The International

2009

Action / Crime / Drama / Mystery / Thriller

218
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten58%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled37%
IMDb Rating6.51095856

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Plot summary


Uploaded by: OTTO

Director

Top cast

Naomi Watts Photo
Naomi Watts as Eleanor Whitman
Ben Whishaw Photo
Ben Whishaw as Rene Antall
Clive Owen Photo
Clive Owen as Louis Salinger
Felix Solis Photo
Felix Solis as Detective Iggy Ornelas
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
866.28 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 58 min
P/S 2 / 6
1.84 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 58 min
P/S 1 / 14

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by secondtake7 / 10

Conventional for Tykwer means still among the best of this formulaic type of corporate espionage flick

The International (2009)

We can't expect every Tom Tykwer film to be as inventive or intense as Run Lola Run or The Princess and the Warrior, and The International feels almost like a breather, an intentional turn at a conventional film. It's an espionage and high stakes international drama with guns and deceit and a pair of very distinctly good good guys played by Clive Owen (brilliantly) and Naomi Watts (unconvincingly...probably just miscast). And overall it's completely enjoyable and slick, well paced, and beautifully filmed, of course.

The plot is one of those sprawling, behind-the-scenes conspiracy, third world, big money scenarios that must have shades of truth, or lots of truth, but gets simplified into a handful of bad guys and a parade of exotic locales (including the inevitable Third World warlord who is an intelligent and willing pawn in the whole game). What I mean is, the plot almost doesn't matter in the details, though it's interesting, and makes you think and worry a little about the world we live in. It's more how the heroes unfold the facts of the plot, against the odds, the clock ticking, that make the movie good. If you liked the Bourne movies (which are as a whole probably faster and more edgy) or Syriana (which is actually kind of similar in feel overall, Clooney substituted for Owen),this will really suit you.

And there is a Tykwer twist now and then, a camera with unusual fluidity, or a scene that gets replayed and rethought. Of course, the hugely complicated shootout in the Guggenheim is a masterpiece of excessive and brilliant kinetic filming. For an amazing short video on the building of the sets for this shoot (yes, it wasn't at the real Gug),go to www.firstshowing.net and type guggenheim tykwer.

In all? The best of it is worth the worst of it. A tightly made and not overly preposterous dip into a well stocked pond.

Reviewed by wellthatswhatithinkanyway7 / 10

Efficient thriller, relevant for our times

STAR RATING: ***** Saturday Night **** Friday Night *** Friday Morning ** Sunday Night * Monday Morning

As others have stated, the current banking scandals have cast a very grim light on bankers and the banking industry in general, and so The International is, if nothing else, a very timely and relevant thriller that plays on modern fears and frustrations. How it didn't do better at the box office with this in mind (maybe it was the recession? Hah, how ironic would that be, a film failed by the corrupt industry it's trying to expose?) is a mystery, but that it manages to be a genuinely intelligent and absorbing thriller anyway is a credit to it.

We have here a polished effort, slick, stylish and glossy and carried out with an accomplished flair that sets it a cut above some. In the lead role as the intrepid Interpol agent on a deadly trail of murder and corruption, Clive Owen continues to improve as an actor and has fine support, including the likes of Naomi Watts and Armin Mueheller Stall, carrying the story along as it gathers pace. The big down point, though, is that at the expense of this intelligence in the script comes a decidedly dull feeling to the film in parts, with maybe too much talking and too little action, which is counter productive to the riveting attention it's trying to demand. But this does improve towards the end and while there are some flaws, there are certainly more plusses. ***

Reviewed by bkoganbing5 / 10

Banking Can Be A Dangerous Business

The International as it is spoken of in hushed tones by its friends and foes, is a multi-national European based bank that's into all kinds of activities, only marginally related to banking. An Assistant District Attorney from New York County, Naomi Watts, is interested in it because they launder money for organized crime. And Interpol agent and former Scotland Yard detective Clive Owen is interested because of some arms trafficking. They decide to pool their resources.

The film was shot all over the world, with significant portions of the story taking place in Istanbul, Milan, and New York. The cartel always stays one step ahead and even for those among us not the conspiratorially minded, the film does show the difficulty in dealing with multi-jurisdictions insofar as law enforcement are concerned.

There's not a hint of any romance in this film between the leads, they are as professional as Mulder and Scully tracking down those aliens. But the characters don't really excite any interest either with their problems. For the action minded, there's a political assassination in Milan and a shootout at the Guggenheim Museum in New York. The place was a shambles after it was over.

In the end some extra legal methods are used to get the bad guys and the monster simply does grow a new head. The International is a fair action film when it gets down to the action. Clive Owen is capable enough, but 25 years ago Sean Connery would have been perfect for his part.

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