Spy Game
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Spy Game | |
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Directed by | Tony Scott |
Produced by | Marc Abraham, Douglas Wick |
Written by | Michael Frost Beckner, David Arata |
Starring | Robert Redford, Brad Pitt, Catherine McCormack |
Music by | Harry Gregson-Williams |
Cinematography | Daniel Mindel |
Editing by | Christian Wagner |
Distributed by | Universal Studios Inc. |
Release date(s) | 19 November 2001 (USA) |
Running time | 126 min |
Language | English |
Budget | US$ 92,000,000 |
IMDb profile |
- This article is about the movie. For the TV series of the same title, see Spy Game (TV series).
Spy Game is a 2001 film, directed by Tony Scott, and starring Robert Redford and Brad Pitt. The film grossed $62,362,785 in the United States and $143,049,560 worldwide [1].
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[edit] Plot details
Set in 1991, the film depicts the U.S. and Chinese Governments on the verge of a major trade agreement with the American President due to pay a visit to China to seal the deal. When the Central Intelligence Agency gets word that operative Tom Bishop (Brad Pitt) has been captured trying to free a terrorist from a Chinese prison near Su Chou (Suzhou), is being questioned under torture and will be executed within twenty-four hours unless he is claimed by the U.S. Government, they scramble to decide whether to allow Bishop to die or to claim him and potentially destroy the trade agreement, a decision made more difficult by the fact that Bishop was working as a rogue agent, outside control of the agency.
In an attempt to quickly deal with the situation, CIA executives call in Nathan Muir (Robert Redford), an aging mid-level case officer on his last day before retirement, and the man who recruited Bishop. Although they tell Muir that they simply need him to act as a "stop gap" to fill in some holes in their background files, the officials are in reality hoping that what he gives them the smoking gun they need to justify letting Bishop die. Realizing as much, Muir attempts to save Bishop by leaking the story to CNN through a contact in Hong Kong, believing that the CIA will rescue Tom once a public outcry puts pressure on them to do so. Unfortunately for Muir, the tactic only stalls them, as a phone call to the FCC from a high ranking executive results in CNN retracting the story.
With his plan squashed, Nathan resorts to far more dangerous tactics, secretly creating a forged urgent operational directive from the CIA Director to commence Operation Dinner Out: a daring rescue mission spearheaded by the U.S. Navy Seals. Using US$282,000 (all of his life savings) as a cover, Nathan bribes a Chinese energy official to cut power to the prison for thirty minutes, during which time the Navy Seals rescue team retrieves Bishop along with the woman he'd gone in to get.
[edit] Main cast
- Robert Redford - Nathan D. Muir
- Brad Pitt - Tom Bishop
- Catherine McCormack - Elizabeth Hadley
- Stephen Dillane - Charles Harker
- Larry Bryggman - Troy Folger
- Marianne Jean-Baptiste - Gladys Jennip
- Ken Leung - Li
- David Hemmings - Harry Duncan
- Michael Paul Chan - Vincent Vy Ngo
- Garrick Hagon - CIA Director Cy Wilson
- Shane Rimmer - Estate Agent
- Benedict Wong - Tran
- Adrian Pang - Jiang
- Omid Djalili - Beirut: Doumet
- Dale Dye - Rescue Sequence: Cmdr. Wiley
- Charlotte Rampling - Anna Cathcart
[edit] Filming locations include
- HSBC Hong Kong headquarters building, presented as the American embassy (note that there is actually a U.S. consulate general, but no embassy in Hong Kong). See Hong Kong in films. The interior of the embassy was filmed at the Lloyd's building in London.
- Budapest, Hungary served as Cold War Berlin in the film. The movie was shot here to save money, and also because Berlin has changed a lot since the fall of the Berlin Wall. The helicopter landing in the film's climax was filmed at an airfield near Budapest.
- Casablanca, Morocco became 1980s Beirut in the film. The crew started off in Haifa, Israel, but had to shift to Morocco because of the Al-Aqsa Intifada which broke out in late 2000. The Vietnam War segment was also filmed in Morocco.
- Oxford, England: the former Oxford Prison, which closed in 1996, was used as the Chinese prison set in Su Chou (Suzhou). (It has since been converted into a luxury hotel.) Shots of the ambulance approaching the prison were also filmed in Oxford.
- The GlaxoSmithKline research centre in Stevenage, England was used for exterior and some interior scenes at the CIA headquarters. (Aerial shots of the real headquarters were also included.)
- The CIA lobby location was in the Senate House of the University of London. Close-ups of Robert Redford as Muir driving from his home to the CIA headquarters were filmed in Regent's Park, standing in for Washington DC.
- A second unit filmed footage in Washington DC and Virginia for the scenes of Muir driving to and from the CIA headquarters.
[edit] Trivia
- At the end of the film, "in memory of Elizabeth Jean Scott" is shown on the screen. This may have lead some viewers that the character of Elizabeth Hadley was based on the real Elizabeth Jean Scott person. In fact, Elizabeth Jean Scott was the mother of the director Tony Scott of the film (and of the director Ridley Scott as well) and she died in 2001[1].