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Alex Rider: Stormbreaker

Original title: Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker
  • 2006
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
26K
YOUR RATING
Alex Rider: Stormbreaker (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from Weinstein Co.
Play trailer2:25
1 Video
99+ Photos
SpyActionAdventureFamilyMysteryRomanceThriller

After the death of his uncle, the 14-year-old schoolboy Alex Rider is forced by the Special Operations Division of the UK's secret intelligence service, MI6, into a mission which will save m... Read allAfter the death of his uncle, the 14-year-old schoolboy Alex Rider is forced by the Special Operations Division of the UK's secret intelligence service, MI6, into a mission which will save millions of lives.After the death of his uncle, the 14-year-old schoolboy Alex Rider is forced by the Special Operations Division of the UK's secret intelligence service, MI6, into a mission which will save millions of lives.

  • Director
    • Geoffrey Sax
  • Writer
    • Anthony Horowitz
  • Stars
    • Alex Pettyfer
    • Mickey Rourke
    • Sophie Okonedo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    26K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Geoffrey Sax
    • Writer
      • Anthony Horowitz
    • Stars
      • Alex Pettyfer
      • Mickey Rourke
      • Sophie Okonedo
    • 205User reviews
    • 67Critic reviews
    • 42Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker
    Trailer 2:25
    Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker

    Photos174

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    Alex Pettyfer
    Alex Pettyfer
    • Alex Rider
    Mickey Rourke
    Mickey Rourke
    • Darrius Sayle
    Sophie Okonedo
    Sophie Okonedo
    • Mrs. Jones
    Sarah Bolger
    Sarah Bolger
    • Sabina Pleasure
    Robbie Coltrane
    Robbie Coltrane
    • Prime Minister
    Stephen Fry
    Stephen Fry
    • Smithers
    Damian Lewis
    Damian Lewis
    • Yassen Gregorovich
    Ewan McGregor
    Ewan McGregor
    • Ian Rider
    Bill Nighy
    Bill Nighy
    • Alan Blunt
    Missi Pyle
    Missi Pyle
    • Nadia Vole
    Andy Serkis
    Andy Serkis
    • Mr. Grin
    Alicia Silverstone
    Alicia Silverstone
    • Jack Starbright
    Ashley Walters
    Ashley Walters
    • Wolf
    Alex Barrett
    • Gary
    Richard Huw
    • Teacher
    Richard James
    Richard James
    • Vicar
    Jimmy Carr
    Jimmy Carr
    • John Crawford
    Julian Bucknall
    • MI6 Man
    • Director
      • Geoffrey Sax
    • Writer
      • Anthony Horowitz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews205

    5.126.1K
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    Featured reviews

    bob the moo

    Reasonably OK "Bond for kids" but it needed to be a lot more fun to prevent it seeming silly at times

    When teenage Alex Ryder's uncle Ian dies, Alex not only loses his adult guardian but also learns how little he knew of his uncle's "boring" job. For, you see, Ian was a top British spy and very good at his job (well, apart from the last twenty seconds of it). Ian's final mission is not complete though and his employer Alan Blunt needs someone to complete the undercover operation. Realising that Ian had been grooming (sorry – "training") Alex, Blunt sends him undercover as a student computer geek into the organisation of American Darius Sayle and his mysterious and "Stormbreaker" devices.

    From the very start it is clear that this is going to try and be a James Bond film for children and this in itself was not a real problem for me. That said though I did think that some of the action was sailing very close to being silly from the outset. This continued into the plot as what is delivered is a quite unremarkable affair that serves as a way in to the character as well as a spy story that puts children at centre stage as the targets. It doesn't serve up a great deal but I suppose it did just about enough as a story to be able to hang a film round it. The action has clearly been given a limited budget but you can see they are trying to make the most of it.

    However lack of budget isn't really the problem I had with this – it was the tone. One side of the cast and crew genuinely seem to be trying to make a semi-serious spy film for kids, while the other half are convincing that it is actually a bit silly and, although not playing it for laughs, are obviously trying to have a bit of a wink at the camera and fun with the audience. Either approach might have worked and my personal preference would have been for the latter, but this mixed approach just doesn't work. It is hard to describe cause at times we have people like Nighy producing ham that would suit a slightly "cheeky" spy film, but in a scene that is delivered as dry as you like; then conversely we have some action scenes delivered "seriously" where really the silly action would have benefited from a more "fun" delivery to prevent us viewing it with serious eyes.

    I'm not sure where the failing lies but certainly a lot of it rests with director Sax for not managing to put his stamp on it and make it his own. Pettyfer is also part of the problem I'm afraid. He has the looks but it is charisma and presence where he falls down and he is unable to really get the tone of the film right. The support cast is mixed but mostly wasted. McGregor seems to enjoy playing James Bond but is only in a small part of the film. Nighy is stiff but hammy, Okonedo is crisp and quite sexy, Fry does his best Q impression, Pyle is rubbish, Carr is mercifully limited to a few seconds and Coltrane is given a poor Tony Blair joke to fluff. Lewis is hampered with a bad accent but is still a solid presence but it is Rourke that makes for a lack of villains in the film and he is too silly to buy into. Walters and Serkis are OK in small roles but god knows what Silverstone got out of it apart from a paying job and maybe a shot at being a bigger character in a sequel.

    Despite all this it is actually a reasonably OK spy film for tweenies unable to get into a "proper" film. It should have been better though and the mixed tone and lack of genuine fun is what limits it and probably means that there won't be a sequel anytime soon.
    9lyndon_gray

    Action packed fun for older children and adults

    I was at the World premiere in London and I was apprehensive about watching a film adaptation of a book as some of them work and others don't. This one definitely does. From the first minutes of the film, you know that you're in for a thrilling adventure. Alex Rider, played superbly by Alex Pettyfer, is very believable as a school kid thrown into the deep end by Bill Nighy who hams it up brilliantly as spymaster Alan Blunt. Alex Rider is a deadly weapon on two legs as you'll see as the film progresses. Marvellous Micky Rourke, plays the evil villain who keeps a very unusual and deadly pet and looks as if he's just stepped off the set of a Revlon ad (you'll see!!). There's lots of action, some love interest, but that's not overplayed and although some of the evil characters look as if they've been loaned out from Cirque Du Soleil, including Micky Rourke, they play their parts as they should be, comically but with a twist of evil thrown in. It all works very well but Alex Pettyfer is a revelation. He plays the part coolly, calmly and with a great deal of conviction. I think Sean Connery would be proud of him. The film throws in a few James Bondesque clichés and there is one scene in the film which will remind you of a particular person from Goldfinger !! All in all highly enjoyable, my 11 year old niece and 14 year old nephew and their friends really enjoyed it and I think you will too.
    4ccoosthuysen

    Someone sold their soul to get this made

    I watched this again after enjoying the series. The ensamble cast are a collection of incredibly famous and popular actors with a deep and rich talent pool. I can only assume that someone made a deal with the devil to get this made. The story has every trope and cliché you can think of. The acting is horrendous and most of the interactions make you cringe and roll your eyes so hard you could power a small English village with the static electricity generated.

    Skip this and watch the new series instead
    cosmic_quest

    Enjoyable but a bit too light-hearted

    Book adaptations rarely capture the excellence of the novel which they are based upon and though the same can be said for 'Stormbreaker', it still is a rather good film considering the fact it is mainly aimed at the pre-teen and young teen audience.

    Based on the first of Anthony Horowitz's 'Alex Rider' novels, the story is centred around orphaned fourteen-year-old Alex Rider who lives with his Uncle Ian, a man who his nephew assumes is a dull bank worker but is in fact an MI6 operative. When Ian is killed on a mission, his superiors are determined to recruit Alex to break the case. Pressured into complying, Alex is trained at an SAS-type camp before being sent undercover to discover the true intents of psychopath Darius Sayle, who is planning a nationwide release of computers he has dubbed Stormbreakers.

    In his big-screen debut as Alex Rider, sixteen-year-old Alex Pettyfer was a shade too old for the role (he was as tall as most of the adult cast, which took away the shock his role as a child thrust into danger). However, although he did have lapses where his performance turned wooden, he was quite successful in bringing the character to life, depicting Rider's determination, anger and cockiness well. It's just a shame he was no-where near as good as he proved himself to be in 'Tom Brown's Schooldays'. Mickey Rourke was great as the unhinged and vengeful Sayle, his real-life disastrous plastic surgery only enhancing his character's crazed nature. It was Pettyfer and Rourke who carried the bulk of the film but their co-stars, including Ewan McGregor, Sophie Okonedo, Robbie Coltrane and Stephen Fry, made their presence known despite having minor roles.

    The fight and action scenes were nicely performed and depicted a suitably odd feel by conveying the fact it is a boy in the heat of the battle. I also enjoyed the homages to James Bond such as how the main credits at the start exploded onto the screen and how Mr. Smithers nicely complimented Bond's Q. And it was also change for the better to meet Ian Rider as he is already dead in the beginning of the novel so we never really get a feel of what his character might have been like (although we could have done without the stereotypical busy father-figure/neglected child scenes).

    However, there were numerous low points in the film. I love Bill Nighy and he did give a good performance as MI6 boss Mr Blunt but the character just didn't come across right. He was too slapstick to properly depict the cold edge to Mr Blunt, a man who doesn't think twice about sending a child into the line of fire. The change to the character of Jack Starbright was also annoying. She isn't meant to be a karate expert nor does she ever become directly involved in Alex's missions so there was absolutely no need for the fight scene. It was quite irking to see the script was poorly handled in terms of keeping Alex's role a secret. Instead of both MI6 and Alex himself taking great care to ensure no-one ever learns of his part in bringing down Sayle, he's all over the news in the film and even his little girlfriend knows the truth. It ruined the idea that if recruiting Alex as a child spy became public, it would be humiliating for MI6 and disrupt whatever chance of normality Alex tries to harbour for himself.

    For a first outing though, 'Stormbreaker' was enjoyable and would probably please young members of the family as well as parents dragged along. However, the unnecessary humorous touches to the film will very likely leave many older teens and twenty-somethings wanting a bit more 'meat'. Hopefully when they adapt 'Point Blanc', the darker edge that makes the novels so addictive is retained.
    6anthonyjlangford

    A Novelist does not a screenwriter make

    Stormbreaker is the first film from Anthony Howowitz's successful Alex Rider novel series for Young Adults, think Cody Banks, Johnny English and James Bond.       

    It's a spy film for teens and kids and though it's well crafted, we've seen it all before. There has been a lot of criticism leveled at this film, which this reviewer believes is a little harsh. There are some fine performances, including the lead, Alex Pettyfey who was chosen over five hundred others. Alicia Silverstone, Stephen Fry and Mickey Rourke also do an adequate job, but it's the veteran Bill Nighy who turns in the most entertaining role as Alex's boss.          

    Someone close to Alex is more than he seems. Now that torch has been passed to Alex, whether he is really ready for it or not.     

    There are several twists and turns as well as some impressive action scenes, but a lot of it is stagy and a little contrived, particularly the character of Nadia Vole who is just plain silly.     

    There is little suspense and much is predictable. It really doesn't differ enough from similar teen fair which is a shame as Howowitz's books predate the other films it so closely resembles. However he wrote the script himself and only has himself to blame. I would have liked to see the series develop, however with only half of its 40 million dollar budget recouped in its worldwide theatrical release, it appears unlikely. Its DVD life will determine its ultimate future.     

    However there's enough for kids to enjoy and that's really who it's aimed at.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Because Alex Pettyfer was only fifteen years old at the time of the film, he could not drive, so the scripted car chase was changed to a horse chase.
    • Goofs
      When Alex gets his gadgets, he is told that a particular cartridge is a bug finder, but in his bedroom, he puts in the cartridge that is a communication device.
    • Quotes

      [Darrius Sayle is on a large TV screen in the MI6 Headquarters, giving an interview to the BBC]

      Alan Blunt: [pauses the video and stands up] We don't trust him.

      Alex Rider: Why not?

      Alan Blunt: Well, we don't trust anyone. It's sort of what we do.

    • Connections
      Featured in Richard & Judy: Episode dated 19 July 2006 (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      I Predict a Riot
      Written by Nick Hodgson, Ricky Wilson, Simon Rix, Nick Baines and Andrew White

      Performed by the Kaiser Chiefs

      Published by Rondor Music London Ltd.

      Courtesy of Polydor Ltd. (UK)

      Under license from Universal Music Operations Ltd.

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    FAQ

    • How long is Stormbreaker?
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 25, 2006 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Germany
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Stormbreaker
    • Filming locations
      • Island Studios, Isle of Man(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Samuelson Productions
      • Isle of Man Film
      • The Weinstein Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £40,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $677,646
    • Gross worldwide
      • $23,937,870
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 33 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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