Contents



It's Not Paranoria If They're Really After You

1998




Enemy Of The State(1998)  

Directed by 
Tony Scott    
  
Writing credits 
David Marconi    
  
Cast (in credits order) 
Will Smith ....  Robert Clayton Dean  
Gene Hackman ....  Brill/Edward Lyle  
Jon Voight ....  Thomas Brian Reynolds  
Lisa Bonet ....  Rachel Banks  
Regina King ....  Carla Dean  
Stuart Wilson (II) ....  Congressman Albert  
Laura Cayouette ....  Christa Hawkins  
Tom Sizemore ....  Pintero  
Loren Dean ....  Agent Hicks  
Barry Pepper ....  Agent David Pratt  
Ian Hart ....  Bingham  
Jake Busey ....  Krug  
Scott Caan ....  Jones  
Jason Lee (I) ....  Daniel Zavitz  
Gabriel Byrne ....  Fake Brill  
James LeGros ....  Jerry Miller  
Dan Butler ....  Shaffer  
Jack Black ....  Fiedler  
Jamie Kennedy ....  Jamie  
Bodhi Elfman ....  Van  
Jacob Chambers ....  Davis  
Alexandra Balahoutis ....  Martha  
Anna Gunn ....  Emily Reynolds  
Jascha Washington ....  Eric Dean  
Rebeca Silva ....  Marie the Nanny  
Bobby Boriello ....  Dylan  
Carl Mergenthaler   
Mattias Kraemer   
Steve Uhrig ....  Electronics store merchant  
Lillo Brancato   
John Capodice   
Vic Manni   
T.R. Richards   
Ivana Marina ....  Ruby's Sales Clerk (as Ivana Milavich)  
Patsy Grady Abrams   
Beatriz Mayoral   
Kasey Lynn Quinn   
Elizabeth Berman   
Donna W. Scott   
Allison Sie   
Michael Andolini   
Arthur J. Nascarella   
Grant Heslov   
John Cenatiempo   
Joyce Flick Wendl   
Frank Medrano ....  Bartender  
Dennis Fahey (II)   
Albert Wong   
Christopher B. Lawrence   
John Haynes Walker   
Joseph Patrick Kelly   
Lennox Brown   
rest of cast listed alphabetically  
Paul M. Clary ....  Ferry Person (uncredited)  
Seth Green ....  Selby  
Carlos Gómez (II) ....  FBI agent  
Philip Baker Hall ....  Silverberg (uncredited)  
Phil Hawn ....  NSA Civilian Technician (uncredited)  
Eric Keung ....  Chinese Restaurant Cook (uncredited)  
Larry King (I) ....  Himself  
Jason Robards ....  Congressman Hammersly  
Pete Sutton ....  Dean House Cop  
Jade Wu  (uncredited)  
  
Produced by 
Jerry Bruckheimer    
Chad Oman   (executive)  
Pat Sandston   (associate)  
James W. Skotchdopole   (executive)  
  
Original music by 
Harry Gregson-Williams    
Trevor Rabin    
  
Cinematography by 
Daniel Mindel    
  
Film Editing by 
Chris Lebenzon    
  
Casting 
Jeanne McCarthy    
Victoria Thomas    
  
Production Design by 
Benjamín Fernández    
  
Art Direction 
Jennifer A. Davis    
James J. Murakami    
  
Set Decoration 
Peter J. Kelly    
  
Costume Design by 
Marlene Stewart    
  
Assistant Director 
Artist W. Robinson ....  assistant director  
  
Sound Department 
William B. Kaplan ....  production sound mixer  
Peggy Names ....  sound utility
utility sound  
Dan O'Connell ....  foley artist  
Earl Sampson (II) ....  boom operator  
Dan Sharp ....  sound re-recordist  
  
Special Effects 
Tim Burke ....  digital effects supervisor  
Robin Griffin ....  visual effects producer  
Emma Norton ....  digital effects producer  
James E. Price ....  visual effects supervisor  
John Seymour (II) ....  visual effects editor  
Elyse Struckman ....  special effects purchaser  
Diana Stulic ....  visual effects co-ordinator  
  
Stunts 
Jill Brown ....  stunts  
Jack Carpenter ....  stunts  
  
Other crew 
Hani AlYousif ....  lead digital compositor  
Peter Albert ....  video assist 
video assist 
cable/utility: Washington D.C. (uncredited)
(uncredited) 
William Bowling ....  location manager  
Tim Burke ....  computer graphics supervisor
lead digital compositor  
Alfred J. Caragay ....  24 frame video operator  
Jack Carpenter ....  camera car driver  
Larry Cox (III) ....  technical advisor  
David Diaz (II) ....  transportation dispatcher  
Paul A. Edwards ....  camera operator: "b" camera  
Carol Flaisher ....  location manager  
Scott C. Garrett ....  draper
set dresser  
F. Carl Hansen ....  production assistant (uncredited) 
Stewart Hendler ....  production assistant  
Thomas M. Hicks ....  set dresser
electronics set dresser  
Chris Holt ....  digital graphics supervisor  
Chris Johnson (I) ....  art department assistant  
Jeff Johnson (II) ....  set medic  
Bob Kaiser ....  color timer  
Martin Kaiser ....  surveillance advisor  
Karin Parish Kurz ....  transportation office co-ordinator  
Paul Linford ....  score co-ordinator
music programmer  
Michael Luckeroth ....  transportation captain  
Stephen A. Marinaccio II ....  travel co-ordinator  
Dan Marrow ....  transportation co-ordinator  
Joseph Martin (II) ....  location liaison  
Michael Meinardus ....  mechanical effects co-ordinator  
Andrew Menzies ....  set designer  
Zachary Merck ....  intern  
Claudio Miranda (II) ....  chief lighting technician  
Michael Papac ....  property master  
Janice Polley ....  location manager  
Douglas W. Randall ....  set dresser  
Chanel Salzer ....  assistant location manager  
Philip Shanahan ....  second assistant camera  
Chris Shaw (IV) ....  computer graphics artist  
Anthony Simonaitis ....  pyrotechnic foreman  
Mary Beth Smith ....  negative cutter  
Gerald Titus ....  transportation  
Jeffery J. Tufano ....  additional camera operator  
Steve Uhrig ....  surveillance advisor  
Marshall Vernet ....  location consultant  
Peter Vogel (III) ....  assistant production co-ordinator: re-shoots
assistant production co-ordinator: reshoots  
Ben White (III) ....  lead animator  
Mark Jan Wlodarkiewicz ....  temp music editor  
Tim Zaccheo ....  lead animator  
Sean C. Álvarez ....  assistant production accountant
first assistant accountant  
 

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ENEMY OF THE STATE
A film review by Steve Rhodes
Copyright 1998 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****):  ***

Ah, men and their toys. As we learn in ENEMY OF THE STATE, NSA (National Security Agency) has the best. They're to die for. Literally.

Producer Jerry Bruckheimer, the king of the action movies from BEVERLY HILLS COP to ARMAGEDDON, trots out his latest movie, ENEMY OF THE STATE, and it's a dandy. Fast-paced and full of rapid cuts among high tech gadgetry, the movie, directed by Tony Scott (TOP GUN and CRIMSON TIDE), throws believability out the window and happily lets the audience just kick back and have some fun.

As the story opens, a senator, played earnestly by Jason Robards, refuses to support a new telecommunications bill that permits unlimited wiretapping by our nation's federal agencies. Jon Voight, a bimodal actor who either goes for creepy caricature or sincere intelligence, plays NSA section head Thomas Brian Reynolds with impressive credibility and enough brainpower to hold his own among the NSA nerds.

When the senator will not agree to support the bill, Reynolds and his NSA goons kill him. As an environmental scientist named Zavitz, CHASING AMY's Jason Lee accidentally videotapes the murder. A small army of bad guys sweep down on Zavitz, but he manages to drop the tape in Robert Dean's shopping bag at an expensive lingerie shop. This permits the movie's photogenic star, Will Smith, who plays Dean, to hobnob with sexy models, dressed only in revealing bras and panties. And it gives an opening for one of the funny script's best interchanges. Dean later jokes that the reason he was there was to pickup some items since he likes to cross-dress on the weekends.

The rest of the movie is one long, high-tech, cat and mouse chase with Reynolds and company going after Dean. Will Smith, being Will Smith, semi-plausibly plays a guy who can elude dozens of guys with guns, tracking devices, helicopters and spy satellites. They throw everything but nuclear weapons at him, but he comes out almost unscathed.

The real star in the movie isn't Smith, Voight, or Gene Hackman, who shows up at the midway point, but it's the technology. The movie spends most of its time and bucks on demonstrations of advanced technical hardware. And it also provides somber lessons in ways to avoid being trapped in our government's crosshairs.

Spy satellites, aimed at us, are so powerful that they can observe the stains on our clothes. We learn that you should never look up, otherwise they will get a make on you. One shouldn't shop at convenience stores or any place with a surveillance camera. And most of all, never use a phone, even a pay phone.

Since Reynolds can't find the tape, he sets out to destroy Dean's life. When a rogue agency goes after you, your reputation is history faster than you can cry foul. Dean's job and marriage quickly go into the toilet as Reynolds fabricates a stream of lies against him.

The always-fascinating Gene Hackman shows up in the movie's second half, playing a mysterious, free-lance investigator named only Brill. With black, horn-rimmed glasses and a quarter-inch haircut, he's the spitting image of your grandfather's fishing buddy. Brill, dressed in thrift-shop clothes rejects, is, of course, an ex-NSA agent who hates and distrusts his old employer.

The movie, which becomes highly repetitious, gets a second wind at the end. The film's creative last half-hour, when Dean and Brill turn tables on NSA, is easily the best part. It's the sort of ending that's liable to set audiences cheering. It did ours. As intriguing as ENEMY OF THE STATE is, it is just as forgettable. Entertainment without pretensions of being anything more, a typically satisfying Jerry Bruckheimer movie.

ENEMY OF THE STATE runs 2:08. It is rated R for violence and profanity and would be fine for teenagers.

Email: Steve.Rhodes@InternetReviews.com Web: www.InternetReviews.com




Have I seen this movie: Yes
And what did I think: Enemy Of The State is smart, thrilling conspiracy story with great acting by Will Smith and Gene Hackman. Will Smith plays Robert Clayton Dean, a lawyer who unwillingly is brought into a conspiracy situation of a murdered congressman. His whole life is destroyed and is in danger of being killed by these conspirators. High tech gadgets and bugs are used to track him, and the only help he gets is from Gene Hackman, an ex government employee. Enemy has a lot of high paced chase scenes and action as well. I was a little disappoined with the end however. Jon Voight, who plays the man behind the killing, and his men are killed in a shootout which is ultimately a misunderstanding between the two sides. I would have liked to see a little more interaction between Smith & Voight. There are a lot of better movies of this genre, but Enemy of The State fares pretty well itself. I gave it 3.5 out of 5 stars.

Review written June 18, 1999
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