Wrong Is Right
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Wrong Is Right | |
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original movie poster |
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Directed by | Richard Brooks |
Produced by | Richard Brooks Andrew Fogelson George Grenville |
Written by | Richard Brooks(Screenplay) Charles McCarry(novel) |
Starring | Sean Connery Robert Conrad Katharine Ross |
Music by | Artie Kane |
Cinematography | Fred J. Koenekamp |
Editing by | George Grenville |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date(s) | 1982 |
Running time | 117 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Gross revenue | $3,583,513 (Dom.)[1] |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
Wrong Is Right (Columbia Pictures, 1982) is a prescient black comedy thriller about the theft of two suitcase bombs, featuring the then novel plot conventions of media bias, government conspiracy, and Islamic terrorism. The film, which starred Sean Connery as superstar TV news reporter Patrick Hale, and directed by Richard Brooks from his own script based on Charles McCarry's novel, The Better Angels, was a commercial and critical failure at the time of its release. Most reviews found the film implausible. British reviews castigated the film for its distributor's attempt to tie it in with James Bond in its advertising scheme and retitling of the film, The Man with the Deadly Lens. In France, where the film was called Meurtes en direct, it was compared negatively to Bertrand Tavernier's La Morte en direct, as did Stanley Kauffmann of The New Republic. The New York Daily News emerged as a champion for the film, Liz Smith calling it "a sleeper not to miss" prior to its release, and Rex Reed and Kathleen Carroll giving it four and three and a half star reviews published a day apart.
The film is also notable for a joke at the end of the movie in which Connery rips off his toupee on camera. Jennifer Jason Leigh has a small role as a girl who is doing a fantasy killing of her parents on national TV (a controversial new recreational activity), and tells Hale that she hopes that her parents are watching, even though she has no particular grudge against them.
Contents |
[edit] Taglines
- Only Patrick Hale can prevent a desperate president, the head of the CIA, a trigger happy general, terrorists, an arms dealer, and religious fanatics from destroying our world.
But he has other things on his mind.
- A very funny look at the world.
- In a moment World War III... but first a word from our sponsor.
- Patrick Hale was invented for television. He's a superstar TV reporter whose special news broadcasts reach a billion people every day. And in the past ten hours, he has uncovered the most incredible story of his career.
The bad news is: it involves the President, Vice-President, Director of the CIA, a trigger-happy general, an Arab terrorist, a European arms dealer, religious fanatics, and the result may be World War III.
The good news is: his ratings are going through the roof.
- If it doesn't happen on TV, it means nothing!
[edit] Plot
Based on Charles McCarry's 1979 novel The Better Angels, Wrong is Right is set in a near future in which violence has become something of a national sport and television news has fallen to tabloid depths (a significantly bigger stretch in 1982, when the film was released.) Star Sean Connery plays Patrick Hale, a globe-trotting reporter with access to a staggering array of world leaders. As the film opens, he has ventured to the Arab country of Hegreb to interview his old acquaintance, King Ibn Awad (Ron Moody). Awad has learned that the President of the United States (George Grizzard) may have issued orders for his removal; as a result, Awad) is apparently making arrangements to deliver two mini-nuclear devices — each about the size of a small suitcase — to a terrorist, with the intention of detonating them in Israel and the United States, unless the President resigns. In the intricate plot that unfolds, nothing is quite the way it seems, and Hale finds himself caught between political leaders, revolutionaries, CIA agents and other figures, trying to get to the bottom of it all.
[edit] Awards
Rosalind Cash was nominated for an Image Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture.
[edit] Translations
Germany: Flammen am Horizont
Russia: Неправый прав (фильм)
Brazil: Homem com a Lente Mortal, O
Finland: Kamera käy - tapa!
France: Meurtres en direct
Italy: Obiettivo mortale
Spain: Objetivo mortal
Sweden: Sekund före noll, En
[edit] References
- ^ boxofficemojo.com. Wrong is right. Retrieved on December 15, 2007.
[edit] External links
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