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The Kingdom

 
Movies:

The Kingdom

  • Director: Peter Berg
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Political Drama
  • Themes: Hostage Situations, Behind Enemy Lines, Race Against Time
  • Main Cast: Jamie Foxx, Chris Cooper, Jennifer Garner, Jason Bateman, Jeremy Piven, Danny Huston
  • Release Year: 2007
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 109 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

In the aftermath of a deadly attack on American forces in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, diplomats are slow to act, but meanwhile, FBI special agent Ronald Fleury (Jamie Foxx) assembles a secret team of U.S. counter-terrorism investigators to enter the city and find the criminal behind what has quickly become an international incident. The crew, however, finds their attempt to capture the perpetrators stalled by bureaucracy and their presence unwelcome. Desperate to gain the trust they need to accomplish their mission in just five days, the team enlists the aid of a Saudi Arabian police officer (Ashraf Barhoum), but as the agents infiltrate the dark and complex world of the Saudi crime scene, they find that the perpetrator's next target may be them. Directed by Peter Berg, The Kingdom also stars Jennifer Garner, Chris Cooper, and Jason Bateman. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide

Review

The Kingdom may just be the first action movie set against the modern war on Islamic terrorism. Unfortunately, it seems pretty clear that director Peter Berg set out to make an ensemble sociopolitical thriller in the style of Syriana. His movie does start out on that track. Not only does the first act acquaint us with numerous players in various arenas, both foreign and domestic, but unlike Syriana, Berg's film deigns to help the audience sort out who's who, supplying handy title cards as characters get introduced. What's strange is that he doesn't actually need them, because most of these characters immediately drop out of the plot. The Kingdom soon abandons its Washington political wranglings and focuses exclusively on the four agents on the ground in Saudi Arabia. At first the focus on this small group sustains the picture. The investigation, such as it is, gets bogged down by the stark difference in forensic procedures (or lack thereof), the friction over whether the oppressive regime will let them do their jobs, and the treatment of Jennifer Garner's character in a society where women can't show their faces in public. (Adding to the tension, the Americans constantly complain and drop f-bombs). The Kingdom mostly retains its sense of realism in these sections, a prized attribute indeed for films dealing with the Middle East. It's all the more problematic, then, that the last 30 minutes get sucked up by an improbable and protracted shootout. These video game aesthetics -- where every character has as many bullets and/or combat skills as he or she needs -- have no place in the movie Berg was originally trying to create. They leave The Kingdom feeling like it "cut and run" on its instincts toward complexity, and opted for the easier route of explosions and simplistic resolutions. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Richard Jenkins - James Grace; Ashraf Barhoum - Col. Faris Al Ghazi; Ali Suliman - Sergeant Haytham; Tim McGraw - Aaron Jackson; Kyle Chandler - Francis Manner; Frances Fisher - Elaine Flowers; Kelly Au Coin - Ellis Leach; Anna Deavere Smith - Maricella Canavesio; Minka Kelly - Miss Ross; Amy Hunter - Lyla Fleury; T.J. Burnett - Kevin Fleury; Omar Berdouni - Prince Ahmed Bin Khaled; Raad Rawi - Prince Thamer; Mahmoud Said - Genearl Al Abdulmalik; Hezi Saddik - Abu Harnza; Uri Gavriel - Izz Al Din; Nick Faltas - Haytham's Father; Ahmed Badran - 35-Year-Old Son; Eli Georges El-Khoury - 15-Year-Old Grandson; Tom Bresnahan - Rex Burr; Yasmine Hanani - Aunt; Trevor St. John - Earl Ripon; Ashley Scott - Janine Ripon; Sarah Hunley - Maddy Ripon; Bordy Tardy - Teddy Manner; Hope Fogle - Mick; Sidney Ortiz - LuLu; Noah Pittenger - Classmate; Damian Foster - Haytham Driver; Kevin Brief - Range Rover Driver; Brian Mahoney - Pitcher; Martin Foxwell - Mom at Game; Kavita Parbhakar - Mom at Game; Hrach Titizian - Suicide Bomber; Munthir Salih - Suicide Bomber; Merik Tadros - Reporter; Sean Donnellan - Reporter; Richard Klein - FBI Agent; John Paul Castorena - FBI Agent; Antonio Evans - FBI Agent; Maryellen Aviano - FBI Agent; Marc Flanagan - FBI Agent; Brian Gehl - Stud in Bar; Ali Abboud - Irate Guard; David Brown - Man at Hotel; Firas Salloum - Airport SANG Officer; Anthony Batarse - Inner-Circle; Nabeel Kort - Police Officer; Shant Demirjian - Police Officer; Assad Mohamed - Bomb Site Investigator; Yaser Alamoodi - Bomb Site Worker; Haider Almosawi - Bomb Site Worker; Saleem Hassan Erekat - Bomb Site Worker; Jasim Tahir - Tank Gunner; Maitham Al-Zubfidy - Main Gate Guard; Alawi Al-Bidery - Machine Gunner; Gino Salvano - Special Forces Officer; Waleed Alsadi - Guard at Café; Mohammed Mohammed - Internet Teenager; Fouad Al-Hamedany - Internet Teenager; Ahmed Al-Ibrahim - Game Player; Yunus Hassan - Game Player; Charbel Tourna - Game Player; Anthony Salibi - Game Player; Bassam O. Saeed - Al Ghazi Aid; Hasan Chaudhry - Al Ghazi Runner; Nick Hermz - Passport Officer; Eyad Elbitar - Kidnapper; Sala Baker - Kidnapper; Kasem Al-Tamimi - Elderly Man; Damian Hajjar - Suweidi Resident; Mario Mercado II - Suweidi Resident; Gaith Al-Jaberi - Al Ghazi's Son

Credit

Karen Wakefield - Art Director, Patrick M. Sullivan, Jr. - Art Director, Todd Holland - Art Director, Maria Williams - Associate Producer, Amanda Mackey-Johnson - Casting, Kate Dowd - Casting, Bruria Albec - Casting, Cathy Sandrich Gelfond - Casting, Pete Anthony - Conductor, K.C. Hodenfield - Co-producer, Susan Matheson - Costume Designer, Peter Berg - Director, Phil Neilson - Second Unit Director, Kevin Stitt - Editor, Colby Parker, Jr. - Editor, Mary Parent - Executive Producer, Steven P. Saeta - Executive Producer, John Cameron - Executive Producer, Sarah Aubrey - Executive Producer, Ryan Kavanaugh - Executive Producer, David Thornsberry - Location Manager, John V Latenser - Location Manager, Angus Maresch - Location Manager, Danny Elfman - Composer (Music Score), Kathy Nelson - Musical Direction/Supervision, Mitchell Dubin - Camera Operator, Maurice K. McGuire - Camera Operator, Lucas Bielan - Camera Operator, Tom Duffield - Production Designer, Mauro Fiore - Cinematographer, Steven P. Saeta - Production Manager, Leigh Clarke - Production Manager, Michael Mann - Producer, Scott Stuber - Producer, Tim Smythe - Producer, Aaron Haye - Set Designer, Willie D. Burton - Sound/Sound Designer, Phil Neilson - Stunts Coordinator, Keith Woulard - Stunts Coordinator, Dave Watkins - Special Effects Supervisor, Matthew Michael Carnahan - Screenwriter, Paul Hughen - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Darin Moran - Second Unit Camera, Patrick B. OBrien - Second Unit Camera, Anthony Smythe - Second Unit Camera, John "D.J." Desjardin - Visual Effects Supervisor, Eric Davis - Gaffer, Mark Sherman - Gaffer, Robert D. West - Production Supervisor, Stephanie Antosca - Production Supervisor, Douglas Fox - Properties Master, David Fencl - Properties Master, Gregory King - Re-Recording Mixer, Rick Kline - Re-Recording Mixer, Alexa Alden - Script Supervisor, Becky Boyle - Script Supervisor, Jeff Okabayashi - Second Assistant Director, Christian Clarke - Second Assistant Director, Burt Dalton - Special Effects Coordinator, John Frazier - Special Effects Coordinator, Kaya Smythe - Special Effects Coordinator, Gregory King - Supervising Sound Editor, Darren King - Supervising Sound Editor, Cory Geryak - Chief Lighting Technician, Michael Diersing - Construction Coordinator, Dana Hart - Costumes Supervisor, Mark A. Peterson - Costumes Supervisor, Melissa D. Forney - Key Hairstylist, Lori Scowley - Production Accountant, Vinod Patel - Production Accountant, Ronald R. Reiss - Set Decorator, Derrick Mitchell - Visual Effects Editor, Roxie Germain - Department Head Hair, Bill Myer - Department Head Makeup, K.C. Hodenfield - Assistant Director, Steve Battaglia - Assistant Director

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Wikipedia: The Kingdom (film)
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The Kingdom

Promotional movie poster
Directed by Peter Berg
Written by Matthew Michael Carnahan
Starring Jamie Foxx
Ashraf Barhom
Chris Cooper
Jennifer Garner
Jason Bateman
Kyle Chandler
Richard Jenkins
Jeremy Piven
Ali Suliman
Music by Danny Elfman
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) United States:
September 28, 2007
United Kingdom:
October 5, 2007
Running time 109 min.
Country United States
Language English
Arabic
Budget $80 million
Gross revenue $86,578,768

The Kingdom is a 2007 film directed by Peter Berg and starring Jamie Foxx, Chris Cooper, Jennifer Garner, Jason Bateman, Ashraf Barhom, with Kyle Chandler, Jeremy Piven and Ali Suliman.

The film is fictional, but inspired by bombings at the Riyadh compound on May 12, 2003 and the Khobar housing complex on June 26, 1996 in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The story follows a team of FBI agents who investigate the bombing of a foreign-workers facility in Saudi Arabia. Screenwriter Matthew Michael Carnahan has summarised the plot as "What would a murder investigation look like on Mars?”[1]

The film was screened at the Edinburgh International Film Festival as its yearly 'Surprise Movie' on 22 August 2007.[2]

Contents

Plot

The opening scene of the movie explains the origins of U.S.-Saudi diplomatic relations and how energy exploitation has transformed the Middle East through a timeline sequence. It portrays the conflicts that have risen since the late 1940s for the rightful ownership of the oil industry. This includes the Gulf War in Iraq and al-Qaeda's growing network of terrorism. Eventually, it explains the 9/11 terrorist attacks and how the majority of the hijackers were Saudis. This raises serious questions on the relationship between Saudi Arabia and the United States. The plot begins with the current struggle of Saudi Arabia and the kingdom's efforts to stand control of their country against terrorist extremists.

During a softball game at an American oil company housing compound in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, al-Qaeda terrorists set off a bomb, killing many Americans and Saudis in the process. The terrorists impersonate members of the Saudi State Police. While one team hijacks a car and shoots up residents of the area, another runs out onto the softball diamond, pretending to aid the Americans, but then reveals that he is a suicide bomber and blows himself up, killing everyone near him. Sergeant Haytham (Ali Suliman) of the Saudi state police, disables the stolen Saudi Police vehicle and kills the terrorists. A short time later, the FBI Legal Attache in Saudi Arabia, Special Agent Francis Manner (Kyle Chandler), calls up his colleague Special Agent Ronald Fleury (Jamie Foxx) to tell him about the attack. Shortly afterwards, a second bomb explodes in the compound killing Manner and more people.

At FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C., Fleury briefs his rapid deployment team on the attack and casualties. During the briefing, Special Agent Janet Mayes (Jennifer Garner), a forensic examiner, breaks down in tears upon hearing of Francis' death. Fleury whispers something into her ear which causes her to control her emotions. While the U.S. Justice Department and the U.S. State Department hinder FBI efforts to investigate the attack, Fleury blackmails the Saudi ambassador into allowing an FBI investigative team into Saudi Arabia. Departing from Andrews Air Force Base, Fleury and his team of Mayes, Leavitt (Jason Bateman), an intelligence analyst and Special Agent Grant Sykes (Chris Cooper), a bomb technician, go to Saudi Arabia. Arriving at Prince Sultan Air Base, they are met by Colonel Faris al-Ghazi (Ashraf Barhom), the commander of the Saudi State Police Force providing security at the compound. Fleury soon realizes that Colonel al-Ghazi is not in charge of running the investigation. In actuality, the investigation is being run by General Al Abdulmalik (Mahmoud Said) of the Saudi National Guard, who does not give Fleury and his team permission to investigate. Rather, they are to observe the Saudi investigation.

When the FBI team is invited to the palace of Saudi Prince Ahmed bin Khaled (Omar Berdouni) for a dinner, Mayes is excluded because of her gender. While at the palace, Fleury persuades the Prince that Colonel al-Ghazi is a natural detective and should be allowed to lead the investigation. With this new change in leadership, the Americans are allowed a more hands-on approach to the crime scene. While searching for evidence, Sergeant Haytham and Sykes discover that the second bomb was detonated in an ambulance, using marbles as projectiles. Fleury learns that the brother of one of the terrorists had access to ambulances and police uniforms. Colonel al-Ghazi orders a SWAT team to raid the house, managing to kill a few heavily armed terrorists. Following the raid, the team discovers valuable intelligence, including multiple photos of the U.S. and other Western embassies in Riyadh. Soon afterwards, Fleury and his team are notified by the U.S. Embassy Deputy Chief of Mission Damon Schmidt (Jeremy Piven) that they have been ordered to return to the United States. However, Fleury and al-Ghazi both believed that the men that they had just killed were just amateur fighters and were not the real planners behind the attacks.

On their way to King Khalid International Airport, Fleury notices a youth watching their convoy from an overpass, and then sees that the last SUV of their convoy has stopped far behind them, he then notices a speeding car coming towards them and grabs the wheel from Sergeant Haytham which allows them to partially evade the collision that occurs when the speeding car runs into the first SUV of their convoy, setting off a trunk full of explosives. Their SUV, the third one in their convoy, hits the first SUV killing the men inside. The fourth SUV finally drives up and the men inside pull out Leavitt, throw him into the back and drive away while a second car drives by to shoot the surviving Americans. Fleury manages to wound one attacker, and al-Ghazi commandeers a civilian vehicle to chase the fourth SUV and the other car into the dangerous Suweidi neighborhood of Riyadh. As they pull up, a gunman launches rocket propelled grenades at them and a fierce fire fight starts. Inside the complex, Leavitt is tied up and gagged while his attackers prepare to tape a video of his beheading.

After having killed their attackers, al-Ghazi decides that three of them must enter and find Leavitt and two must stay behind and cover the entrance. While Sykes and Haytham watch the entrance, al-Ghazi, Fleury and Mayes enter the building, following a blood trail and manage to finish off many other gunmen inside. Mayes, separate from the other two, scares a little girl in an apartment, and she enters to find a family with little children, their mother and grandfather. She yells at them to stay put and goes across the hall to another apartment to find Leavitt and his attackers. She kills the remaining insurgents, and al-Ghazi and the team start to leave. However, Mayes feels unsettled about the little girl, and walks in to give the girl a lollipop. In return the girl gives her a marble, matching the ones pieced together earlier from the bomb scene. Fleury then realises that there is a trail of blood leading to the back of the apartment, and al-Ghazi sees the grandfather, suspects something and asks to help him up in order to inspect his hand. When the old man gives him his hand, al-Ghazi sees that the man is missing the fingers that[3] is missing in the terrorist groups many videos and confirms his idea that the grandfather is the terrorist leader. Abu Hamza's teenage grandson walks out of the bedroom and manages to shoot al-Ghazi in the neck twice with a pistol before it jams, prompting Fleury to kill him. Abu Hamza then feebly pulls out an assault rifle and Haytham puts three shots in his chest. As Abu Hamza dies, his younger grandson hugs him and Abu Hamza whispers something into his ear to calm the child down. Al-Ghazi dies in Fleury's arms.

At Al-Ghazi's house, Fleury and Haytham meet his family. Fleury tells his son that al-Ghazi was his good friend, mirroring a similar scene earlier in the movie where he comforted Special Agent Manner's son. Fleury and his team return to the U.S., where they are commended by FBI Director James Grace (Richard Jenkins) for their outstanding work. Afterwards, Leavitt asks Fleury what he had whispered to Mayes (earlier in the film) to calm her down. The scene cuts to Abu Hamza's daughter asking her son what his grandfather whispered to him as he was dying. Fleury recalls saying, "We're gonna kill them all," while the grandson tells his mother, "Don't fear them, my child. We are going to kill them all."

Cast

Production

Prior to filming, director Peter Berg spent two weeks in Saudi Arabia doing research for the film.[4] Filming commenced July 10, 2006, on the west side of the old Maricopa County Courthouse in Phoenix, Arizona, USA. Additional scenes were being filmed concurrently in Mesa, Arizona; the scenes at the American compound were shot at the Polytechnic campus of Arizona State University.[5] In some of the trailer frames, saguaro cacti are visible in the background.

While shooting on location in Mesa, Arizona Berg was involved in a fatal accident that resulted in the death of another member of the production team. The SUV he was riding in collided with a Gator all-terrain vehicle driven by Nick Papac. Papac died three hours later. On August 8, 2008, Papac's parents Michael Papac and Michele Bell filed suit against the director, a driver and the production company.[6] The lawsuit was dropped in 2008.[7] Filming resumed one day after the incident.

On-location filming took place in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates for two weeks in mid-September.[4] Since Universal Pictures does not have an office in the Middle East, the production was facilitated by a local production firm called Filmworks, based in Dubai.[8] Filming also took place at the Emirates Palace hotel in Abu Dhabi.[9][10] The film's production cost $80 million.[11]

The Kingdom was released on DVD December 20, 2007.

Reception

Western reception

The Kingdom opened to mixed reviews. Based on 17 reviews, the film averaged a 55 on Metacritic.[12] Rotten Tomatoes reported that 52% of critics gave the film positive reviews, based on 178 reviews.[13]

Weekly Standard columnist John Podhoretz called the film "perfectly paced" and "remarkably crisp and satisfying", arguing that it evokes the films The Taking of Pelham One Two Three, Dog Day Afternoon, and The New Centurions.[14] New York Times critic A.O. Scott called it "a slick, brutishly effective genre movie". He also stated that "Just as Rambo offered the fantasy of do-over on Vietnam, The Kingdom can be seen as a wishful revisionist scenario for the American response to Islamic fundamentalist terrorism."[15] Evan Williams of The Australian called it "an excellent thriller" and stated that it "may be the first Hollywood film to confront Saudi involvement in international terrorism."[16]

New York Post critic Lou Lumenick stated that "Hollywood provides the Islamic world another reason to hate America with The Kingdom," calling it "xenophobic" and "pandering."[17] Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly accused the film of "treating its audience like cash-dispensing machines".[18] Kenneth Turan of The Los Angeles Times called it "a slick excuse for efficient mayhem that's not half as smart as it would like to be." He added that "the film's thematic similarity to those jingoistic World War II-era 'Yellow Peril' films makes it hard not to feel your humanity being diminished."[19]

Middle Eastern reception

Kaveh L Afrasiabi of Asia Times Online called it "a pseudo-realist action movie that succeeds only if we degrade ourselves to adolescent Americans' perception of world affairs" and "non-stop nonsense from beginning to end." He accused the film of "FBI-worship", "Saudi-bashing", and "Islamophobia".[20] Faisal Abbas, media editor of the London-based international Arabic journal Asharq Al Awsat, wrote on the newspaper's English website that "despite some aspects which might be perceived by some as negative, many might be pleasantly surprised after watching this film, bearing in mind that Arabs have for a long time been among Hollywood's favorite villains." Faisal concluded that "In all cases, the film is definitely action-packed, and perhaps Saudis and Arabs may enjoy it more than Americans, as events are depicted as taking place in the Saudi capital…and it is not every day that you watch a Hollywood-style car chase happening on the streets of Riyadh. For Westerners, the movie might be an interesting “insight” to a culture that is very different to their own."[21]

Box office performance

The film grossed $17.1 million in 2,733 theaters in the United States and Canada on its opening weekend, ranking #2 at the box office.[22] It also grossed £919,537 in the United Kingdom[11], about $1.9 million.[23] As of December 15, 2007, the film has grossed an estimated $47,536,778 in the United States and $39,042,352 at the foreign box office with a worldwide gross of $86,579,130.[24]

The film has been extremely successful in the rental market, grossing $77.4 million in the United States as of April 13 2008.[25]

References

  1. ^ Review, from The New York Times, June 19, 2007
  2. ^ "Edinburgh Film Festival Gets a Surprise Trip to 'The Kingdom'". Cinematical. August 26, 2007. http://www.cinematical.com/2007/08/26/edinburgh-film-festival-gets-a-surprise-trip-to-the-kingdom/. 
  3. ^ Abu Hamza al-Masri (أبو حمزة المصري Abū Ḥamzah al-Maṣriy) born Mustafa Kamel Mustafa
  4. ^ a b The Kingdom's Peter Berg
  5. ^ "ASU Campus makes big screen debut in 'Kingdom'". ASU State Press. 1 October 2007. http://www.asuwebdevil.com/issues/2007/10/01/news/702018. 
  6. ^ "'Hancock' director sued over death". CNN. 2008-08-08. http://www.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/08/08/movie.crash.ap/index.html?iref=mpstoryview. Retrieved 2008-09-14. 
  7. ^ "Lawsuit dropped against director Berg". ContactMusic. 2008-12-08. http://www.contactmusic.com/news.nsf/article/lawsuit%20dropped%20against%20director%20berg_109018. Retrieved 2009-07-30. 
  8. ^ Dubai surfaces as regional film hub - Entertainment News, Inside Dubai, Media - Variety
  9. ^ Nos. 51 and 52: Peter Berg, Director of 'The Kingdom' - Esquire
  10. ^ Feeling the heat - The Boston Globe
  11. ^ a b The Kingdom (2007) - Box office / business
  12. ^ "Kingdom, The (2007): Reviews". Metacritic. http://www.metacritic.com/film/titles/kingdom. Retrieved 2007-09-28. 
  13. ^ "The Kingdom - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_kingdom/. Retrieved 2007-09-29. 
  14. ^ One for the Good Guys The Weekly Standard
  15. ^ The Kingdom - Movie - Review - New York Times
  16. ^ Into a Persian gulf | The Australian
  17. ^ The King-Dumb
  18. ^ The Kingdom | Movie Review | Entertainment Weekly
  19. ^ Dead link
  20. ^ Asia Times Online :: Middle East News - A failed kingdom
  21. ^ Asharq Alawsat Newspaper (English)
  22. ^ "The Kingdom (2007) - Weekend Box Office". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=weekend&id=kingdom.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-24. 
  23. ^ As of October 21, 2007 using Yahoo!Finance
  24. ^ "The Kingdom (2007) - International Box Office". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=intl&id=kingdom.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-21. 
  25. ^ "Weekly DVD/Home Video Rentals, April 7–13, 2008". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/dvdrentals/chart/?wk=2008-04-13&p=.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-29. 

See also

External links


 
 

 

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