Spy Game (Widescreen Edition)
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| List Price: | $9.99 |
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #8909 in DVD
- Released on: 2002-04-09
- Rating: R (Restricted)
- Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
- Formats: Closed-captioned, Collector's Edition, Color, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: English, French
- Subtitled in: English, Spanish
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 127 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
A thinking person's thriller, Spy Game employs dense plotting without sacrificing the kinetic momentum that is director Tony Scott's trademark. The film has the byzantine scope of a novel, focusing on veteran CIA operative Nathan Muir (Robert Redford), whose protégé Tom Bishop (Brad Pitt) is scheduled for execution in a Chinese prison. It's Muir's last day before retiring (cliché alert!), and Bishop is being deliberately sacrificed by oily CIA officials to ensure healthy trade with China. Muir has 24 hours to rescue Bishop and his perfunctory love interest (Catherine McCormack), and Spy Game connects the mentor's end-run strategy to flashbacks of his student's exploits in Berlin, Beirut, and beyond. Ambitious but emotionally bland--and not as exciting as Scott's Enemy of the State--Spy Game offers pass-the-torch humor between leather-faced Redford and pretty boy Pitt, and although their dialogue is occasionally limp, the movie compensates with efficient style and substance. --Jeff Shannon
From The New Yorker
Or, blond on blond. Robert Redford plays an old-school C.I.A. agent, a cynical, manipulative sort who harbors a rebellious, anti-bureaucratic streak. Brad Pitt is his protégé, a hotshot who disapproves of his boss's amorality. The movie is set in 1991, on the last day of Redford's career in the agency. Pitt has been arrested by the Chinese, and Michael Frost Beckner and David Arata's complicated screenplay lays out Redford's attempt to save him and intercuts it with flashbacks of their tortuous relationship as it unfolded in locales like Vietnam, Berlin, and Beirut. Tony Scott's visual panache, as always, obscures most of the issues raised by the script. The movie comes out against the callousness of using people for political ends while treating most of the people around the two gleaming stars as callously as possible. -David Denby
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker
Customer Reviews
Great Movies
This is a great spy film with Robert Redford and Brad Pitt. You must watch every scene very closely because there is so much going on that you don't realize what's happening. Every time I watch the DVD I see something I didn't pick up on before. Excellent movie.
Intelligence Case Officer Training - Key Lesson
This film has excellent examples of the psychological dimensions of clandestine case officers. I particular like the training sequences. The focus on people skills, psychology, etc. I believe a British spy television program revealed that the one training exercise in which Brad Pitt (the trainee) has to get invited onto an apartment owner's balcony with the owner present and give a toast to Redford (the trainer) down below within minutes/seconds, was inspired from Mossad's officer training program.
The movie is action packed and is very "smart" and "sharp" and I highly recommend it.
Spy Game
This is a film I've been wanting for a long time but I really got stung with this purchase ! The Format is HD DVD which, I found out AFTER I opened the package and attempted to view it, not only does not work with MY DVD Player, is apparently in a Format that is destined for the cemetary. I'm Sure Amazon was aware of that fact when they listed it for sale and, in fact, it Was identified as being HD DVD. However, to a neophyte like me, it didn't "Ring a Bell" that I wouldn't be able to play it without a special HD DVD player. A Prominent Warning would have been a Nice thing to do. NOW, I'm stuck with it because "opened" merchandise cannot be returned for a Refund.





