Un trafiquant de drogue devient de plus en plus désespéré après qu'un accord raté le laisse avec une dette importante envers un baron de la drogue impitoyable.Un trafiquant de drogue devient de plus en plus désespéré après qu'un accord raté le laisse avec une dette importante envers un baron de la drogue impitoyable.Un trafiquant de drogue devient de plus en plus désespéré après qu'un accord raté le laisse avec une dette importante envers un baron de la drogue impitoyable.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
- Branko
- (as Vanja Bajicic)
- Brian
- (as Jang Go Star)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn a famous TV interview with Nicolas Winding Refn and Kim Bodnia, a reporter asked about research to make the film so realistic, the one thing the Winding Refn and Bodnia had asked them not to ask about. The interview thus became very awkward. The interview appears on some DVDs.
- GaffesWhen Frank and Tony are in Frank's car, they pass a crossing just before Frank's phone rings. 20 seconds later, when Frank finishes his phone call, they turn right, at the same crossing they just passed.
- Citations
Tonny: I once ejaculated a girl in the face, and she wanted me to piss it off.
Frank: Wait a minute, wait a minute. You ejaculated a girl in the face, and she wanted you to piss it off?
Tonny: Yeah.
Frank: [laughing] Pervert! That's fucking sick!
Tonny: It is not?
Frank: It's fucking sick, man. Who was she?
Tonny: Your mother.
- Générique farfeluTil min onkel Peter Refn
- ConnexionsFeatured in On the Edge: Making 'Pusher' (2000)
- Bandes originalesPusher Theme
by The Prisoner Feat. Thomas Risell
A genuinely original and completely fresh take on the gangster genre by first time Danish director Nicolas Winding Refn, giving us an insight in the live of Frankie, a lowlife Copenhagen drug-pusher. The film follows his day-to-day pusher-routine during a crucial week in his life but in this particular week things go wrong, as he sets up a heroine deal with a former mate of him, that goes completely bust because the police was informed. He is arrested but is released soon. Problem is, he lost the drugs AND a lot of money and now owes big time to one of the most dangerous criminals in town, a Balkan low-life Yugoslav mafia type, named Milo. Now he desperately tries to find money to repay him in what is very likely to be the last week of his life.
There must have been some buzz about this movie when it came out in 1996, but it completely passed me by. Luckily I managed to catch up at the 2006 International Film Festival Rotterdam when hordes of people were attending a screening of the complete Pusher-trilogy ( a bit too much for me at the time, it was sold out anyway). At the same time, Nicolas Winding Refn, was giving an intriguing interview for quite a huge crowd. He had a very dry sense of humor and a scene from MEAN STREETS by Martin Scorsese was shown as his main inspiration for this film, so it stuck with me and I simply had to see it for myself.
A tense, exciting storyline, executed in a raw almost documentary-like fashion with a hand-held camera, this film grabs you by the collar and never lets go once it's gets going. Not for the squeamish though, as the sometimes very violent and intense confrontations come very unexpected. Kim Bodnia, who was equally outstanding in NATTEVAGTEN (1994) is exceptionally good. His character, Frank, doesn't invoke much sympathy, but somehow he manages to make his character very much alive and even touching at times. The rest of the cast is equally good with some truly extraordinary performances.
Camera Obscura --- 9/10
- Camera-Obscura
- 14 juin 2006
- Lien permanent
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Pusher?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 6 000 000 DKK (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 1 605 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 1 792 $ US
- 20 août 2006
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 1 605 $ US
- Durée1 heure 50 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1