Explore

Curator

Langue

Z

7.8·1969·122 min·Français·Directed by Costa-Gavras

He is alive!

ThrillerCrimeDrama
Synopsis

A prominent politician is murdered during a demonstration. The government and army are trying to suppress the truth, but a tenacious magistrate is determined to not to let them get away with it.

Main Cast
Yves Montand

Yves Montand

Z

Irene Papas

Irene Papas

Hélène

Jean-Louis Trintignant

Jean-Louis Trintignant

Examining Magistrate

Jacques Perrin

Jacques Perrin

Photojournalist

Charles Denner

Charles Denner

Manuel

Communauté
7.9
Note Trakt
595 votes
10
77
9
128
8
173
7
104
6
49
5
15
4
12
3
2
2
1
7
1.2KSpectateurs
22.2KCollectés
3.7KListes

Avis de la communauté (4)

S
soonertboneVIP
9/10Apr 15, 2025

Frightening, infuriating movie about political corruption and authoritarianism that really wowed me with its editing. Hard week to watch this, but vitally important to see. Loved it.

1
T
tcg37
Dec 1, 2025

a horror movie about real life monsters that's still relevant! everyone should watch this.

O
OffbeatParadox
9/10Oct 17, 2021

Exhilarating and upsetting with a fantastic conclusion.

D
drqshadowCritique
9/10Oct 27, 2020

When it's threatened by a budding resistance movement, a visibly panicked military government begins pulling dirty tricks and punching below the belt. Chief among their concerns is an upcoming rally by the opposition, which is subsequently sabotaged and co-opted in a number of plausibly-deniable ways. Things get hairy when their agents go too far, killing the keynote speaker before a mob of protestors, and the ensuing cover-up attempts unravel under closer scrutiny. The story's real driving force is Trintignant, an examining magistrate, who enters the scene as a legal advisor to the establishment but grows more concerned and vigilant as his investigation uncovers such arrogant, clumsy, widespread corruption. Like he's gone out for a bit of gardening, turned over an innocuous stone and found it teeming with maggots. He's surprised, then diligent, then increasingly angry and vengeful, disregarding threats and commands from higher-ups as he pushes for lawful justice on an imbalanced playing field. The acting can be amateurish, the filming techniques low-budget and dated, the dialogue rapid to the point of exhaustion (keeping up with the subtitles is often a tall order), but in a way, many of those shortcomings actually lend validity and ground-level meaning to the film. This isn't a polished, dumbed-down, all-audiences interpretation of an idea; it's a raw, passionate cry of rage and indignant frustration. Its depiction of the means and methods a ruling class employs, to skirt its own rules and retain power without tipping its hand, is chilling in its clinical efficiency and all too relatable. Even the "happy ending" is soured by a reality-check epilogue that always felt inevitable. And this isn't just a hypothetical; _Z_ has way too much in common with the Greek coup d'etat of a few years prior to be a mere coincidence. A stirring, rousing, crushing bit of intrigue that makes no bones about its message and still, maddeningly, resonates fifty years later. Some things, apparently, never really change.

reviews

Critiques