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Sean Connery Und Catherine Zeta Jones

1999 motion-picture show by Jon Amiel

Entrapment
Entrapment film.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Jon Amiel
Screenplay by Ronald Bass
William Broyles, Jr.
Story past Ronald Bass
Michael Hertzberg
Produced by Sean Connery
Michael Hertzberg
Rhonda Tollefson
Starring
  • Sean Connery
  • Catherine Zeta-Jones
  • Will Patton
  • Maury Chaykin
  • Ving Rhames
  • Maya Karin
Cinematography Phil Meheux
Edited by Terry Rawlings
Music past Christopher Young

Production
company

Regency Enterprises

Distributed past 20th Century Pull a fast one on

Release dates

  • 30 April 1999 (1999-04-30) (United States)
  • 27 May 1999 (1999-05-27) (Frg)
  • 2 July 1999 (1999-07-02) (United Kingdom)

Running fourth dimension

114 minutes
Countries United States
United Kingdom
Frg
Language English
Upkeep $66 meg
Box office $212.4 meg[i]

Entrapment is a 1999 caper pic directed by Jon Amiel and written by Ronald Bass. It stars Sean Connery and Catherine Zeta-Jones and includes Will Patton, Ving Rhames and Maury Chaykin. The movie focuses on the human relationship between investigator Virginia "Gin" Baker and professional thief Robert "Mac" MacDougal as they attempt a heist at the plow of the New Millennium. Simon West and Antoine Fuqua were both in talks to directly before Amiel was hired.[2] [3]

The picture show was released theatrically in the U.s.a. on 30 April 1999 and in the Great britain on ii July 1999.

Plot [edit]

Virginia "Gin" Baker (Catherine Zeta-Jones) is an investigator for "Waverly Insurance". Robert "Mac" MacDougal (Sean Connery) is a professional thief who specialises in international art. A priceless Rembrandt painting is stolen from an office building in New York 1 nighttime, and Gin is sent undercover to investigate Mac as the chief doubtable. She tries to entrap him with a proposition, claiming that she is a professional thief herself, and promises that she will aid him steal a priceless Chinese mask from the well-guarded Bedford Palace. Earlier like-minded, Mac tells Gin his "Rule Number I": "Never behave a gun: Y'all deport a gun, you may exist tempted to employ it." They travel to Scotland and program the very complicated theft at Mac'south hideout, an isolated castle. Aaron Thibadeaux (Ving Rhames), plainly the only ally that Mac trusts, arrives with supplies for the heist. While Mac is decorated making terminal preparations, Gin contacts her dominate, Hector Cruz (Will Patton), from a payphone, and informs him of Mac's whereabouts. Lilliputian does she know that the whole island is bugged, allowing Mac to eavesdrop on their chat. Mac also makes certain to continue Gin's romantic advances at bay, unsure if she is a true partner in crime or an ambitious career woman on a mission.

After they take stolen the mask, Mac accuses Gin of planning to sell the mask to a heir-apparent in Kuala Lumpur and then turn him in. Gin convinces him that her insurance bureau job is the real comprehend and that she has planned an even bigger heist in Kuala Lumpur: $8 billion from the "International Clearance Bank" (which refers to the Bank of International Settlements in Malaysia) in the North Tower of the Petronas Towers. During their gear up-up, Cruz and his squad (with the guidance of the stealthy Thibadeaux) runway downwards Gin and confirm that she is all the same on mission to bring in Mac.

Despite the presence of Cruz and other security watching the building, the theft takes place in the last seconds of the new 2000 millennium countdown. Gin pulls the plug on her laptop prematurely and sets off alarms. They narrowly escape from the computer vault and are forced to cross the lights hung from the bottom of the bridge linking the two towers. Following a death-defying moment when the cablevision breaks, Gin and Mac brand their mode to a ventilation shaft, where Mac explains "Plan B". Using mini-parachutes, they were going to escape downwards the shaft. Gin had lost her parachute earlier in the escape, so Mac gives her his. He tells her to see him the side by side morn at Pudu railroad train station.

Gin arrives at the station waiting for Mac. He shows upward belatedly with Aaron Thibadeaux, who reveals himself with fellow FBI agents. He explains that Cruz is here and that the FBI has been looking for her for some time. Two years before, when Agent Thibadeaux defenseless and arrested him, Mac made a bargain to help the FBI abort Gin, every bit she was the primary target all along. However, the ageing thief has another plan: to help her escape. Mac slips Gin a gun, new passport and travel documents and quietly explains that he returned just seven of the eight billion dollars they had stolen electronically in the heist. Gin and then pretends to hold Mac earnest at gunpoint, threatening to shoot him if the agents follow her. She boards a train and the FBI heads to the adjacent station. Gin jumps trains mid-station and arrives back at Pudu. She tells Mac that she needs him for another job and they both board a train.

The Petronas Twin Towers, where the terminal heist takes place

Cast [edit]

  • Sean Connery as Robert "Mac" MacDougal
  • Catherine Zeta-Jones as Virginia "Gin" Baker
  • Volition Patton as Hector Cruz
  • Ving Rhames as FBI Agent Aaron Thibadeaux
  • Maury Chaykin as Conrad Greene
  • Kevin McNally as Haas
  • Terry O'Neill every bit Quinn
  • Madhav Sharma equally Security Chief
  • David Yip as Master of Police
  • Tim Potter as "Millennium Man"
  • Rolf Saxon as Director
  • Maya Karin (Cameo)

Filming locations [edit]

Duart Castle, the location of MacDougal's hideout

Principal Photography took place from June 29 to October 1998. Filming locations for the film include Blenheim Palace, Savoy Hotel London, Lloyd's of London, Borough Market, London, Duart Castle on the Isle of Mull in Scotland, the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur (with other filming completed at Pinewood Studios) and the Bukit Jalil LRT station. However, the signage at this station that was used for the film was Pudu LRT station instead of Bukit Jalil.[four] [five]

Music [edit]

The film'south score was composed by Christopher Young.

British singer-songwriter Seal performs "Lost My Religion" over the end credits. The music video features Seal performing a heist in a tall edifice, where he steals a talisman only sets off the alarm. As the police storm the edifice, Seal ultimately escapes by jumping through a window. At first, he appears to be free-falling, but a descender he is attached to (the same one Gin uses in the film) stops him before he reaches the basis. Seal unclips himself and walks away. The music video contains clips from the film, including Sean Connery and Catherine Zeta-Jones as Seal's accomplices.

Reception [edit]

The film was a box office success, grossing over $87 1000000 in the US and $212 one thousand thousand worldwide.

Co-ordinate to the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 39% of critics have given the moving picture a positive review based on 83 reviews, with an average rating of v.2/ten. The site'south critics consensus reads, "A poorly developed plot weighs down any potential chemical science between the motion-picture show's leads."[6] At Metacritic, the picture show has a weighted average score of 54 out of 100 based on 24 critics, indicating "mixed or boilerplate reviews".[7]

Critics such as The New York Times,[8] New York Magazine,[ix] the Chicago Sun-Times,[10] Multifariousness [11] and Desson Howe/Thomson of The Washington Post [12] praised the motion-picture show.

Roger Ebert gave the flick three of four stars. "It works because information technology is made stylishly. The plot is put together similar a Swiss scout that keeps changing time zones: Information technology is authentic and misleading at once. The film consists of i elaborate caper sequence after another, and it rivals the Bail films in its climactic action sequence. The stunt and f/x piece of work here does a practiced task... Most of the film'southward action is just that—action—and not extreme violence." Ebert noted about Zeta-Jones, "I tin can but reflect, every bit I did while watching her in "The Mask Of Zorro," that while cute women are a dime a dozen in the movies, those with burn down, flash and humor are a adept bargain more deficient."[10]

"There's a breadbasket-churning tradition of pensionable movie blokes getting paired up with beautiful babes..." complained OK! in its review. "We barely believed Sean and Michelle Pfeiffer in The Russian federation House; a decade later, Sean and Catherine Zeta-Jones? You lot gotta be kidding. The film's alright-ish."[13]

Responses from the Malaysian government [edit]

Following Entrapment 'southward release in June 1999, the Malaysian Prime number Minister Mahathir Mohammed accused the motion picture of presenting a distorted image of Malaysia. Mahathir took result with the film splicing images of the Petronas Twin Towers with slums from Malacca. The Malaysian Government had assisted Twentieth Century Fox with visa processing, community clearance, telecommunications and security in a bid to promote Malaysia as a film location.[14]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Entrapment (1999)". Box Office Mojo . Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  2. ^ Petrikin, Chris (22 May 1997). "Fuqua to captain Connery in 'Entrapment' for Flim-flam". Variety . Retrieved iv April 2022.
  3. ^ Petrikin, Chris (8 March 1998). "Fuqua escapes 'Entrapment'". Variety . Retrieved 4 April 2022.
  4. ^ "Filming Locations for Entrapment". Net Movie Database . Retrieved 21 October 2012.
  5. ^ Manan, Daz (3 July 2017). "Bukit Jalil LRT station's Hollywood connection". Malay Mail . Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  6. ^ "Entrapment (1999)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved 1 November 2020.
  7. ^ "Entrapment Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 23 Dec 2016.
  8. ^ Maslin, Janet (30 April 1999). "'Entrapment': They're a Devilish Lucifer, but Who's Conning Who?". The New York Times . Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  9. ^ Rainer, Peter (10 May 1999). "Some Similar Information technology Hotter". New York . Retrieved 23 Dec 2016.
  10. ^ a b Ebert, Roger (xxx April 1999). "Entrapment Movie Review & Film Summary (1999)". RogerEbert.com . Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  11. ^ McCarthy, Todd (26 Apr 1999). "Entrapment Movie Review". Variety . Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  12. ^ Howe, Desson (thirty Apr 1999). "Take No Pensioners". The Washington Post . Retrieved 23 Dec 2016.
  13. ^ MacDonald, Bruno (nineteen May 2000). "Film & Video: DVD sales releases". OK!. No. 213.
  14. ^ "Amusement Entrapment rapped by Malaysian PM". BBC News. 22 June 1999. Archived from the original on 17 February 2020. Retrieved 31 August 2020.

External links [edit]

  • Entrapment at IMDb
  • Entrapment at AllMovie
  • Entrapment at Box Office Mojo
  • Entrapment at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Entrapment at the TCM Picture Database

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entrapment_(film)

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