Tartalmak(1)

A világ forrongó részein készíti fényképeit Russell Price fotóriporter. Csak a pénz érdekli, politikával, erkölcsi kérdésekkel nem foglalkozik. Most éppen a közép-amerikai Nicaraguában dolgozik, ahol utolsó óráit éli a Somoza-féle diktatúra. Itt találkozik az elkötelezett riporternővel, akinek hatására rádöbben a sandinista forradalom lényegére, jogosságára. Kutatni kezd a fölkelők vezére, Rafael után. Interjút szeretne készíteni vele. Amikor végre találkozik vele, élete legnagyobb kihívása elé kerül. (AMC Hungary)

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Recenziók (2)

DaViD´82 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angolAnd for all the right reasons, your poets choose the wrong side.” A disillusioned insight into the underbelly of the "Third World" during the Cold War. On the one side a fascist dictator, on the other Marxist rebels, with the interests of the great powers in the background, while "wanna-be-neutral" journalists lose their illusions during a conflict that has only losers in the form of repeating history and human tragedies. Whenever it threatens to turn into sentimental agitprop or take an undisguised leftist stance (like Stone's very similar Salvador), it gets relativised and thrown into the grey zone. Raw, compelling, superbly acted and the only thing beautiful about it is Goldsmith's surprisingly dense soundtrack combining synths with South American flutes and motifs, which in logic shouldn’t work, but it does. ()

D.Moore 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol Goldsmith's soundtrack to Under Fire is one of my all-time favorites, I know it by heart, and I was very curious about the film it was written for. I was therefore quite surprised how long it took after the opening credits for the music to start playing at all... Maybe half an hour, maybe more. Until then, the plot unfolded very slowly, at length, and not much of interest happened. But then the heroes got to the town of Leon, Goldsmith finally started winning, the film picked up momentum, and the atmosphere thickened and thickened. The ending was chilling and I would say quite realistic and with an idea that is unfortunately still relevant. There are simply no real heroes. And if you think so, you can bet there would be plenty of other people who would convince you otherwise. ()

Hirdetés

Galéria (22)