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IMDbPro

L'enquête - The international

Original title: The International
  • 2009
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
103K
YOUR RATING
Clive Owen and Naomi Watts in L'enquête - The international (2009)
Interpol Agent Louis Salinger (Clive Owen) and Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Eleanor Whitman (Naomi Watts) pool their resources in an attempt to break up an international arms dealing ring financed by a high-profile bank.
Play trailer1:36
15 Videos
81 Photos
SpyActionCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

An Interpol agent attempts to expose a high-profile financial institution's role in an international arms dealing ring.An Interpol agent attempts to expose a high-profile financial institution's role in an international arms dealing ring.An Interpol agent attempts to expose a high-profile financial institution's role in an international arms dealing ring.

  • Director
    • Tom Tykwer
  • Writer
    • Eric Warren Singer
  • Stars
    • Clive Owen
    • Naomi Watts
    • Armin Mueller-Stahl
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    103K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tom Tykwer
    • Writer
      • Eric Warren Singer
    • Stars
      • Clive Owen
      • Naomi Watts
      • Armin Mueller-Stahl
    • 252User reviews
    • 243Critic reviews
    • 52Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos15

    The International: Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:36
    The International: Trailer #1
    The International - First 5 minutes
    Clip 5:27
    The International - First 5 minutes
    The International - First 5 minutes
    Clip 5:27
    The International - First 5 minutes
    The International
    Clip 1:32
    The International
    The International
    Clip 1:18
    The International
    The International
    Clip 1:14
    The International
    The International
    Clip 1:34
    The International

    Photos81

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    Top cast90

    Edit
    Clive Owen
    Clive Owen
    • Louis Salinger
    Naomi Watts
    Naomi Watts
    • Eleanor Whitman
    Armin Mueller-Stahl
    Armin Mueller-Stahl
    • Wilhelm Wexler
    Ulrich Thomsen
    Ulrich Thomsen
    • Jonas Skarssen
    Brían F. O'Byrne
    Brían F. O'Byrne
    • The Consultant
    Michel Voletti
    Michel Voletti
    • Viktor Haas
    Patrick Baladi
    Patrick Baladi
    • Martin White
    Jay Villiers
    Jay Villiers
    • Francis Ehames
    Fabrice Scott
    Fabrice Scott
    • Nicolai Yeshinski
    Haluk Bilginer
    Haluk Bilginer
    • Ahmet Sunay
    Luca Barbareschi
    Luca Barbareschi
    • Umberto Calvini
    • (as Luca Giorgio Barbareschi)
    Alessandro Fabrizi
    Alessandro Fabrizi
    • Inspector Alberto Cerutti
    Felix Solis
    Felix Solis
    • Detective Iggy Ornelas
    Jack McGee
    Jack McGee
    • Detective Bernie Ward
    Nilaja Sun
    Nilaja Sun
    • Detective Gloria Hubbard
    Steven Randazzo
    Steven Randazzo
    • Al Moody
    Tibor Feldman
    Tibor Feldman
    • Dr. Isaacson
    James Rebhorn
    James Rebhorn
    • New York D.A.
    • Director
      • Tom Tykwer
    • Writer
      • Eric Warren Singer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews252

    6.5102.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7secondtake

    Conventional for Tykwer means still among the best of this formulaic type of corporate espionage flick

    The International (2009)

    We can't expect every Tom Tykwer film to be as inventive or intense as Run Lola Run or The Princess and the Warrior, and The International feels almost like a breather, an intentional turn at a conventional film. It's an espionage and high stakes international drama with guns and deceit and a pair of very distinctly good good guys played by Clive Owen (brilliantly) and Naomi Watts (unconvincingly...probably just miscast). And overall it's completely enjoyable and slick, well paced, and beautifully filmed, of course.

    The plot is one of those sprawling, behind-the-scenes conspiracy, third world, big money scenarios that must have shades of truth, or lots of truth, but gets simplified into a handful of bad guys and a parade of exotic locales (including the inevitable Third World warlord who is an intelligent and willing pawn in the whole game). What I mean is, the plot almost doesn't matter in the details, though it's interesting, and makes you think and worry a little about the world we live in. It's more how the heroes unfold the facts of the plot, against the odds, the clock ticking, that make the movie good. If you liked the Bourne movies (which are as a whole probably faster and more edgy) or Syriana (which is actually kind of similar in feel overall, Clooney substituted for Owen), this will really suit you.

    And there is a Tykwer twist now and then, a camera with unusual fluidity, or a scene that gets replayed and rethought. Of course, the hugely complicated shootout in the Guggenheim is a masterpiece of excessive and brilliant kinetic filming. For an amazing short video on the building of the sets for this shoot (yes, it wasn't at the real Gug), go to www.firstshowing.net and type guggenheim tykwer.

    In all? The best of it is worth the worst of it. A tightly made and not overly preposterous dip into a well stocked pond.
    7claudio_carvalho

    Surprisingly Effective Blockbuster Thriller

    The Interpol Agent Louis Salinger (Clive Owen) and his partner are investigating the International Bank of Business and Credit (IBBC) in a joint operation with the District Attorney Eleanor Whitman (Naomi Watts) from Manhattan in a two hundred million dollars illegal business of weapons trading. They schedule a meeting with an insider informer from IBBC at the Central Station in Berlin; however his partner is mysteriously killed after the encounter. Salinger finds the identity of the informer when he sees that the Vice President of Acquisitions André Clement (Georges Bigot) had died in a car accident. Salinger and Whitman head to Milan where they meet the politician Umberto Calvini (Luca Giorgio Barbareschi), who is great manufacturer of arms, and he explains that IBBC is interested in buying the missile guiding system that he produces in his factory. When Calvini is murdered by a sniper in a political rally, Salinger and Whitman head to New York following the killer and later to Istanbul, and disclose a scheme of arms supply and destabilization of governments to make their nations slaves of debt. Further, the bank is protected by legal systems and only if Salinger crosses the line he might bring some justice to the corrupt system.

    "The International" is a surprisingly effective blockbuster thriller. I had lower expectations with this movie, but I really liked it. The complex story of corruption and greedy has flaws, but holds the attention of the viewer until the last scene. The way Louis Salinger easily travels to many countries is strange, since we simple mortals need documentation, money, reservations, connections in the airports, but his character has no problem even when he is chased by the police. In Guggenheim, the always effective police force of the movies takes a long time to come to the place and arrives only after the shooting. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "Trama International" ("International Plot")
    7lee_eisenberg

    our world sucks

    In recent times, the major news in the world has consisted of war and banking scandals. While "The International" is mostly an action flick, it does focus on these topics. Like "Syriana" and "Michael Clayton", the movie portrays a world of vile people, although this one has characters whom it's easier to define as protagonists.

    The movie's plot is that two agents (Clive Owen and Naomi Watts) investigate a major bank's role in arms trading. In a quest that takes them to places as far apart as New York and Luxembourg* and even Turkey, these two do everything to look into the bizarre conspiracy...not without interference. But the overall point is that pretty much everyone in these sorts of affairs is, for lack of a better word, bad. And it's a true representation of what we've seen in the world during the past few years.

    All in all, this movie was no worse than I expected, no better than I expected. Worth seeing maybe once. Directed by Tom Tykwer ("Run Lola Run") and also starring Armin Mueller-Stahl.

    *We don't often see Luxembourg in movies. Or hear about it at all.
    6C-Younkin

    Exquisitely shot but problematic

    "The International" is about an evil bank and begs the question; do these fricken things come in any other way? It's a fairly interesting story that got a major boost from current events last September once we learned that banks actually do have shadier dealings than expected. Only the ironic part now is will people be willing or even able to pay to see this movie. My recommendation would be wait for the DVD. Director Tim Tykwer ("Run Lola Run") does a decent directing job and for a while "The International" crackles with suspense but soon the interesting idea posed by the script, by Eric Singer, just fizzles out.

    Clive Owen plays Louis Salinger, an Interpol agent whose been trailing the business practices of one of the biggest banks in the world, the IBBC, for what seems like years. Just when he manages to find witnesses, they either end up dead or manipulated into silence. He teams up with Manhattan District Attorney Eleanor Whitman (Naomi Watts) to bring the bank to justice but she's getting added pressure to shut this whole investigation down because the two are coming up with next to no evidence. The bank's trail of money, used for everything from arms deals to murder, sends Salinger and Whitman globe-trotting from Berlin to Milan to New York to Istanbul but one dead end could shut the case down for good.

    I'm usually not very cognizant of camera shots so the fact that i'm saying Tykwer really makes you think about perfect camera movement and angles really says a lot for what he does here. Not only does he start the suspense up early with strong verbal encounters/hard stares between characters but the way he frames and pans along the beautiful design of places like the Guggenheim Museum and the IBBC headquarters or the ancient buildings, narrow, bustling streets, and rooftops of Instanbul is fantastic. Nearly every scene has a lively visual quality. His one mistake actually comes with the movie's one big action sequence. It's a bloody shootout inside the Guggenheim but it just seems messy and hard to make out, a Paul Greengrass imitation without the exciting energy of a "Bourne" movie.

    The screenplay by Singer is more than partly to blame. His story starts out well, catching our attention with the bank's deceptive and shady practices and building up a healthy dose of paranoia as well. The problem is the screenplay then lets itself off far too easily. Instead of focusing on how the bank creates slaves-to-debt and how the whole process works, the movie just vaguely and complicatedly brushes over those issues in favor of lazy, generic plotting. Salinger and Whitman soon find that their best option is pinning a murder on IBBC, just you would think a major bank could do better than hiring such an easily track-able killer. And where the movie really goes wrong is the conclusion, which doesn't go into how the bank is actually taken down as much as it just satisfies the audience's need for bloodlust. You can tell that no one knew how to end this thing.

    Casting Clive Owen is a good idea. He brings a determined, serious demeanor to Salinger though with the type of roles he has played recently, you wonder why this guy turned down James Bond. He seems like a natural for it. The rest of the cast struggles with poor character development. Naomi Watts gets a role so useless that it could have easily been played by my grandma. Armin Mueller Stahl shows up as a former communist whose lost his way and now works with the bank as a consultant or something. He gets one well written scene, going man-o-e-man-o with Owen but otherwise not that many impressions are made by the cast. Unfortunately for the movie, try as Tykwer and Owen might, it also fails to make much of an impression as well.
    tedg

    Circularity

    A life in film is a wonderful thing, in part because of the people you come to know intimately.

    You learn how certain filmmakers twist ideas. How their imagination is shaped. Sometimes it is beautiful. Sometimes it stays beautiful and by not changing loses its luster. Then you have guys like Tykwer. He develops. He tries new moves. He thinks deeply about film. He's the guy who reimagined "Rashomon." He's the fellow who stood with Cate Blanchett looking as Kieslowski with a Kieslowski script by God!

    He made a film based on sight as smell, and recently one on cinematic sight through blindness.

    Now he makes an action movie with, guess what? No sex, no car chase, no fight on the top of a train, no gasoline explosions. And he doesn't rely on that newspaper notion of "a thinking man's thriller," because he deliberately makes the template so ordinary it fades from view. It hardly matters that there is a bank involved. Its all about that vanilla bugaboo, the conspiracy that compromises the authorities and (usually) involves arms. Really, the story disappears.

    What we are left with is an amazing use of context. I've seen James Bond, Jason Bourne and Laura Croft traipse through famous cities, but their beings are never affected. Tykwer, I surmise, saw this as an opportunity to do a Kieslowski with cities instead of rooms. Look at what he does, its an entirely environmental film. Its not quite enough, but if you are there already, its sublime.

    What else? Well, test audiences did not get it, so there was a scene replaced, the one in the Guggenheim. If you have ever been in that building it is remarkable. Its a failure, an intrusive imposition. You can see where Frank knew that corners were bad, but he so mismanages the eye that you retreat into the art, or try too. Its an amazing, disturbing experience. Tykwer exploits the very things about this space that make it so unnerving.

    He pretty much gleefully trashes it. This one scene, added after the movie was finished, makes the whole adventure worthwhile.

    If you know architectural cinema, you'll know it was invented by Welles and depends on planes and corners. These are absent here. We have a new method, a new eye.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      An explosive shootout scene is set inside New York's famous Guggenheim Museum. The production team used the Guggenheim's original blueprints to build a full-size replica of its interior in an abandoned locomotive warehouse. Construction took four months.
    • Goofs
      When Salinger and Karssen meet on the Grand Bazaar rooftop in Istanbul, both characters are backlit, even though they are facing each other. (According to the DVD commentary, the director wanted both to be lit by a dramatic back light. The scene was filmed twice, once in the morning and once in the evening. After cutting between the two shoots, the sun is behind both actors in the scene.)
    • Quotes

      Wilhelm Wexler: Sometimes a man can meet his destiny on the road he took to avoid it.

    • Crazy credits
      During the credits fade-in on the second and third newspaper printed articles, look above the main story of focus and you will see articles that reference a company by the name of SuckleOil, which is most likely a nod to Producer Richard Suckle.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: He's Just Not That Into You/Confessions of a Shopaholic/The International/Two Lovers/Friday the 13th (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Strange Brew
      Written by Eric Clapton, Gail Collins and Felix Pappalardi

      Performed by Cream

      Courtesy of Universal International Music B.V.

      Under license from Universal Music Enterprises

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    • Who or what is the International?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 11, 2009 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Germany
      • United Kingdom
      • France
      • Turkey
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Sony Pictures (United States)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
      • French
      • Danish
    • Also known as
      • Agente internacional
    • Filming locations
      • Autostadt, Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony, Germany(Calvini's headquarters)
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Relativity Media
      • Atlas Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $50,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $25,450,527
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $9,331,739
      • Feb 15, 2009
    • Gross worldwide
      • $60,253,843
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 58m(118 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.40 : 1

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