FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

Find (見つける) + Key (鍵・正解)

映画に限らず、人生のヒントを見つける場所です。

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その土曜日、7時58分
その土曜日、7時58分

その土曜日、7時58分

20071h 57m★ 7.1犯罪ドラマスリラー
U-NEXT

あらすじ

「十二人の怒れる男」「狼たちの午後」の名匠シドニー・ルメット監督が、一つの強盗計画を軸に浮かび上がるある家族の深い心の闇を実力派俳優陣の豪華なアンサンブルで描き出すサスペンス・ドラマ。娘の養育費もまともに払えない冴えない男、ハンク。そんな彼に兄のアンディはある強盗計画を持ちかける。狙うのはなんと彼らの両親が営む宝石店。ハンクとは対照的に、会計士として働き、美しい妻ジーナにも恵まれて不自由ない生活を送っているかに見えたアンディにも緊急に金が必要なワケがあった。ためらうハンクだったが、アンディに言葉巧みに説得されてしまう。そして、いよいよ計画実行の日がやってくるが...。

作品考察・見どころ

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興行成績

製作費: $18,000,000 (27億円)

興行収入: $25,005,257 (38億円)

推定収支: $7,005,257 (11億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

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キャスト

フィリップ・シーモア・ホフマン
フィリップ・シーモア・ホフマン
Andy Hanson
イーサン・ホーク
イーサン・ホーク
Hank Hanson
Albert Finney
Albert Finney
Charles Hanson
マリサ・トメイ
マリサ・トメイ
Gina Hanson
Aleksa Palladino
Aleksa Palladino
Chris Lasorda
マイケル・シャノン
マイケル・シャノン
Dex
エイミー・ライアン
エイミー・ライアン
Martha Hanson
Sarah Livingston
Sarah Livingston
Danielle
ブライアン・F・オバーン
ブライアン・F・オバーン
Bobby Lasorda
ローズマリー・ハリス
ローズマリー・ハリス
Nanette Hanson

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Sidney Lumet

脚本: Kelly Masterson

音楽: Carter Burwell

制作: William S. Gilmore / Brian Linse / Paul Parmar

撮影監督: Ron Fortunato

制作会社: Michael Cerenzie Productions / Capitol Films / Linsefilm / Unity Productions / Funky Buddha Productions / EFD Films

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

John Chard
John Chard
★ 9

The world is an evil place Charlie. Some of us make money off that and others get destroyed. Before the Devil Knows You're Dead is directed by Sidney Lumet and written by Kelly Masterson. It stars Philip Seymour Hoffman, Ethan Hawke, Marisa Tomei, Albert Finney, Rosemary Harris and Amy Ryan. Music is scored by Carter Burwell and cinematography by Ron Fortunato. Two brothers with differing financial problems plan to rob their parents' jewellery store. But when all does not go to plan and tragedy strikes, it sends them, and those close to them, into a world of fear, shame and violence... It opens with a raunchy sex scene, man and wife in the throes of committed passion, for these brief moments there is pleasure. Once over, though, it proves to be a false dawn, the last time anyone on screen will taste pleasure in Lumet's biting morality tale. From here on in the film unfolds in a dizzying array of multi-perspectives and over lapping of narrative structure, a three pronged assault on the senses as a family implodes in a haze of greed, lies and inadequacies. A botched robbery underpins the plotting, the aftermath of which is what is most cutting, we zip around learning the wherewithal and whys of the key players, learning exactly what we need to know to fully immerse in this bleak world. This is a world populated by love cheats, drug abuse, embezzling, bad parenting and blackmail, a world where the brothers Hanson (Hoffman & Hawke) now dwell, either ill equipped (Hawke's Hank) or stuck between idiocy and smug evil (Hoffman's Andy). Their folly, their greed, impacting with a juddering severity on the family circle. My life, it doesn't add up. Nothing connects to anything else. I'm not the sum of my parts. All my parts don't add up to one...me. It would be Lumet's last film (he passed away in 2011), thankfully it is a fitting final offering from the talented Philadelphian. He's aided considerably, mind, by a razor sharp script from debut screenplay writer Masterton. It's full of nastiness and tension, but still observational as a family tragedy, with major bonus' being that it never resorts to stereotypes or cops out come the crushing denouement. Where Lumet excels is in drawing near faultless performances from his cast. Youthful and downtrodden haplessness portrayed by Hawke, Hoffman's powerhouse manipulator with emotional issues, Tomei proving that over 40 is still sexy while dialling into a very touching performance. Finney, a cracker-jack of grief from the wily old fox, Ryan's hard edged ex-wife and Michael Shannon strolling into the picture late in the day exuding notable menace. All splendidly guided by the great director who asks them to portray characters convincing in going deeper for motivations and means. Bleak, brutal and near brilliant across the board. 9/10

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

The outwardly successful "Andy" (Philip Seymour Hoffman) needs to raise some cash before his business gets an IRS audit. His weaker brother "Hank" (Ethan Hawke) needs cash to settle some childcare costs with his divorced wife. The two concoct a plan to rob their parents' jewellery store to solve both of their problems whilst, they hope, harming nobody but the insurers. A staffing alteration changes all of that, though, and as it turns out, mom is no pushover so the raid goes quite spectacularly wrong leaving her and one of the robbers in the ground. "Hank" is emotionally struggling, "Andy" still faces his problems and now they have their father (Albert Finney) determined to track down just who these attackers are! Now, to add to this already quite toxic mix, we discover that "Hank" has also been having an affair rather too close to home for his sibling and so the tension is soon building to a point where something is going to have to give - and lethally too. Finney features sparingly here, but he does steal the show as the Hoffman/Hawke dynamic builds to an effective and powerful conclusion that does rather powerfully portray just how family's are not always sweetness and light. It's a solid story well cast and written, with Sidney Lumet letting his talent do the heavy lifting with minimal interference from him or from any extended dialogue. I did like the ending, too!

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