Time Out says
Given the classic status of John Frankenheimer’s 1962 movie, Jonathan Demme, his cast and writers Daniel Pyne and Dean Georgaris were risking ridicule in taking on another version of Richard Condon’s novel. Happily, this extremely timely entertainment matches, even perhaps surpasses its predecessor. Suspense and sly humour are again in abundance, as is political relevance. Here is an America where truth, democracy and proper ethical considerations are imperilled not by Cold War enemies but by unbridled late capitalism itself; dynastic ambition, hollow patriotism, meaningless slogans, the fuelling of fear and paranoia, media complicity and puppet figureheads under the influence of shady, self-serving global conglomerates are the order of the day. Nothing surprising about that, really, except that this is a Hollywood genre movie, and it’s terrific, for once, to see a sharp, slick, adult, darkly comic thriller whose more outlandish aspects – brainwashing by implant, say – succeed so well as metaphors for contemporary reality. The performances (especially that of Streep) are spot-on, the script extraordinarily up-to-date, and Demme’s direction – particularly the creation of unease through the subtle use of sound and odd direct-to-camera dialogue – a real return to form after his last film. Worryingly superior stuff.
Release Details
- Rated:15
- Release date:Friday 19 November 2004
- Duration:130 mins
Cast and crew
- Director:Jonathan Demme
- Screenwriter:Daniel Pyne, Dean Georgaris
- Cast:
- Kimberly Elise
- Simon McBurney
- Ted Levine
- Jon Voight
- Bruno Ganz
- Denzel Washington
- Jeffrey Wright
- Liev Schreiber
- Meryl Streep
- Robyn Hitchcock
- Vera Farmiga
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