Z

NR 8.2
2009 2 hr 7 min Drama , Thriller , Crime

Amidst a heated political climate, the opposition leader is killed in what appears to be a traffic accident. When a magistrate finds evidence of a government cover-up, witnesses start to get targeted. A thinly-fictionalized account of the events surrounding the assassination of Greek politician Grigoris Lambrakis in 1963, Z captures the outrage about the military junta that ruled Greece at the time.

  • Cast:
    Yves Montand , Irene Papas , Jean-Louis Trintignant , Jacques Perrin , Charles Denner , François Périer , Bernard Fresson

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Reviews

UnowPriceless
2009/03/13

hyped garbage

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CommentsXp
2009/03/14

Best movie ever!

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Taraparain
2009/03/15

Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.

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SanEat
2009/03/16

A film with more than the usual spoiler issues. Talking about it in any detail feels akin to handing you a gift-wrapped present and saying, "I hope you like it -- It's a thriller about a diabolical secret experiment."

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ballju
2009/03/17

Several of my favorite films were directed by Greek-French film director Costa-Gavras. Z, State Of Siege, Missing, and the Confession. The mixing of the thriller genre and universal political themes not only makes for very interesting films but also thought provoking ones.His first serious film was Z. A film that won Best Foreign Language Film Oscar. It follows an idealistic judge investigating the killing of left wing politician. A fatal club strikes said politician and a cover up story of a drunk driver emerges. The film appears to end on a positive ending however at the very end those about to be criminally charged seize power. This ending the result of frustration related to the US-backed coup in Greece.State of Siege was based on Costa-Gavras's and Franco Solinas (The Battle of Algiers Screenwriter) investigation into Daniel A. Mitrone. Mitrone was kidnapped and eventually executed by Tupamaros urban guerrillas in Uruguay. Costa-Gavras read news headlines that changed his description from Official to Policeman to Diplomat. Why would the Tupamaros be interested in an "traffic and communications" adviser?This movie has a similar outline as Z as both were meant to be frustrating critically commentary of events at the time. The actions look pointless but there are no alternative choices apparent. The urban guerrillas will continue to fight,the government will continue to use US taught torture methods, and US companies will continue to exploit the country.

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dannieboy20906
2009/03/18

From 1947 to 1949 the United States supported Greece in its fight for freedom from a Communist insurgency. This reviewer characterizes that as a "Civil War." It was not civil (most civil wars are not), but it was fought against foreign Communists supporting a Communist Geek minority in an attempt to seize control of the country.I haven't seen the movie and would prefer an actual review of the movie rather than the reviewers whine. Nothing in the review reprises the plot, discusses the actors, the writing, or the music. Much more information is needed. If the reviewer wants to blog about politics, there are many boards at other internet sites available where he will be free to spout his pro-communist diatribes to his heart's content. Please provide information about the movie and opinions about the quality.

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McCamyTaylor
2009/03/19

I re-watched this one recently, and (as usual) I was blown away by it. Once you start watching "Z" it is difficult to stop. There is a "what's going to happen next?!" feeling that grabs hold of you close to the film's beginning and does not let up until the very end. Which is strange, in a way, because you already know what it going to happen. "Z" is a lot like watching a Greek tragedy---"Antigone" or "Oedipus Rex". Or "Hamlet".So, how does "Z" manage to stay fresh even after multiple viewings? That was the question I asked myself as I sat down to watch it again. And because I was paying attention this time, I realized that the editing in this movie is godly! Anyone who thinks that actors (or special effects or music) make the movie, should watch "Z." This is no fictionalized documentary. This is poetry done in black and white that uses the visual language of documentary for additional visceral impact. And the film really is visceral. By its end, you feel that you have just watched your own country's political crisis, no matter where you are from.

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ElMaruecan82
2009/03/20

"Z" opens with an amazing statement from the writers Jorge Semprun and Costa-Gavras: any similarity with real events, dead or living persons, is not fortuitous, it is deliberate. Indeed, more than a gauzy fictionalized dramatization of the events that surrounded the assassination of a political activist in Greece in 1963, "Z" is a powerful denunciation. Though most of us are not familiar with these events, it hardly matters because the film is beyond any geopolitical consideration, although the military officers' opening speech leaves a bizarre taste. And since only justice can be the measure of a good society, it's appropriate that the film's main protagonist is a magistrate. Jean-Louis Trintignant, behind his horn-rimmed glasses and zombie-like strictness, incarnates a legitimate form of authority, because only a zealous judge can carry the hopes of a population eager to see one of his most admirable heroes be avenged, Yves Montand, a physician, an ex-athlete and the major opponent to the country's right-wing military-dominated government. The ill-fated deputy is killed twice: first by a club hit on his head after a chaotic meeting, the second time by the corrupted system that concluded to a hazardous accident. Meaning 'he lives' in ancient Greek, "Z" becomes the protest slogan following his death, as his spirit, courage and hopes for the country still inhabited the hearts of his supporters. And served by a dizzying editing, the film deconstruct the conspiracy lying behind the murder. Preventing the meeting from being held, bribing some thugs to razz the supporters, the heads of state all conveniently attend an opera event while the assassination takes place, as a perfect alibi. In the the middle of a populous fizz, the Deputy is surprised by the arrival of an azure delivery-truck zigzagging as driven by a 'drunken' man, Yago (Renato Salvtaori), while Vago gives the lethal shot. Marcel Bozuffi, the brutal hit-man from "The French Connection", incarnates, through his cunning grin, the system's evil craziness. And on their sides, his bosses, from the General (Pierre Dux) to the Chief of Security (Julien Giuomar), and the tacit complicity of a smooth-talking François Périer as the Public Prosecutor, spare no efforts to silence the witnesses, and raze the traces of conspiracy. But the magistrate can also count a young photojournalist, played by Jacques Perrin, who seizes the opportunity to get through the infuriating procedural maze. "Z" carries the mark of a great political thriller, with a score from Mikis Theodorakis that brilliantly conveys the quest for democratic light in the tyrannic haze. But each country has a "Z", a shameful secret of state. The sight of Montand holding his head after being hit is the ultimate representation of disbelief and a desperate pray for the nightmare to end. But the nightmare only begins through the cat-and-mouse chase while the road to truth is paved by hints, false declarations or too conveniently similar statements. Yet unless the conspiracy is proved, the magistrate still refers to it as an 'accident', which makes even more significant the pivotal slip of tongue when he inadvertently refers to the act as a 'murder', entering at this point a very dangerous zone. We know we're coming close to a happy ending, and it's almost a blessing not to be familiar with the real events, because it makes the conclusion even more impacting.The irony of "Z" is to be much more cinematically efficient for foreigners, hence the film's universal acclaim, Golden Palm, Oscar for Best Foreign picture, nomination for Best Picture, most acclaimed French movie. No one can expect the ending, after the whole climactic sequence with the grizzly officers finally being interrogated in an almost zany way. Their triumph, the way they razed all the efforts, is as upsetting as the previous five minutes were zesty and enthralling. When Irene Papas, the Deputy's widow, is told about the victory but she looks at the sea, wondering if it isn't too good to be true, somewhat, her face betrays the look of a real Greek woman who knows what happened, and when the image of the young journalist freezes, the following monologue is the last smack in our faces before the score fills our heats with puzzlement and anger. Still, beyond the shock, we can relate to it, because as foreigners, "Z" reveals our own country's ugly side, like "JFK" did to Americans with the Kennedy's assassination, except that "Z" is a gutsy as if "JFK" was made in the 60's. Theodorakis was imprisoned at "Z" release; that tells you how the film was still impregnated by the cruel reality it denounces."Z" is about the zero level of governments, political practice at its most abject, at its most cynical, where it's better to blame the Americans, the systems in -isms, where the leaders have control on the slightest elements and treat education like plantation, oozing the most disgusting signs of fascism…. where the general, magnificently played by Pierre Dux, shouts that he can't compare himself to Dreyfus because "Dreyfus was guilty", a line so amoral it's better to take it with laughs."Z" is the dazing and dazzling recollection of such notions taken for granted as freedom, truth and justice, disguised in a thrilling political jigsaw puzzle; "Z" is a rally cry full of hopes and anger, "Z" is probably the only iconic title of movie history, speaking so many universal verities behind a simple letter.It is also the most significant political film ever made.

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