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Aos 60 anos, Robert Miller é dono de uma das maiores fortunas dos EUA. Apesar de um longo e estável casamento com Ellen, o seu grande orgulho é a filha Brooke, cuja inteligência e capacidade de trabalho faz prever uma carreira de sucesso na gestão do património da família. Porém, o que ninguém imagina é que ele está à beira do colapso e que tem preparada uma última jogada financeira que poderá, ou não, salvar o seu império. Numa viagem de carro com Julie Côte, a sua amante, Miller adormece e tem um acidente. Ao perceber que Julie não sobreviveu e que a situação ficou fora do seu controlo, entra em pânico e foge. A partir daquele momento, o magnata vê-se envolvido numa espiral de mentiras e contradições. E, ao mesmo tempo que tenta não ser implicado na morte da amante por Michael Bryer, um detective que teima em investigar o acidente, vai ter de lidar com algumas descobertas muito comprometedoras feitas pela própria filha. (RTP)

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Críticas (4)

POMO 

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português Concebido como um filme do género thriller, suscitando a expectativa de um surpreendente ou super inteligente desenlace. No entanto, isto não acontece, e o filme baseia-se numa ideia noirista (ao estilo dos «filmes de arte» europeus ou dos filmes americanos vencedores de Óscares), que só ligeiramente toca em termos de profundidade. No entanto, a experiência continua a ser grande, uma vez que a atenção e curiosidade do espetador é mantida desde o primeiro ao último minuto. O estreante Nicholas Jarecki recebeu o orçamento e os melhores atores para entregar um argumento de qualidade. Richard Gere apresenta aqui talvez o melhor desempenho de atuação da sua carreira. ()

kaylin 

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inglês Richard Gere is no longer the wealthy man who once chooses the right prostitute and turns her into a princess. It seems that the times of romantic comedies have ended, and it must be said that "Pretty Woman" will be hard to surpass. In recent years, he has been more focused on thrillers and it must be said that he is quite good at it. He is simply a good actor. True, he may not gain as much popularity as Liam Neeson, but similar roles suit him well. He can put on the right expression to embody the role of a worthy father figure or a proper scoundrel who manipulates people around him without their knowledge. Robert Miller is a very wealthy man who owns an extensive company and has set himself up for a comfortable retirement. Robert Miller is a man who has a loving wife and daughter and seems to live a happy life. But of course, everything is different. His company is having problems and he will likely get involved in them because of some fraud. But that's not all. Miller may have a happy family, but it doesn't stop him from having a mistress. But what happens when the mistress dies in a car accident he caused? Will he run away or confess to the police? Miller doesn't choose the easiest path and gets deeper and deeper into a whirlwind that he is sitting on but no longer controls. Everything spins around him and he makes desperate decisions that theoretically should lead to redemption, but it doesn't happen. Susan Sarandon and Tim Roth excellently support Gere, with Roth being one of the most underrated actors, including in his roles. "Arbitrage" is not a bad film, it has its gradation, but perhaps the ending is too symbolic. More: http://www.filmovy-denik.cz/2012/11/arbitrage-interview-male-deti-neznamy.html ()

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Othello 

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inglês If it weren't for the cast, this thing would never have seen the light of day, because this overwrought crime-corporate drama without a single instantly dramatic scene just isn't worth anyone's time. Thank goodness, though, for the acting crisis of Gere, who realized that if he's doomed to romantic soft-light zoophilia (see Hachikō) at the end of his career, he'll quite possibly have something like "Uhh... Somebody" and thus combed through both of the scripts sent to him over the last five years to find the one in which he could scream more, i.e. give a performance. By which he meant pulling back from the nursing home Susan Sarandon, with whom in one scene I was begging God for mercy so her boob wouldn't fall out, and Tim Roth, who overacts like he's a five-year-old somebody stuck in front of a camera. As a result, some guy named Jarecki was given 12 million to adapt his actually good script, which manages to weave several storylines together in an almost textbook way, with no random situations and with characters acting logically and pragmatically. He puts his own grist to the mill from his position as director in the form of portraying a sick, alienated world from the fortieth floor up, with many scenes introducing a cold static shot of structures (but not a classic building -> i.e. this scene will take place inside) and ending with extreme long shots on the character. Another unique thing is the perception of the protagonist, who even though he's a bastard to look at him, the level of jobs he takes necessarily builds viewer empathy. The reason is that there isn’t really any specific main villain here, just the environment in which the protagonist has spent his entire life. ()

DaViD´82 

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inglês Save the Tiger 2012. When the wheels of justice begin turning even against an arch-asshole who, after years at the top, finds his personal and professional life starts falling apart (with nobody else to blame but himself), it’s hard not to root for him despite everything he stood for before. An intelligent thriller that shows the true face behind the American smile. In marriage, in unfaithfulness, in business, in friendship, while bluffing, while cheating, while threatening, while submitting evidence... Simply in all possible situations. At least, this applies in this pleasant blast from the nineties (in terms of style, themes and even casting) which would have been more than equal to others in this genre even back then. P.S.: In fact, I think the frequently criticized ending is absolutely perfect and also the only ending possible; it’s clever, ties up all loose ends, while being ingeniously open, leaving sufficient room for viewer fantasy. ()

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