling, boyish suicide bombers, covert ops, murder, love, and much more given this US/UK co-op's budgetary constraints. On the upside, "The Grid" gets busy and stays busy sufficient to engross and make some of the obvious histrionics easily overlooked as it provides an acceptable overview of the amorphous nature of terrorist cells and the international agency cooperation required to effectively cope with this 21 century threat. On the downside the film is difficult to follow at times, somewhat disjointed in an effort to be all things to all people, pushes the believability envelope occasionally, and is generally too pat to be real. Overall, "The Grid" is an acceptable miniseries worth a look for those who can commit to a 4.5 hour small screen watch. Those who enjoy this miniseries should also check out "Traffic (2004)". (B-)
    dee.reid

    Engaging, Intelligent, Thoughtful

    I was at first very skeptical towards "The Grid," a show that offers an insider's view on the United States War on Terror, as this show seemed certain to provoke more outrage and mistrust amongst Americans. The previews certainly made it look that way too. Then last night (July 19, 2004) came and I got a chance to view the show in its entirety, and I must say that it makes for thoughtful entertainment.

    Whether you agree with President George W. Bush's politics or not (for the record, I don't support him), I think "The Grid" will do a good job of showing us that the people at the top may always lie to us on a daily basis, but they are trying to stop terrorism, which unfortunately for us, is never going away (a little morbid, you and I may think, but true).

    The story for "The Grid," the title referring to the organizations who are involved in fighting or masterminding terrorism, begins in London, where three men attempting a terrorist attack on a nearby hotel fail miserably, when their weapon of choice (Sarin bombs encased in coffee pots) accidentally goes off, and kills everyone that is exposed to it (body count: 19). News of this spreads quickly and eventually it becomes evident to everyone on both sides of the Atlantic that a huge plot is underway by members of a lunatic fringe associated with Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda terrorist camp.

    We are later introduced to members of both sides of the War on Terror, including the aforementioned people at the top, the newly formed extremist camp (including some of its obviously conflicted members), and the struggle between the powers-that-be over information and within the terrorist camp.

    "The Grid" was created by Tracey Alexander (who is also the show's executive producer), and has said that it is her way of dealing with the events of 9/11, the terrorists and the powers-that-be in Washington, D.C. and Britain who can't seem to get it together to protect their people.

    This show doesn't offer us a one-sided view of the so-called "evildoers" and their associates, some of whom as we're shown, are forced into the fringe because they have no other choice. Some of the men shown, are respectable individuals; one man is a physician, who joins because the hospital where he works cannot afford medicine to treat its patients. We are also shown a devoted Muslim man working for the C.I.A., who faces much mistrust from his fellow workers, especially his own boss.

    "The Grid" could also teach us some things about what really goes on. For one, something that I learned from a friend of mine who is from Iran, that the word "jihad" does not mean "holy war," as some of the extremists and American news media have put it; the word in fact, means to strive for a better way of life.

    Much of what goes on in "The Grid" will not come as news to anyone who pays close attention to politics. We know that intelligence failures played heavily into the events of 9/11, we know that the powers-that-be in Washington and Great Britain were/are still in the middle of a power struggle, we know at least partially, some of the motivations for the extremists' desires to kill Americans (rid the Middle East of Western culture and influence) and that some of the members of the lunatic fringe are human beings, not soulless monsters as the Administration sometimes makes them out to be.

    You may not agree with the politics, you may not agree with the message, but "The Grid" is certainly a show that I think most Americans should see, and make up their own minds about the direction that our country is going in the War on Terror.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The aerial shot of the CIA headquarters is stock footage from La Mémoire dans la peau (2002). The establishing shot of the CIA headquarters entrance gate is from Spy game - Jeu d'espions (2001), and is in fact a location in England, not the real CIA headquarters.
    • Quotes

      FBI Agent Max Canary: If I'm not mistaken, she just cut off your balls, Derek.

      Derek Jennings: Just the one, Max. Just the one.

    • Alternate versions
      There were two slightly different versions edited - one for the North American market, and one for the British/European market due to the different attitudes to swearing or violence in each market.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 62nd Annual Golden Globe Awards 2005 (2005)

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    FAQ17

    • How many seasons does The Grid have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 23, 2005 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
      • Canada
    • Official site
      • TNT
    • Languages
      • English
      • Arabic
    • Also known as
      • The Grid
    • Filming locations
      • London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Carnival Film & Television
      • DAS Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 4h 26m(266 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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