Lorsqu'une jeune escorte est retrouvée morte dans les bureaux d'une société japonaise à Los Angeles, les inspecteurs Web Smith et John Connor assurent la liaison entre les dirigeants de la s... Tout lireLorsqu'une jeune escorte est retrouvée morte dans les bureaux d'une société japonaise à Los Angeles, les inspecteurs Web Smith et John Connor assurent la liaison entre les dirigeants de la société et le policier chargé de l'enquête, Tom Graham.Lorsqu'une jeune escorte est retrouvée morte dans les bureaux d'une société japonaise à Los Angeles, les inspecteurs Web Smith et John Connor assurent la liaison entre les dirigeants de la société et le policier chargé de l'enquête, Tom Graham.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMichael Crichton wrote the part of Connor with Sir Sean Connery in mind. Indeed, the very name "John Connor" is an Anglicization of "Sean Connery".
- GaffesSenator Morton receives a color fax on a machine far too simple a model to accept one.
- Citations
John Connor: The Japanese have a saying, "Fix the problem, not the blame." Find out what's fucked up and fix it. Nobody gets blamed. We're always after who fucked up. Their way is better.
- Générique farfeluThere is a credit in Rising Sun thanking "The MIT Leg Lab" and "Marc Raibert and his Running Team." This refers to a short scene where the two detectives go out to a fancy-looking research lab (really a water treatment plant; also used as the set for Starfleet Academy on the TV series "Star Trek - The Next Generation). In the background of some of the shots there are two legged robots: one hopping in a circle in a tea-house; the other bouncing up a garden path. These robots are actually academic research projects from the MIT AI Lab's Legged Locomotion Lab. They really do hop about and maintain their balance. Power comes from off-board hydraulic pumps (hence the guy in the background (me!) pulling hoses for the robot), and body attitude is sensed with gyroscopes. A human with a joystick tells the robot what direction to go, and the control algorithms (which are the real subject of Leg Lab research) maintain speed, direction, and balance. However, the robots aren't designed for special effects. They're always being modified, and they tend to break down frequently. This made shooting in the hot july sun of the San Fernando Valley a real nightmare, with transputers crashing in the heat, stuck gyros, and hydraulic leaks. Three grad students and a professor worked steadily for about a month before Hollywood, and then five days on the set and on location to get the robots in about 15 seconds of film. The credits are: Marc Raibert (our prof), and Charles Francois, Rob Playter and Lee Campbell (me) who are students. We three students appear in the film in white lab coats acting like Robot Scientists!!
Rising Sun is one of these latter-day Sean Connery movies. Here he's trying to bridge the cultural gap between the Japanese and Americans in a murder mystery. And as usual, he's way better than the movie itself. Connery is smooth and natural and completely believable as a guy who understands the Japanese language and culture. Also in the plus column belong Harvey Keitel and Wesley Snipes.
But goodness the drop-off from there is enormous. The supporting cast would be hard-pressed to hold up their end of an L.A. Law episode. Ray Wise is esp terrible. As for the Asian actors, well, at least they were able to pick up a nice Hollywood paycheque. Kurosawa this isn't. More like an extra-long episode of Magnum, P.I.
The plot is a mess. It might have seemed interesting to hang a plot on a Japanese corporation's takeover of an American tech firm, but that seems laughably old-fashioned these days.
Connery and Snipes, as far as I can tell, put in about 3 weeks of detective work in one 24-hour stretch. As for the ultimate perp, phhhht, you'd have to be pretty dense not to see that coming.
The fight scene near the end was a nice touch. Pointless, but fun.
And then it keeps going. Like Kaufmann shot a million feet of film and couldn't bring himself to cut any of it.
- ArtVandelayImporterExporter
- 27 nov. 2020
- Lien permanent
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- How long is Rising Sun?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 35 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 63 179 523 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 15 195 941 $ US
- 1 août 1993
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 107 198 790 $ US
- Durée2 heures 5 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1