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Lord of War

 
Movies:

Lord of War

 
  • Director: Andrew Niccol
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Political Drama, Crime Thriller
  • Themes: Rise and Fall Stories, Political Corruption, Sibling Relationships
  • Main Cast: Nicolas Cage, Jared Leto, Bridget Moynahan, Ian Holm, Ethan Hawke
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 122 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

One man demonstrates how to get rich selling warring nations the tools of their deadly trade in this dark comedy drama. Yuri Orlov (Nicolas Cage) is an opportunistic businessman who stumbled into a gold mine after the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union. Huge caches of Soviet weapons became available at bargain prices (and even for free if one wasn't above stealing), and as literally billions of dollars' worth of Soviet military technology disappeared, it began finding its way into the hands of weapons dealers eager to sell it to the highest bidder. Orlov was one such dealer who found plenty of buyers for guns and military gear in unstable Third World nations, who paid cash and didn't appreciate too many questions. Orlov's exploits in the arms business quickly made him a very rich man, but they've also led to some unwanted attention from Jack Valentine (Ethan Hawke), an Interpol agent who is convinced Orlov isn't playing by the rules. Inspired by a true story, Lord of War also features Jared Leto, Ian Holm, Bridget Moynahan, and Donald Sutherland. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Eamonn Walker - Baptiste Senior; Sammi Rotibi - Baptiste Junior

Credit

Stephen H. Carter - Art Director, James E. Vidal - Associate Producer, Mindy Marin - Casting, Doug Hansen - Co-producer, Elisabetta Beraldo - Costume Designer, Matthew Penry-Davey - First Assistant Director, Andrew Niccol - Director, Zach Staenberg - Editor, Ronaldo Vasconcellos - Executive Producer, Gary Hamilton - Executive Producer, Michael Mendelsohn - Executive Producer, James D. Stern - Executive Producer, Andreas Schmid - Executive Producer, Christopher Eberts - Executive Producer, Bradley Cramp - Executive Producer, Fabrice Gianfermi - Executive Producer, Antonio Pinto - Composer (Music Score), John Bissell - Musical Direction/Supervision, Jean-Vincent Puzos - Production Designer, Amir Mokri - Cinematographer, Nicolas Cage - Producer, Andrew Niccol - Producer, Andreas Grosch - Producer, Christopher Roberts - Producer, Philippe Rousselet - Producer, Norm Golightly - Producer, Derek Mansvelt - Sound/Sound Designer, Eddie Yansick - Stunts Coordinator, Tyronne Stevenson - Special Effects Supervisor, Andrew Niccol - Screenwriter, Yann Blondel - Visual Effects Supervisor, Dane A. Davis - Supervising Sound Editor, Eric Warren Lindemann - Supervising Sound Editor, L'E.S.T. - Visual Effects, Donna Hamilton - Set Decorator

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Wikipedia: Lord of War
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Lord of War
Directed by Andrew Niccol
Produced by Nicolas Cage
Chris Roberts
Andreas Grosch
Written by Andrew Niccol
Starring Nicolas Cage
Ethan Hawke
Jared Leto
Bridget Moynahan
Eamonn Walker
Music by Antonio Pinto
Cinematography Amir Mokri
Editing by Zach Staenberg
Distributed by Lions Gate Entertainment
Release date(s) September 16, 2005
Running time 123 mins
Country United States
Language English, Russian, Spanish
Budget US$42 million
Gross revenue Domestic: $24,149,632
Worldwide: $72,617,068

Lord of War is a 2005 political crime thriller written and directed by Andrew Niccol which starred Nicolas Cage. It was released in the United States on September 16, 2005, with the DVD following on January 17, 2006 and the Blu-ray Disc on July 27, 2006. Cage plays the illegal arms dealer with similarities to Russian arms dealers Viktor Bout[1][2][3] and Leonid Minin. The film was officially endorsed by the human rights group Amnesty International for highlighting the trafficking of weapons by the international arms industry.[4][5]

Contents

Plot

The movie begins with Yuri Orlov (Nicolas Cage) standing in a sea of spent shell casings. The rest of the movie is told in flashback, starting in 1982 and ending in the completion of the opening scene. The opening credits sequence shows a 7.62x39mm round being produced in the Soviet Union and going through various stages before getting fired from an AK-47 and travelling through the head of a child soldier during a war in Africa.

Through voice-over, Orlov describes how he first became an arms dealer. Yuri and his family came to the United States from Soviet Ukraine when he was a young boy. His family pretends to be Jewish for favourable immigration conditions to leave the Soviet Union, however the pretension led to his father ultimately converting to Judaism. His family owns a restaurant, which Yuri sees as providing a necessity as people have to eat. After Yuri sees a Russian mobster kill two would-be assassins, he decides to fulfill another of mankind's basic necessities: guns. He begins his career by selling Uzis after coming in contact with someone in his father's temple.

Yuri partners up with his chef brother Vitaly (Jared Leto) after trying to convince him that he had no future cooking. Before beginning his career, he approaches Simeon Weisz (Ian Holm), a seasoned arms dealer, at an arms convention in Berlin with a business proposal. Weisz turns him down, dismissing Yuri as an amateur and chides him for not "taking sides". Yuri mocks Weisz for selling weapons to both Iran and Iraq during their 1980-88 war, but Weisz says he wanted both sides to lose. Yuri gets his first break selling M-16s after the 1982 Lebanon War and becomes "an equal opportunity merchant of death", selling guns to all sides. Yuri develops multiple identities (complete with appropriate paperwork and ID cards) and stores his records and paperwork in a metal security container.

As he grows, Yuri (through voiceover) tells of his first incident with Jack Valentine (Ethan Hawke), an Interpol agent who cannot be bought with money and is "that rarest type of law enforcement officer...the kind who knew I was breaking the law, but wasn't willing to break it himself to bust me." Their first encounter is when Yuri is on the ship Kristol smuggling a shipment of weapons. When he learns that Valentine is after him, he changes the boat's name to Kono, and his first interaction plays out smoothly in Yuri's favor.

During a business deal with a Colombian drug lord, Yuri is paid in cocaine instead of cash. He argues, but eventually accepts the payment after being shot. Vitaly and he both get high on cocaine, but Vitaly becomes addicted, and Yuri checks him into a rehabilitation center. From that point onward, he conducts his arms business alone.

Shortly afterwards, he begins to court Ava Fontaine (Bridget Moynahan), a model. He books a photo shoot and the entire hotel where it is supposed to take place so that they have the whole area to themselves. After impressing her, they marry, and later have a child named Nikolai.

On the day that Nikolai begins to walk, the Soviet Union dissolves. Yuri rushes to Ukraine after watching Gorbachev's Christmas Day 1991 speech of resignation on television. He contacts his uncle, Dmitri, a general of the former Soviet Army, and begins buying his tanks and AK-47s to expand his inventory, explaining in detail how the AK-47 is the most reliable assault rifle in the world. Weisz comes back and attempts to deal with both Yuri and Dimitri, but is rejected by both. Valentine attempts to stop Yuri again as he tries to ship off a Mil Mi-24; fortunately, a young Soviet Army mechanic is able to remove the weapons and because of a loophole in international law that does not classify either of them as weapons of war as long as they are shipped separately, Valentine is forced to let him go. Shortly afterwards, Weisz sets up a car bomb intended for Yuri but he gives the car to Dimitri, which results in his uncle's death.

Yuri moves on to selling arms to the West African dictator of Liberia, André Baptiste (Eamonn Walker, strongly similar to real-life Liberian warlord Charles Taylor), who pays in blood diamonds. After digging through his garbage, Valentine learns that Yuri will be making a cargo run to Sierra Leone. Valentine has fighter planes successfully intercept the plane in flight, but Yuri makes an emergency landing on a dirt road, and gives away all the guns to local villagers before Valentine can arrive and detain him. Valentine handcuffs and detains (actually leaving him in the middle of nowhere) Yuri for 24 hours before being forced to release him. While Yuri is waiting next to the An-12 aircraft, the villagers are shown dismantling the plane for scraps.

Yuri makes his way back to Monrovia, where Baptiste invites him to kill the captured Weisz, who simply states he came to Liberia to sell weapons to Baptiste's enemies. Yuri is reluctant, but does not tell Baptiste to stop pulling the trigger until he has done so and killed Weisz. Weisz later appears in a drug-induced hallucination and tells Yuri once again to "take sides".

Valentine keeps Yuri under surveillance, and one day he reveals to his wife Ava that Yuri is a major weapons dealer. Ava pleads with Yuri to stop, and he does, instead choosing to exploit the resources of the third world nations. However, he dislikes the business, complaining that the profit margins are low and that there is too much competition compared to illegal arms.

Yuri reenters the arms market when Baptiste approaches him. He is reluctant, but goes when Baptiste tells him that he will pay more than the usual rate. Yuri decides to bring Vitaly along because he is nervous about the current climate of Liberia; however, they later learn that the sale is actually taking place in Sierra Leone to the Revolutionary United Front. Yuri notes (to paraphrase), "all these groups call themselves freedom this and democracy that, when they're really just worse bunches of oppressors than the last bunch." During the transaction, moreover, Vitaly witnesses a group of RUF rebels killing a mother and her child with machetes, and tells Yuri the entire village will be massacred if the deal comes through. He pleads with Yuri to stop the transaction, but Yuri says it's not their conflict. Vitaly responds by taking a grenade and blowing up a truck with half of the guns. Several guards watching the transaction shoot Vitaly to death. Yuri still accepts the deal and all the villagers are then slaughtered.

Yuri ships his brother's body back to the United States with him. He pays a local doctor to remove the lead from Vitaly's body, but one bullet remains after sloppy surgery and he is stopped by customs. In the meantime, while being followed by Jack Valentine, Ava finds Yuri's security container, which is definitive proof of Yuri's arms dealing. Ava takes their son and leaves him. When Yuri calls his parents, his mother says, "Both my sons are dead." Valentine detains Yuri and tells him that he has a long jail sentence ahead of him.

However, Yuri reveals to Valentine that the very reasons that Yuri should be incarcerated for are also the same reasons that he'll walk free; his existence is a "necessary evil", as the people he supplies are often "the enemies of your enemies". He goes on saying that sometimes the U.S. Government needs a "freelancer" like himself to supply those that they'd rather not be seen supplying. Yuri then predicts that a high-ranking officer will come, congratulate Valentine, and then order him to free Yuri because of his necessity. Surely enough, a high-ranking U.S. military officer does indeed come, and Yuri is released.

A free man again, he returns to selling arms. The movie ends by proclaiming on-screen that it is "based on actual events," and that while private arms dealing around the world flourishes, the U.S., the UK, France, Russia and China are the world's leading arms suppliers, and that these countries are the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, with a veto over any United Nations General Assembly ban on international arms trafficking.

War zones featured

Cast

Music

Opening sequence is filmed on the song For What It's Worth by Buffalo Springfield.

DVD release

The UK DVD release of Lord of War includes, prior to the film, an advert for Amnesty International, showing the AK-47 being sold on a shopping channel of the style popular on cable networks. The American DVD release includes a bonus feature that shows the various weapons used in the movie, allowing viewers to click on each weapon to get statistics about their physical dimensions and histories.

Reception

Critical

The film received a 61% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and it also received a special mention for excellence in film making from the National Board of Review.

Box office

The film grossed $9,390,144 on its opening weekend (2,814 theaters, $3,336 average). After the film's 7-weeks release it grossed a total of $24,149,632 on the domestic market in the US, and $48,467,436 overseas.[6]

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Lord of War" Read more

 

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