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Le Pont des espions

Original title: Bridge of Spies
  • 2015
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 22m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
338K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,789
3
Le Pont des espions (2015)
Watch the latest trailer for Bridge of Spies with Tom Hanks.
Play trailer1:44
34 Videos
99+ Photos
Legal DramaLegal ThrillerPeriod DramaPolitical DramaPolitical ThrillerSpyDramaHistoryThrillerWar

During the Cold War, an American lawyer is recruited to defend an arrested Soviet spy in court, and then help the CIA facilitate an exchange of the spy for the Soviet captured American U2 sp... Read allDuring the Cold War, an American lawyer is recruited to defend an arrested Soviet spy in court, and then help the CIA facilitate an exchange of the spy for the Soviet captured American U2 spy plane pilot, Francis Gary Powers.During the Cold War, an American lawyer is recruited to defend an arrested Soviet spy in court, and then help the CIA facilitate an exchange of the spy for the Soviet captured American U2 spy plane pilot, Francis Gary Powers.

  • Director
    • Steven Spielberg
  • Writers
    • Matt Charman
    • Ethan Coen
    • Joel Coen
  • Stars
    • Tom Hanks
    • Mark Rylance
    • Alan Alda
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    338K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,789
    3
    • Director
      • Steven Spielberg
    • Writers
      • Matt Charman
      • Ethan Coen
      • Joel Coen
    • Stars
      • Tom Hanks
      • Mark Rylance
      • Alan Alda
    • 632User reviews
    • 513Critic reviews
    • 81Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 30 wins & 105 nominations total

    Videos34

    "Standing Man" Trailer
    Trailer 1:44
    "Standing Man" Trailer
    International Trailer
    Trailer 2:45
    International Trailer
    International Trailer
    Trailer 2:45
    International Trailer
    Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:43
    Trailer #1
    Bridge Of Spies: He's A Spy (French Subtitled)
    Clip 0:55
    Bridge Of Spies: He's A Spy (French Subtitled)
    Bridge Of Spies: Would It Help?
    Clip 0:33
    Bridge Of Spies: Would It Help?
    Bridge Of Spies: The Rule Book
    Clip 0:50
    Bridge Of Spies: The Rule Book

    Photos200

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    + 194
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Tom Hanks
    Tom Hanks
    • James B. Donovan
    Mark Rylance
    Mark Rylance
    • Rudolf Abel
    Alan Alda
    Alan Alda
    • Thomas Watters Jr.
    Amy Ryan
    Amy Ryan
    • Mary Donovan
    Domenick Lombardozzi
    Domenick Lombardozzi
    • Agent Blasco
    Victor Verhaeghe
    Victor Verhaeghe
    • Agent Gamber
    Mark Fichera
    Mark Fichera
    • FBI Agent
    Brian Hutchison
    Brian Hutchison
    • FBI Agent
    Joshua Harto
    Joshua Harto
    • Bates
    Henny Russell
    Henny Russell
    • Receptionist
    Rebekah Brockman
    Rebekah Brockman
    • Alison (Donovan's Secretary)
    John Rue
    John Rue
    • Lynn Goodnough
    Billy Magnussen
    Billy Magnussen
    • Doug Forrester
    Jillian Lebling
    Jillian Lebling
    • Peggy Donovan
    Noah Schnapp
    Noah Schnapp
    • Roger Donovan
    Eve Hewson
    Eve Hewson
    • Carol Donovan
    Joel Brady
    Joel Brady
    • Police Officer - Brooklyn Courthouse
    Austin Stowell
    Austin Stowell
    • Francis Gary Powers
    • Director
      • Steven Spielberg
    • Writers
      • Matt Charman
      • Ethan Coen
      • Joel Coen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews632

    7.6338.3K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'Bridge of Spies' is lauded for Tom Hanks and Mark Rylance's performances and Steven Spielberg's direction. The film is appreciated for its historical accuracy and period detail. However, some find the plot slow and dialogue-heavy, impacting its overall effectiveness. The cinematography and production design receive frequent praise. Despite mixed views on pacing and plot, it is generally seen as an engaging historical drama offering a distinct Cold War perspective.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Great Performances and Good Drama

    Bridge of Spies (2015)

    *** (out of 4)

    Attorney James Donovan (Tom Hanks) is given the thankless job of defending suspected Russian spy Rudolf Abel (Mark Rylance). Donovan accepts the job but soon finds himself defending his client a bit too good for some, which leads to him being the main negotiator between America and Russia when it comes time for a prisoner swap.

    Steven Spielberg's BRIDGE OF SPIES isn't one of the director's greatest works but it's certainly a very well-made film that manages to hold your attention throughout the rather long running time. I must admit that the trailer for the film really left me cold so I wasn't sure what to expect from the film but overall it's another good movie from the director, although the ending falls into that cringe-worthy, over-sentimental stuff that the director does quite often.

    With that said, there's no doubt that there's a highly good story being told here that grabs your attention and doesn't let it go. The screenplay by Joel & Ethan Coen and Matt Charman does a very good job at capturing the spirit of the period and even if you're not familiar with the Cold War the film does a nice job at bringing you up to speed on the various fears. Spielberg perfectly handles the material and milks it for some nice drama as well as some political points that are certainly meant to be taken into consideration on some current issues.

    Hanks, as you'd expect, turns in an excellent performance and is certainly believable in the role of the attorney who finds his life spinning out of control from not only his wife but strangers who feels he is helping a spy. Hanks is such a calm grace that it really was entertaining just seeing him negotiate. Rylance also deserves a lot of credit for the way he played this character and I really loved the laid back approach to where the character never tips his cap in regards to what and who he really is. Technically speaking the film is quite good and of high standards.

    BRIDGE OF SPIES could have been a bit tougher on the political aspects but it's goal was to aim for the mainstream and in the end it's an entertaining film.
    9bob-the-movie-man

    "And the Best Supporting Actor Oscar goes to... Mark Rylance"

    There are combinations of film makers that make you confident, as you pay your ticket price, that you are not going to be terribly disappointed: Steven Spielberg directing; Tom Hanks taking the lead; Janusz Kaminski behind the camera; Michael Kahn editing and a Coen brothers script (with Matt Charmon (Suite Française)). And Bridge of Spies doesn't disappoint, particularly for someone of my more advanced years (I was born the year following the film's climatic events) who remembers well the terror of potential nuclear catastrophe that hung over the world through the 60's and 70's.

    In a story based on true events, Hanks plays James Donovan (diverging somewhat from reality here) as an insurance lawyer dragged by his firm into defending Rudolf Abel, the accused Soviet spy played exquisitely by British stage acting legend Mark Rylance. Against this backdrop, the international blue touch paper is about to be lit by the shooting down over Russia of Gary Powers (Austin Stowell from "Whiplash") in his U-2 spy plane (sorry – "article"). Donovan becomes instrumental in unofficially negotiating on behalf of the US government the release of Powers in East Berlin. The deal is jeopardized by his boy-scout tendencies to also want to help another US captive Frederic Pryor (Will Rogers).

    I've read some negative reviews of this film in the papers that made me quite cross, describing it as "yawnsome" and "sanctimoniously dull". For me, nothing could be further from the truth and the packed Saturday night audience I saw this with seemed equally gripped from beginning to end, silent save for the odd laugh where some appropriate humor is weaved into the story.

    Tom Hanks is solid and believable as the fish-out-of-water lawyer, albeit that the role is played with a large spoonful of patriotic American sugar as Donovan trumpets about the importance of the constitution over the lynch-mob mentality of the general public. Alan Alda – great to see again on the big screen – channels his best Hawkeye-style exasperation as Donovan's boss, looking for a clean and quick conviction.

    But it is Mark Rylance – an irregular player in movies, and due to appear again in next year's "BFG" – who shines out as the acting star of the film. His salubrious and calm turn as the cornered spy just reeks of class and if he isn't nominated for a Best Supporting Actor nomination for this then there is no justice. (A special 'casting recognition award' to my wife Sue for spotting that the actress playing Judge Byer's wife – Le Clanché du Rand – was Meg Ryan's mother in Sleepless in Seattle 22 years ago!)

    The cinematography is superb with some gorgeous tracking shots and framed scenes. Most outstanding of all is the scene depicting the traumatic construction of the Berlin wall – long tracking shots in greys and blues delivering a truly breathtaking piece of cinema. In general I'd give a big shout-out to both the art department and the special effects team in making the desolation of East Berlin feel so real. It makes the similar scenes, that I commented positively on in the recent "Man from U.N.C.L.E." seem like an amateur school production.

    The special effects team also contribute in making the shooting down of the U-2 a thrilling piece of cinema.

    Music is sparingly and effectively used by Thomas Newman, and it can be no greater complement to the composer than that I was wondering until the end titles as to whether it was another Spielberg/ John Williams collaboration or not.

    A great film, one of my favorites this year. Highly recommended, especially if you are over 50. You should also get out to a cinema to see this one – it will be far more effective on the big screen than the small one.

    (Please visit http://bob-the-movie-man.com for the graphical version of this review. Thanks.)
    JohnDeSando

    Spielberg and Hanks--fry to find a better duo than that for a great film.

    "Everyone deserves a defense. Everyone matters." James B. Donovan (Tom Hanks)

    In Bridge of Spies, Steven Spielberg once again masterfully goes to the historical drama with a righteous man's theme (think Schindler and Lincoln for starters). This time lawyer James B. Donovan is asked to defend an accused Soviet spy, Rudolf Able (Mark Rylance, superb), in order to show the world the American justice system is democratic.

    The story is "inspired by true events" with the outline of the exchange of Able for U-2 downed pilot Gary Powers historically accurate. As usual, Spielberg recreates the times with the atmosphere, cars, and film noir aspect of a spy thriller in the figurative and literal Cold War. He said, "I always wanted to tell the stories that really interested me in my personal life—which are stories about things that actually happened."

    Hanks is central to Spielberg's vision of the lone hero defying the odds and supporting the highest ideals of the American Constitution and the individually virtuous man. Never does Hanks overplay the good-guy card; he's just very adept at playing an everyman not always right but always righteous.

    The dialogue is crisp, a no fooling around typical of Spielberg and Hanks but a charming bad guy as well: James Donovan: "Aren't you worried?" Rudolf Abel: "Would it help?" As producer Kristie Macosko Krieger commented about Spielberg, "He's got a childlike sense of wonder. He never gets tired of hearing stories . . . . " Bridge of Spies is vintage Spielberg with a Lincoln-like atmosphere, righteous hero, and intriguing multi-plot, an entertaining spy story brimming with humanity.

    As the director says, "This is more about very smart people in conversation with each other, and the sword of Damocles hanging over their heads is that, if they make the wrong decisions, it's the end of the world."
    8erkucz00

    An organic wonder.

    Bridge of spies is not your typical movie, it almost seems like it would be boring, except it isn't. This film is like a tree that you drive by on your way to work. Nothing special, quite ordinary; and then one day you see it from a different angle, and the way the dew glistening off of its leaves catches the sunlight, just takes your breath away.

    As I mentioned before, bridge of spies is different, it doesn't have a particularly memorable score, or poetic dialogue, every character is portrayed as a "regular guy/gal". The credit must go to the Coen brothers here. The actors lines, particularly the exchanges between Hanks' and Rylance's characters are stirring in their simplicity. The story unfolds similarly, everything sort of just happens, and at the end, it all fits together perfectly.

    Nobody knows, what makes Spielberg so great, is it his groundbreaking camera work? or perhaps his implementation of cutting edge visual effects? In my humble opinion it is his enigmatic ability to take what would likely be dull and uninteresting in the hands of any other director, and turn it into a thing of wonder. This movie plays out naturally, with moments of subtle heroism, and true human emotion, it is so very downplayed, that one simply cannot pull their eyes away. Bridge of Spies is truly an Organic Wonder.
    8nsharath009

    An unshowy Steven Spielberg does a master's job with Cold War tensions, honoring a real-life attorney's victory over fear.

    A feel-good Cold War melodrama, Bridge of Spies is an absorbing true-life espionage tale very smoothly handled by old pros who know what they're doing. In its grown-up seriousness and basis in historical conflict, Steven Spielberg's first feature since Lincoln three years ago joins the list of the director's half-dozen previous "war" films, but in its honoring of an American civilian who pulled off a smooth prisoner exchange between the East and West during a very tense period, the film generates an unmistakable nostalgia for a time when global conflict seemed more clear-cut and manageable than it does now. Spielberg's fourth collaboration with Tom Hanks, which world- premiered at the New York Film Festival and opens commercially on October 16, looks to generate stout box-office returns for Disney through the autumn season. For people of Spielberg's generation, the early years of the nuclear era and the stand-off between the United States and the Soviet Union represents a significant part of the fabric of childhood. With the passage of time, it's possible to tell stories of the time without furnishing them with overt propagandistic overlays, and for Westerners there is the added built-in appeal of the "we won" factor and the perception that dealing with adversaries was so much simpler then than it is now. As their focus in this impeccably rendered recreation of a moment in history, most palpably represented by the building of the Berlin Wall, Spielberg and screenwriters Matt Charman and Ethan and Joel Coen have chosen a sort-of Atticus Finch of the north, a principled, American Everyman insurance attorney unexpectedly paged to represent a high-level Soviet spy caught in New York. There is no question that Rudolf Abel (Mark Rylance) is guilty, but James B. Donovan (Hanks), a proper and decent family man with a professional dedication to his client and an abiding loyalty to the principles of the U.S. Constitution, has a quick and intuitive read of any legal situation and shrewdly stays at least one step ahead of the game in almost any situation.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Soviet agent Rudolf Ivanovich Abel sent and received coded messages that were hidden inside such things as hollow U.S. coins, bolts, and batteries. The FBI first became aware of Abel's activities in 1953, when Abel's incompetent junior colleague Reino Hayhanen carelessly spent a hollow nickel that ended up in the hands of a paperboy. The Brooklyn newsboy who got the nickel thought it felt too light. He dropped the nickel on the sidewalk, and it popped open, revealing a piece of microfilm with a coded message inside. After Hayhanen's blunders, Abel lost confidence in him and sent him back to the U.S.S.R., which would not have gone well for Hayhanen, who defected in 1957. He showed the FBI how to crack the code and it was Hayhanen who gave up Rudolf Abel. The "Hollow Nickel Case" was also dramatized in La police fédérale enquête (1959).
    • Goofs
      The end titles say that the Soviets never acknowledged Abel as a spy. On the contrary, Rudolf Ivanovich Abel was frequently used as an example of a very successful spy, being able to stay undetected for 8 years in the United States and maintain his silence after being captured. Western journalists were invited to attend Abel's funeral. His gravestone is marked with the KGB crest. Abel also frequently gave public speeches about the importance of intelligence work. Finally, Abel is portrayed on a series of Soviet stamps dedicated to "Soviet Intelligence officers" together with other well known agents such as Kim Philby and K.T. Molody.
    • Quotes

      James Donovan: I have a mandate to serve you. Nobody else does. Quite frankly, everybody else has an interest in sending you to the electric chair.

      Rudolf Abel: All right...

      James Donovan: You don't seem alarmed.

      Rudolf Abel: Would it help?

    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Tom Hanks/Jessica Chastain/Pentatonix (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Please Send Me Someone to Love
      Written by Percy Mayfield

      Performed by Red Garland

      Courtesy of Savoy Jazz

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    FAQ

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    • Is this film historically accurate?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 2, 2015 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • India
      • Germany
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Instagram
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Puente de espías
    • Filming locations
      • Wroclaw, Dolnoslaskie, Poland
    • Production companies
      • DreamWorks Pictures
      • Fox 2000 Pictures
      • Reliance Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $40,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $72,313,754
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $15,371,203
      • Oct 18, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $165,478,348
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 22 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
      • Datasat
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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