War, Inc.
War, Inc. | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Joshua Seftel |
Produced by |
John Cusack Danny Lerner Grace Loh Les Weldon |
Written by |
John Cusack Mark Leyner Jeremy Pikser |
Starring |
John Cusack Hilary Duff Marisa Tomei Joan Cusack Dan Aykroyd Ben Kingsley |
Music by | David Robbins |
Cinematography | Zoran Popovic |
Edited by | Michael Berenbaum |
Distributed by | First Look Studios |
Release date |
|
Running time | 106 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $10 million[1] |
Box office | $1,296,184[1][2] |
War, Inc. is a 2008 American political action comedy film starring John Cusack and directed by Joshua Seftel. Cusack also co-wrote and produced the film.
Plot
The film opens in a bar in Nunavut when hitman Brand Hauser (John Cusack) shoots and kills three men at the bar. He takes pictures of the men with his phone, sends the pictures, and then throws the phone into a burning garbage can.
Hauser is then seen on a plane getting directions and life advice from the on-board navigation system, Jerry (Montel Williams). He turns on his screen to receive a video call from the former Vice President (Dan Aykroyd) who gives him his next mission: to terminate Omar Sharif (Lyubomir Neikov), the CEO of the oil company Ugigas in Ugigistan. He tells Hauser that he will be working under the Viceroy, whose identity is still being withheld until further notice. He also tells Hauser that his cover will be a trade show host, working with Tamerlane, a huge corporation that specializes in advertising. He must produce a trade show and a gala wedding as a finale, and still manage to kill Omar Sharif before he makes his plane back to Ugigistan.
He is taken by a car to the safe Emerald City within the fictional war-torn desert country of Turaqistan. In the Tamerlane building, he meets Marsha (Joan Cusack), his assistant for the mission. Once inside the building, he notices a reporter, Natalie Hegalhuzen (Marisa Tomei) attempting unsuccessfully to get inside the Tamerlane building. Natalie attempts to find out why she can't get into Tamerlane, and after asking him several questions, is rushed out of the room by Hauser who doesn't want to reveal any personal details about himself. He does arrange for her to have drinks with him which she accepts. Hauser visits the Viceroy in a secret location hidden in a Popeye's restaurant, who tells him what he needs to do. The Viceroy (who cannot be seen, but only heard with an altered voice) informs Hauser that the grand finale of the Trade Show he's supposed to prepare will be a wedding for Yonica Babyyeah (Hilary Duff), an oversexed, Central Asian pop star. He meets briefly with her and her fiancé, Ooq-Mi-Fay (Sergej Trifunović).
Later, Natalie meets Hauser at a restaurant where he gives her an all-access pass to the Trade Show. She arrives at the rehearsal and is greeted by Hauser and Marsha, who quickly go to watch Yonica's rehearsal. Her oversexed appearance and slight attraction for Hauser make him throw up on Natalie's coat and he walks out. After talking to Jerry in his car, he drinks some hot sauce and then has a flashback. He sees himself telling his fellow hitman Walken (Ben Kingsley) that he is tired of killing and wants to quit. He and Walken engage in a brief struggle in which he shoots Walken and leaves him for dead in the back of a garbage truck.
After receiving a delivery from a dry-cleaner in Germany, he goes to the hotel that Natalie stays in and gives her her coat, cleaned. He asks her out for coffee and confesses to her his habit of drinking hot sauce when he's nervous. She then confesses that she doesn't despise him at all, and the two build up a small friendship. He is later visited by Yonica in his office. She tries to seduce him, but he rebuffs her. He later sees her when he is in a restaurant with Sharif and Natalie. Hauser takes Natalie home, where she kisses him. Embarrassed, she quickly rushes out of the car. She sees him the next day and asks for a pass out of the Emerald City. He gives her a card that he received earlier by videomakers who are big in the Arts Community, and might give her a good lead. Hours later, he visits Yonica and listens to her sing a beautiful ballad; from here on out, he develops a paternal affection for her.
Meanwhile, Natalie buys the cover for a pornographic video that the videomakers were going to shoot on Yonica's wedding night, and leaks it to the American press. After a confrontation with Ooq-Mi-Fay (who was involved in the making of this video), Hauser decides that the only way to continue with the wedding peacefully is to blame everything on Ooq-Mi-Fay's friend Bhodi Bhundhang. Bhodi hunts him down and tries to kill him in a big house that Yonica is supposed to do an interview in. There, Hauser reveals his past to Natalie and Yonica, and how his wife was killed and his daughter was kidnapped. He is interrupted when he hears a gun and rushes to another room, where he is forced to fight Bhodi. He kills Bhodi in front of Natalie and Yonica, who flee the house, horrified. They rush off into a cab, where Yonica asks Natalie to be her bridesmaid; Natalie accepts. Six hours before the wedding, Hauser receives a ransom video from what appears to be a gang of terrorists, who have taken Natalie hostage. Hauser travels to a nearby city named Fallaf, saves Natalie, and makes it to Room 1101, where he had planned to meet and kill Sharif. Hauser has a change of heart and lets Sharif live, and in return is informed "the ultimate chicken-hawk is nearby". Realizing what this means Hauser goes to the Viceroy's secret location, and breaks down the glass to reveal the man behind the screen. The Viceroy is actually Walken — the man who killed Hauser's wife and kidnapped his daughter.
Hauser asks Walken what he did with his daughter, and finds out that Yonica was actually his daughter all along. He rushes to tell Yonica at the wedding, and arrives there right before Walken destroys the building, accidentally killing himself in the process. Fortunately, Hauser, Natalie, and Yonica survive, and rush off to a plane that Yonica and Ooq-Mi-Fay were supposed to fly off in. Once they are airborne, and have presumably escaped, we see a trailing missile about to strike the aircraft. The Vice President reveals his next plan to attack neighboring Ugigistan, blaming them for the bombing of the Emerald city, and terrorist incidents in Turaqistan.
Cast
- John Cusack as Brand Hauser, a hitman posing as a trade show producer.
- Hilary Duff as Yonica Babyyeah, a sexy Central Asian pop star.
- Marisa Tomei as Natalie Hegalhuzen, a reporter for liberal magazines
- Ben Kingsley as Walken, a hitman.
- Joan Cusack as Marsha Dillon
- Dan Aykroyd as the former Vice President, working for Tamerlane industries.
- Ben Cross as Medusa Hair
- Lyubomir Neikov as Omar Sharif, CEO of the oil company Ugigas of Ugigistan.
- Sergej Trifunović as Ooq-Mi-Fay Taqnufmini, husband to be of Yonica Babyyeah
- Nikolay Stanoev as Bhodi Bhundhang
- Bashar Rahal as Video Guy One
- Ned Bellamy as Zubleh / Ooq-Yu-Fay Taqnufmini
- Montel Williams as GuideStar, a navigational system similar to OnStar which also functions as his de facto therapist.
- John McLaughlin as Himself
Production
War, Inc. is thought to be an informal sequel to the 1997 film Grosse Pointe Blank. Both films are similar in style and theme, and both films star John Cusack as an assassin and Joan Cusack as his assistant, with Dan Aykroyd in a supporting role. In an interview, Joan Cusack said, "I think, in a way, [War, Inc.] was a Grosse Pointe Blank 2."[3] John Cusack described it as a "spiritual cousin to Grosse Pointe Blank".[4]
John Cusack co-wrote and produced the film, as well as starring in the lead role as Brand Hauser. A working title of the film was Brand Hauser: Stuff Happens. The story is partly inspired by Naomi Klein's Harper's Magazine article "Baghdad Year Zero".[4][5]
War, Inc. was filmed in Bulgaria beginning in late October 2006.
Reception
Critical response
War, Inc. received generally negative reviews from critics. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 29% based on 78 reviews, with the consensus that the film "attempts to satirize the military industrial complex, but more often than not it misses its target".[6] Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, gives the film a score of 37 based on 21 reviews.[7]
Roger Ebert gave the film two stars out of four, describing the film as a "brave and ambitious but chaotic attempt at political satire". He praises Cusack for bravery and the determination to make a film that is uncompromising and sets out to make a statement, but Ebert concedes he wanted to like the film more than he could.[8] Philip Marchand of the Toronto Star is critical of the crude satire of the film, unimpressed by Dan Aykroyd as a Dick Cheney-like figure we see delivering a televised rant while sitting on the toilet. He judges the film to be more about resurrecting Cusack's role as a hitman from Grosse Pointe Blank. He goes on to describe it as fast paced, full of shooting, but ultimately "as corrupt as the politics it attempts to satirize".[9] Reviewer Reyhan Harmanci complained that the film tried so hard to be clever but treated the viewer like an idiot.[10]
The film earned a Razzie Award nomination for Ben Kingsley as Worst Supporting Actor.
Box office
War, Inc. opened on an extremely limited release in only two theaters across the United States on May 23, 2008. It grossed an estimated $36,600 in those two theaters during its opening weekend.[11] The film went on to open in a further thirty theaters across the United States.[12] It was second in largest per theater gross behind Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. It closed on August 7, 2008 without a wide release, grossing only $580,862 domestically in fewer than thirty theaters across the United States and Canada.[2]
Home media
War, Inc. was planned to have a fast DVD release date of July 1,[12] but was delayed three months to maximize the impact of the theatrical release.[13] The film was released later on DVD on October 14, 2008 in the US and acquired $883,364 in the opening weekend, selling 60,534 DVD units.[14]
References
- 1 2 "War, Inc.". The Numbers. External link in
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(help) - 1 2 "War, Inc. (2008)". Box Office Mojo. Amazon. Retrieved 2010-05-20.
- ↑ Jen Yamato (May 22, 2008). "RT Interview: Joan Cusack on War, Inc., the Unofficial Sequel to Grosse Point Blank". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster.
- 1 2 Ryan Gilbey (31 August 2007). "I'm basically a brand". The Guardian. London.
War, Inc, a "spiritual cousin to Grosse Pointe Blank", and partly inspired by Naomi Klein's article "Baghdad Year Zero."
- ↑ Klein, Naomi (September 2004). "Baghdad year zero: Pillaging Iraq in pursuit of a neocon utopia". Harper's Magazine. The Harper's Magazine Foundation. Archived from the original on 2007-04-06. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
- ↑ "War, Inc. (2008)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved 2010-05-20.
- ↑ "War, Inc. (2008): Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2010-05-20.
- ↑ Roger Ebert (2008-06-12). "War Inc". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2010-05-21.
- ↑ Philip Marchand (April 25, 2008). "War, Inc.". The Toronto Star. Toronto.
- ↑ Harmanci, Reyhan (August 19, 2010). "'War, Inc.' - a satire that misses its mark". The San Francisco Chronicle.
- ↑ "War, Inc. (2008) - Weekend Box Office Results". Box Office Mojo. Amazon. Retrieved 2008-05-26.
- 1 2 Tina Daunt (June 4, 2008). "'War' seems to be winning over fans". Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ Ruth Payne (2008-12-01). "Box office success, the 'War, Inc.' way". Retrieved 2010-05-21.
- ↑ "War, Inc. - DVD Sales". The Numbers. External link in
|work=
(help)
External links
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- War, Inc. at Metacritic
- War, Inc. at Box Office Mojo