When his mentor is taken captive by a disgraced Arab sheik, a killer-for-hire is forced into action. His mission: kill three members of Britain's elite Special Air Service responsible for hi... Read allWhen his mentor is taken captive by a disgraced Arab sheik, a killer-for-hire is forced into action. His mission: kill three members of Britain's elite Special Air Service responsible for his son's deaths.When his mentor is taken captive by a disgraced Arab sheik, a killer-for-hire is forced into action. His mission: kill three members of Britain's elite Special Air Service responsible for his son's deaths.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 8 nominations
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSir Ranulph Fiennes, an English adventurer, polar explorer and former S.A.S. man is the author of The Feather Men, the novel on which this film is adapted. Although he has often claimed the novel was a true story, the families of the real dead S.A.S. men named in the novel who died on S.A.S. exercises, and the S.A.S. themselves publicly attacked it as sick exploitation and complete fiction. The S.A.S. even went on the record to disown both Fiennes and the book, with Lieutenant Colonel Ian Smith telling the Daily Mail "It was utter bullshit", the figment of a fertile imagination. What was really upsetting, was that it was making a story out of a tragedy." Maggie Denaro, the widow of one of the dead S.A.S. men said of Fiennes, "It's time he grew up. He's made his money out of the book. He should come clean. When the book came out saying Mike had been murdered, we knew it wasn't true. But that didn't stop our children from being upset when other people believed it." Although Fiennes claims he sent a manuscript of the book to the S.A.S. and the families of the dead men, who gave their approval, they have all unequivocally denied his claim.
- GoofsWhen Hunter sits with Anne in the cafe in Paris the menu items written on the wall have prices in Euros, in 1980 it should have been Francs.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Episode #19.214 (2011)
- SoundtracksDelilah
Composed by Barry Mason (as B. Mason) / Les Reed (as L. Reed)
(c) 1968 Donna Music Limited
Administered by J. Albert & Son Pty Limited
Used with permission
Featured review
The storyline was mildly interesting, about Statham attempting to rescue De Niro from the hands of a sheik who wants Statham to seek and destroy several people that killed the sheik's three sons. The story follows their brief investigations along the way. Statham also recruits Dominic Purcell (Blade Trinity) and another. The investigations give a hint of what they're looking for, then they search and almost always find their target without much trouble. That's the gist of the storyline throughout. No major spikes in the flat line story till the end. Just an observation.
Being a huge action fan, this is what I paid to see after a good storyline. The action fight scenes featuring Statham are poor at best, not because of Statham or his enemy, but do to the director of photography filming too tight on the action, and the editor cutting every split second to another angle, resulting in the infamous "What just happened? Who hit who? What the hell is going on here?" This style is mostly reserved for low budget TV shows, though I can think of one that puts this movie's fight scenes to shame. A wasted opportunity probably in an attempt to rush through the scene. If film makers think action fans don't care, they need to think again and stop giving us a jumbled, incoherent mess of a fight scene.
The shoot outs are decent, but De Niro barely has his moments, since the story line keeps him as the one needing rescue. (See Ronin for his best).
Beware to those looking for Jason Statham in a new classic fight scene. It's not found here.
Being a huge action fan, this is what I paid to see after a good storyline. The action fight scenes featuring Statham are poor at best, not because of Statham or his enemy, but do to the director of photography filming too tight on the action, and the editor cutting every split second to another angle, resulting in the infamous "What just happened? Who hit who? What the hell is going on here?" This style is mostly reserved for low budget TV shows, though I can think of one that puts this movie's fight scenes to shame. A wasted opportunity probably in an attempt to rush through the scene. If film makers think action fans don't care, they need to think again and stop giving us a jumbled, incoherent mess of a fight scene.
The shoot outs are decent, but De Niro barely has his moments, since the story line keeps him as the one needing rescue. (See Ronin for his best).
Beware to those looking for Jason Statham in a new classic fight scene. It's not found here.
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Sát Thủ Chuyên Nghiệp
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $70,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $25,124,966
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $9,352,008
- Sep 25, 2011
- Gross worldwide
- $57,084,522
- Runtime1 hour 56 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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