Le plus grand assassin au monde Duncan Vizla est sur le point de prendre sa retraite quand son ancien boss envoie un jeune groupe de tueurs sans pitié à sa poursuite.Le plus grand assassin au monde Duncan Vizla est sur le point de prendre sa retraite quand son ancien boss envoie un jeune groupe de tueurs sans pitié à sa poursuite.Le plus grand assassin au monde Duncan Vizla est sur le point de prendre sa retraite quand son ancien boss envoie un jeune groupe de tueurs sans pitié à sa poursuite.
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
Lovina
- Junkie Jane
- (as Lovina Yavari)
Stasia Caz
- Evalina
- (as Anastasia Marinina)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe neighbor's cabin is also the same one from the final season of Hannibal (2013).
- GaffesVivian says "He's currently staking out in Belarus, Russia", to Duncan while discussing business at the restaurant. Belarus and Russia are two separate countries.
- Citations
Duncan Vizla: Try not to be scared.
- Crédits fousThe end credits roll from top-to-bottom instead of the more widely used bottom-to-top
- Bandes originalesSeptember
Performed by Earth Wind & Fire (as Earth, Wind & Fire)
Written by Al McKay, Maurice White, Allee Willis
(c) Steel Chest Music/EMI Blackwood Music Inc./EMI April Music/Irving Music, Inc.
Courtesy of EMI Music Publishing Germany GmbH/Rondor Musikverlag GmbH
(p) 1978 Sony BMG Music Entertainment
Courtesy of Sony Music Entertainment Germany GmbH
Commentaire à la une
A good action movie is like a classic meat-and-potatoes meal; standard fare that although might be seasoned differently is both filling and unsurprising. Occasionally a genre-breaking film will surprise everyone and pop open a bottle of Malbec to serve with a little filet mignon. Usually? The plot, situation, even the action itself, is as recycled as a hot dog washed down with a Coors Light. Forgettable. Ordinary. Monotonous. Then there is Polar.
The film is Irish-carbomb crazy; chopped meat that's charbroiled yet still pink-on-the-inside, along with plenty of extra cheese.
The film's plot is insanely generic. Older hitman seeks retirement but his boss won't let him go. In fact, said boss, a maniacal Matt Lucas who was given free reign of Elton John's wardrobe circa 1987, would much rather see Duncan (Mads Mikklesen) dead than pay him his owed bank. A squad of diverse goons head out in hopes of retiring Duncan in cleverly ridiculous ways only to discover - shock - that old Duncan is more wily than initially estimated. Silliness ensues.
The slick camera-work and kinetic editing is an over-the-top, ADD-infused assault. Think Tony Scott helming John Wick. Adapted from a Dark Horse graphic novel and directed by Jonas Åkerlund, Polar looks like a full-length Rammstein music video, albeit scored by Deadmau5, and comes complete with Instagram-worthy title cards.
The film is soaked with annoying characters, absurd situations (Richard Dreyfuss on karaoke, anyone?), and a devilish weapon-fetish. Duncan, however, hi-jacks the film with his heart of plated gold, a desire for a pet, and the smooth handling of an axe.
Every plot point was slashed to bits with a dull sword. Betrayals were telegraphed as subtlety as a missile strike. And the ending was as secure as an A-Team mission. Through all that, Polar is deep-fried fun that makes an otherwise-forgettable Tuesday night slightly more memorable.
If only there were an explanation of the film's title...
The film is Irish-carbomb crazy; chopped meat that's charbroiled yet still pink-on-the-inside, along with plenty of extra cheese.
The film's plot is insanely generic. Older hitman seeks retirement but his boss won't let him go. In fact, said boss, a maniacal Matt Lucas who was given free reign of Elton John's wardrobe circa 1987, would much rather see Duncan (Mads Mikklesen) dead than pay him his owed bank. A squad of diverse goons head out in hopes of retiring Duncan in cleverly ridiculous ways only to discover - shock - that old Duncan is more wily than initially estimated. Silliness ensues.
The slick camera-work and kinetic editing is an over-the-top, ADD-infused assault. Think Tony Scott helming John Wick. Adapted from a Dark Horse graphic novel and directed by Jonas Åkerlund, Polar looks like a full-length Rammstein music video, albeit scored by Deadmau5, and comes complete with Instagram-worthy title cards.
The film is soaked with annoying characters, absurd situations (Richard Dreyfuss on karaoke, anyone?), and a devilish weapon-fetish. Duncan, however, hi-jacks the film with his heart of plated gold, a desire for a pet, and the smooth handling of an axe.
Every plot point was slashed to bits with a dull sword. Betrayals were telegraphed as subtlety as a missile strike. And the ending was as secure as an A-Team mission. Through all that, Polar is deep-fried fun that makes an otherwise-forgettable Tuesday night slightly more memorable.
If only there were an explanation of the film's title...
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Polar: Sát Thủ Tái Xuất
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 58 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.00 : 1
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