Déjà Vu

    Déjà Vu
    2006

    Synopsis

    Called in to recover evidence in the aftermath of a horrific explosion on a New Orleans ferry, Federal agent Doug Carlin gets pulled away from the scene and taken to a top-secret government lab that uses a time-shifting surveillance device to help prevent crime.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Denzel WashingtonDoug Carlin
    • Paula PattonClaire Kuchever
    • Val KilmerAgent Pryzwarra
    • Jim CaviezelCarroll Oerstadt
    • Adam GoldbergDenny
    • Elden HensonGunnars
    • Erika AlexanderShanti
    • Bruce GreenwoodJack McCready
    • Rich HutchmanAgent Stalhuth
    • Matt CravenMinuti

    Recommandations

    • 80

      Variety

      Cinema's natural felicities for time and action have seldom felt as beautifully dovetailed.
    • 80

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Unlike the last Scott-Washington matchup, "Man on Fire," Deja Vu boasts a muscular, fast-forward story that won't be overwhelmed by Scott's need for speed in the form of rapid cuts and all that visual fusion that have become his stylistic trademark. Here, the approach is perfectly suited to the picture's time-shifting, multitasking structure.
    • 80

      Los Angeles Times

      What is interesting is not how little sense Déjà Vu makes but how little that matters. If you want your films to add up logically, you're welcome to take your calculator somewhere else. But if you do, you will be missing out on some first-class genre fun.
    • 75

      ReelViews

      Denzel Washington plays Denzel Washington, good cop. This isn't a great performance, but Washington wasn't brought in to show off his acting chops.
    • 75

      Premiere

      Although the science fiction element had the potential to drag the story down, it's kept to a minimum and left somewhat buried in techno jargon.
    • 75

      Chicago Tribune

      It's an almost overwhelmingly professional picture, murderously fast, slick and full of outlandish notions, painstakingly realized. And it's also surprisingly satisfying -- thanks to Washington, a good cast, Tony Scott's swift direction and that unyielding professionalism.
    • 70

      Newsweek

      It's preposterous, but never dull: Scott whips the action into a taut, tasty lather.
    • 70

      Village Voice

      Déjà Vu isn't as sleek a genre pleasure as "Enemy of the State," but it does have a freaky little trick up its sleeve.

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