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Projet échelon

Original title: In ascolto
  • 2006
  • R
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Italian theatrical poster
CrimeDramaThriller

Estranged by the degree of corporate influence within the largest U.S. listening station in the world, an aging NSA officer defects and mounts a clandestine counter-listening station high in... Read allEstranged by the degree of corporate influence within the largest U.S. listening station in the world, an aging NSA officer defects and mounts a clandestine counter-listening station high in the Italian alps.Estranged by the degree of corporate influence within the largest U.S. listening station in the world, an aging NSA officer defects and mounts a clandestine counter-listening station high in the Italian alps.

  • Director
    • Giacomo Martelli
  • Writers
    • Giacomo Martelli
    • Iñigo Dominguez
    • Riccardo Brun
  • Stars
    • Michael Parks
    • Maya Sansa
    • Andrea Tidona
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Giacomo Martelli
    • Writers
      • Giacomo Martelli
      • Iñigo Dominguez
      • Riccardo Brun
    • Stars
      • Michael Parks
      • Maya Sansa
      • Andrea Tidona
    • 12User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos1

    View Poster

    Top cast29

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    Michael Parks
    Michael Parks
    • James Wagley
    Maya Sansa
    Maya Sansa
    • Francesca Savelli
    Andrea Tidona
    • Gianni Longardo
    James Parks
    James Parks
    • Anthony Ashe
    Matt Patresi
    Matt Patresi
    • Guglia Graef
    Bruce McGuire
    Bruce McGuire
    • Phil Kovacs
    Vincent Riotta
    Vincent Riotta
    • Frank Vaughan
    Terence Beesley
    Terence Beesley
    • John Strobel
    Carla Cassola
    • Tina Longardo
    Giulia Bernardini
    • Katherine Palmer
    Marc Fiorini
    Marc Fiorini
    • Lehmann
    Adam O'Neill
    Adam O'Neill
    • Louis Perry
    Jay Natelle
    • Bryden
    Claudia Zanella
    Claudia Zanella
    • Annamaria
    Harold Bradley
    • Polygraph Examiner
    Francis Pardeilhan
    Francis Pardeilhan
    • Murray
    David Kirk Traylor
    David Kirk Traylor
    • Ellison
    • (as David Traylor)
    George Pedol
    • Gypsy Boy
    • Director
      • Giacomo Martelli
    • Writers
      • Giacomo Martelli
      • Iñigo Dominguez
      • Riccardo Brun
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.21.1K
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    Featured reviews

    6merklekranz

    Lighten up ...... it's only science fiction ...... or is it ?

    Like something out of the pages of "The National Enquirer", "The Listening" is entertaining, as long as you don't let facts get in the way of a good story. After all, the best science fiction, is believable science fiction. Michael Parks goes up against the government's National Security Agency and a private corporation supplier, trying to save an innocent Italian woman from their abusive silencing techniques. Though the movie has it's flaws in the logic department, the intriguing subject matter overcomes any glitches in the story. If you are one of those people who is paranoid about "big brother" listening, this is a film you might want to avoid, because it will definitely strike a nerve. - MERK
    3geminate7

    One more for the commode

    The premise that almost anything was possible in this movie just goes against all known physics and electronics. In other words it isn't happening, can't happen and isn't going to happen. The most hilarious part of the 'movie' was the over-modulating scene and what happens to the girl - this is totally and completely impossible. Also do you know how much it hurts to get your eardrums blown out and how long that pain lasts especially at high altitude - completely ridiculous movie from start to finish. I suppose the most irritating part was that the movie was unapologetically lumbering and dull. I really find it hard to understand how this made it anywhere, let alone a movie theater.
    9robert-temple-1

    Everything you say will be taken down and held in evidence against everyone

    This is a remarkable film about hair-raising (fictional?) abuses of the notorious eavesdropping system called 'ECHELON', which is operated by the National Security Agency (NSA) of the United States, with a major listening post in the north of England. The French title of the film is LE PROJET ÉCHELON ('The Echelon Project'), and THE LISTENING is the title of the English language DVD. Although the film is an Italian production, it was apparently shot in English (perhaps the Italians got a dubbed version in their language, as they do not seem to mind dubbing in Italy). It is the first and only feature film directed by Giacomo Martelli, and perhaps after exposing Echelon, 'he can never work again' in the international film scene? Most recently (2010-2012), he has directed an Italian TV series entitled 'ANTIMAFIA SQUAD – PALERMO TODAY'. So he is clearly not afraid to make enemies of the most dangerous people in the world, that is obvious. (For those visiting Palermo, if you wish to see the Mafia Headquarters, it is an enormous building in a low-lying and rather deserted section of the old part of town disguised by heavily sheeted scaffolding all around it so that from the outside it appears to be a derelict building, and the lights inside at night cannot be seen from the street. Indoors, there are Renaissance paintings on the walls and plenty of luxurious features, even an appallingly bad-taste restaurant of extreme high prices nearby where the girlfriends can be taken, dripping in diamonds.) This excellent film makes a full-frontal attack on the way multi-national corporations are becoming increasingly enmeshed in the security apparatus of America, as well as other states of course. Since this film came out, much more has been revealed in the media about private contractors with private armies paid for by the American taxpayers, who are unaccountable both financially and in terms of lines of command, and which have run out of control in the most alarming manner. Some of the combat duties in Iraq, for instance, were out-sourced to private companies, and that caused a scandal, but one which was quickly suppressed. There is nothing remotely implausible about the story of this film, and it may well be an under-representation of the problem. The Echelon system, which has been well known for a long time and has doubtless been superseded now by far more sophisticated systems evolved from it, monitors all worldwide telephone and other electronic communications using banks of super-computers. When key words are spotted, or key voices are recognised, the system automatically alerts the human operators. The reason the system is called 'Echelon' is that it does this in ascending steps of a hierarchy of alert. If someone mentions 'terrorist attack', that might be a level one alert triggering a more intense automated scrutiny, but if someone mentions 'terrorist attack next week', that might jump to level four, and require a human listener. The supposed justification for this monster eavesdropping system is 'protection against attack', which goes to show that paranoia is the ruling political principle these days, and any scepticism expressed about 'the terrorist threat' has now itself become 'a threat'. It's like trying to make a joke at airport check-in that you don't have a bomb in your bag: you will immediately be hauled off and interviewed for hours, so don't be tempted to have a sense of humour anymore because it has become 'politically incorrect', and there might as well be a sign on the current White House lawn which says: 'jokers will be persecuted', and even thinking of stepping on the grass has now become a hate crime. One day, when airport systems are fitted with 'thought detectors', and don't forget we are already being photographed naked by devices which see through our clothes, we will all be in danger of arrest if we think of the wrong political party when boarding a plane. It is already dangerous to suggest that a large proportion of the world's politicians might be psychopaths, since there is nothing a psychopath hates more than being identified as what he is. Psychopaths can manipulate the LIBOR rate, lie to Parliament and take a nation to war, pass a Patriot Act which no one in Congress has read, and order every conversation in the world to be listened to, and no one will do anything about it. Banks can launder billions of dollars of drug and terrorist money a year and just received a slap on the wrist when exposed. The lunatics took over the asylum so long ago that there are few people alive who are old enough to remember a sane world (if such a thing ever existed, of course). This film has a brilliant central performance by the actor Michael Parks, who plays a very low-key, aging and depressed expert who has worked for the NSA for 30 years. He is a traditionalist who believed in 'serving his country'. But when arrogant corporate toadies invade his premises with instant high security clearances and start threatening his bosses and himself and saying 'don't you know that I can have you fired?', he cracks. When he sees that they are trying to kill an innocent woman in Italy because she accidentally came across something which might threaten a $400 million deal, he goes rogue, flies to Italy to save her, and tries to expose the new system called 'Tumbleweed' and the way in which everyone in the world is threatened by psychopathic corporate people. The entire film is done in a very under-stated style, with no hyperbole, and without unnecessary and silly Bourne-style action sequences. See it and tremble. Much of it is shot in the deep snow on the top of Mont Blanc, at 11,000 feet, which does have a chase sequence over the crags. The suspense throughout is very intense. This film is really worthwhile.
    10bathshebathree

    a stunning visual trip

    I saw this beautifully shot film recently.... to be honest I was expecting to watch a good thriller, pass a couple of hours and that's about it. What I discovered was an incredibly fascinating story where, wonder of wonders, I actually felt I was learning something valuable without being preached to...

    But the biggest surprise was how moving, honest and sensitive the performances were .... and most of all - how visually stunning the film was.. I was taken on a journey through all the atmospheric 'landscapes', both literal and metaphorical.

    Great stuff! A quiet but powerful film. The Listening is undoubtedly one of the best movie surprises of 2006.
    7rasecz

    Not bad for a Hollywood-style thriller

    Those who enjoy Hollywood thrillers, a la the recent Manchurian Candidate, should not be disappointed. Refreshingly we find the US NSA and its American corporate partners in the role of bad guys. The saving grace for the American side is that the hero is a conscientious NSA staff in the role of master saboteur of a new Big Brother spying technology called Tumbleweeds that can listen to conversations even when cell phones are not in use (but ON of course). Clearly a potential concern of the moment. To some all this may appear far-fetched, even conspiratorial, but it is within the realm of the possible, especially considering the increasing collaboration of phone companies with the NSA. Would you rely on Nokia, Samsung and other phone manufacturers to protect your privacy?

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    Storyline

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    • Trivia
      Eleonora Baldwin's debut.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 22, 2009 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • The Listening
    • Filming locations
      • Elba Island, Livorno, Tuscany, Italy
    • Production companies
      • EchoFilm
      • Ammo Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • €2,870,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $362,742
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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