The Wages of Fear

  • New Zealand The Wages of Fear (more)

Plots(1)

In a small, isolated, hot and dusty Central American village, there's only one thing to do: dream of getting out. An opportunity for escape presents itself -- but only to those with nerves of steel. An American oil company has offered to pay big bucks to get two trucks filled with nitroglycerin over to a well fire. The catch: the unpaved terrain contains enough bumps and crags to make the unstable material explode... and instantly kill the driver. Nonetheless, the company has many applicants hungry for work, and a quartet of the coolest are chosen. But even these stalwart men will discover that fear of their deadly payload can ignite even the most frozen emotions. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (7)

kaylin 

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English First, it seems like a social drama from the slums, but as soon as we hit the road with trucks full of nitroglycerin and guys who are only after money, it becomes an incredible drama. The term thriller is not misleading at all. There are great scenes here that are a disaster in themselves, but they promise an even more oppressive ending. ()

D.Moore 

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English A rough, dirty, sweaty movie. Some might think that the half-hour introduction of the characters and the following half-hour, after which the first truck finally hits the road, will hold up the plot. But not at all - it is just part of The Wages of Fear. This is all the more so later in the frantic and nerve-wracking trek through the jungle and mountains, where daredevils become cowards, nerves are at play, every tremor can be fatal, and fear equals caution, which sometimes really pays off. Yves Montand's character is definitely not one of the greatest characters on the screen, but you root for him anyway. That's the kind of movie it is. Of all the memorable scenes, I would highlight especially the lake of crude oil. ()

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DaViD´82 

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English “The Wages of Fear is probably the best thriller in world cinema because the suspense doesn’t come from an artificial construct, but from real life." British film critic, Basil Wright, 1972. I would just like to add to this that this claim still applies more than twenty-five years later. And the movie is better than the book it is based on, which, however, certainly deserves no high praise. ()

Malarkey 

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English A film that is 60 years old, two and a half hour long and yet it kept me in suspense the way not many things can. The Wages of Fear aroused a brutal fear in me, so it fulfilled its goal. Some might be upset that the film drags a lot in the first hour. For me, it was possibly the best part. During the first hour the story was basically non-existent. The cameraman walked around the village with a camera and filmed the lives of French workers. He watched what they did, how they worked and what they dreamed about. For a sixty-year-old film there were some pretty interesting ideas. For example, nowadays you couldn’t even imagine living like that. Well, things were different back then. After all of this, however, it turns into pure despair, and the film left me with a huge lump in my stomach from the stress it caused me. Well done, that’s exactly what I had imagined it to be. ()

lamps 

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English Utterly unique. The most suspenseful or second most suspenseful movie I've ever seen. The first hour is a boring but absolutely necessary preparatory manoeuvre for an uncompromising and formally riveting spectacle, which even today ranks in my eyes among the top of several genres. Rarely do we, as viewers, feel such fear and excitement just because the camerawork is flawless and the actors perform as if their lives depended on it, and it's really rare how the psychologically and visually exquisite anxiety builds up precisely throughout the long 150 minutes. The closing five minutes may be a bit too out of context, but the rest is undoubtedly among the best cinema has to offer – I've probably never been this emotionally drained after a black and white film. 100% ()

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