Phim lẻ
Nội dung
A drug pusher grows increasingly desperate after a botched deal leaves him with a large debt to a ruthless drug lord.
Thông tin sản xuất
August 30, 1996
Ngày phát hành
$965,000
Ngân sách
Truy cập website
Website chính thức
Denmark
Region (DK)
Balboa Entertainment
Producer
Đạo diễn
Nicolas Winding Refn
Female
Rikke Gulstad
Male
Diễn viên
Kim Bodnia
Frank
Mads Mikkelsen
Tonny
Laura Drasbæk
Vic
Zlatko Burić
Milo
Slavko Labović
Radovan
Peter Andersson
Hasse
Levino Jensen
Mike
Nicolas Winding Refn
Brian
Thomas Bo Larsen
Junkie
Lars Bom
Uro'er
Michael Hasselflug
Uro'er
Jesper Lohmann
Mikkel
Gordon Kennedy
Anders
Gyda Hansen
Mor
Lisa Lach Nielsen
Betina
Liv Corfixen
Hotelportiers stemme
John Kalmar
Bodybuilder
Trailer
Pusher Collection
Bộ sưu tập
3 phim
Trùm Ma Túy
Pusher
7.0 | 1996 • Hành Động • Hình Sự • Chính Kịch
Bộ phim xoay quanh Frank, một tên buôn bán ma túy nhỏ, và tuần lễ đầy biến cố của anh khi mọi thứ dần trở nên tồi tệ sau một phi vụ thất bại. Frank phải đối mặt với cảnh sát, nợ nần, và những đối thủ nguy hiểm trong thế giới ngầm tội phạm ở Copenhagen.
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Screens & Gallery















International Critic Reviews

A solid crime thriller. <em>'Pusher'</em> entertained me enough, though the plot did feel a bit repetitive as it felt like it kept 'going around in circles' to me personally. Some of the lighting and editing (as in cuts) choices also made the film feel a little more underwhelming. The cast do well, arguably the film's strongest element. Kim Bodnia makes for a solid lead, though his performance is a tad samey throughout - similar to the aforementioned. Mads Mikkelsen's Tonny sticks out because he is being played by Mads Mikkelsen, the character is OK - underused perhaps, though I may just think that as it's Mads... the whole reason I chose to view this trilogy, to be honest. 6/10 would feel harsh so this 1996 release gets 7/10 from yours truly. I didn't overly enjoy it, though I can't exactly say I disliked it either... probably levels out at watchable.

“Frank” (Kim Bodnia) makes a decent living dealing drugs with his skinhead pal “Tonny” (Mads Mikkelsen) until one deal goes a bit pear shaped. That doesn’t go down so well with his supplier, “Milo” (Zlatlo Buric) but when you’re €45k in the hole, you might as well try to deal your way out of it so he promises to make that cash back from the next deal. That goes even worse when the cops intervene and the cocaine ends up in a lake. He’s released from custody, takes his revenge on his erstwhile pal who was a better runner when they were nicked and then heads to his boss to explain that he’s now even more in debt. He is given a little more time but his options are dwindling, his friends likewise and his already borderline sociopathic behaviour is becoming as much a threat to himself as to the people he turns on in desperation. On the face of it, there’s nothing especially innovative about this but as you get into it there’s a lot from Bodnia’s performance here that works. Subtle seems an odd word to use given the activities that goes on, but there is some subtlety here as his character shows signs of “Jekyll and Hyde” syndrome - especially when galvanised by the impressively odious Buric who brings something of the psychotically sleazy to his portrayal. Why is it the kingpin’s in these sort of dramas are always just more toxic versions of “Ratso” from “Midnight Cowboy” (1969)? There’s plenty of action, but precious little graphic violence portrayed as this man’s spiral of misfortune and bad judgement risks the lives of himself and those close. This is a grim indictment of an underground industry that prays on the addicted remorselessly, and personally I consider this as authentic and compelling as anything made on the other side of the Atlantic.