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Fair Game (2010 film)

Fair Game is a 2010 biographical political drama film directed by Doug Liman and starring Naomi Watts and Sean Penn.[4] It is based on Valerie Plame's 2007 memoir Fair Game[4] and Joseph C. Wilson's 2004 memoir The Politics of Truth.[5]

Fair Game
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDoug Liman
Written by
Based onFair Game
by Valerie Plame
The Politics of Truth
by Joseph C. Wilson
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyDoug Liman
Edited byChristopher Tellefsen
Music byJohn Powell
Production
companies
Distributed bySummit Entertainment (United States)
Gulf Film (United Arab Emirates)[3]
Release dates
  • May 20, 2010 (2010-05-20) (Cannes)
  • October 1, 2010 (2010-10-01) (United States)
Running time
108 minutes
Countries
  • United States
  • United Arab Emirates
LanguageEnglish
Budget$22 million[3]
Box office$24.2 million[3]

Watts stars as Plame and Penn as her husband, Joseph C. Wilson.[4] It was released in 2010 and was one of the official selections competing for the Palme d'Or at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival.[6] The film won the "Freedom of Expression Award" from the National Board of Review. The film marked Watts' and Penn's third collaboration, having previously co-starred in the films 21 Grams and The Assassination of Richard Nixon.

Plot Edit

Valerie Plame is employed by the Central Intelligence Agency, a fact known outside the agency to no one except her husband and parents. She is an intelligence officer involved in a number of sensitive and sometimes dangerous covert operations overseas.

Her husband, Joseph C. Wilson, is a diplomat who most recently has served as the U.S. ambassador to Gabon. Due to his earlier diplomatic background in Niger, Wilson is approached by Plame's CIA colleagues to travel there and glean information as to whether yellowcake uranium is being procured by Iraq for use in the construction of nuclear weapons. Wilson determines to his own satisfaction that it is not.

After military action is taken by George W. Bush, who justifies it in a 2003 State of the Union address by alluding to the uranium's use in building weapons of mass destruction, Wilson submits an op-ed piece to The New York Times, claiming these reports to be categorically untrue.

Plame's status as a CIA operative is subsequently revealed in the media, the leak possibly coming from White House officials, including the vice president's chief of staff and national security adviser, Scooter Libby, in part to discredit her husband's allegation that the Bush administration had manipulated intelligence to justify the invasion of Iraq. As a result, Plame is instantly dismissed from the agency, leaving several of her delicate operations in limbo and creating a rift in her marriage.

Plame leaves her husband, further angered by his granting of television and print interviews, which expose them both to public condemnation and death threats. Wilson ultimately persuades her, however, that there is no other way to fight a power as great as that of the White House for citizens like them. Plame returns to him and testifies before a Congressional committee, while Libby is convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice and given a 30-month prison sentence, although President Bush commutes the jail time on Libby's behalf.

Main cast Edit

Production Edit

Nicole Kidman[9] and Russell Crowe[10][better source needed] were originally cast in the lead roles in 2008.

Production took place in Washington, D.C.[11] and New York City.[12] In October 2009 the film news website Corona's Coming Attractions published an exclusive review from a source that had been invited to a test screening of the film. The reviewer gave the rough cut a positive recommendation calling it, "A wonderful human drama with political suspense that should interest anybody no matter how they vote."[13]

The film had a public screening during the Abu Dhabi film festival on October 21, 2010, and it got a generally positive review. There was also a Q&A session with the director afterwards.[citation needed]

There was a second preview screening in Brisbane, Australia as part of the Brisbane International Film Festival (BIFF) on October 28, 2010.[citation needed]

Critical reception Edit

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 79% based on 174 reviews, with an average rating of 6.89/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "It struggles with the balance between fact-based biopic and taut political thriller, but Fair Game brims with righteous anger – and benefits from superb performances by Naomi Watts and Sean Penn."[14] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 69 out of 100, based on 35 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[15] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave it a grade "A−" on a scale from A+ to F.[16]

Historical accuracy Edit

The film's premise – that Joe Wilson's fact-finding trip to Niger debunked the British claim that Saddam Hussein had tried to obtain uranium there – remained contested by some political writers. In a November 2010 Washington Post column about the film, Walter Pincus and Richard Leiby, two reporters who had covered the Plame affair, wrote that Wilson's assessment of the situation was accurate,[17] while National Review journalist Clifford May disagreed, writing that "the most important piece of information Wilson brought back from his mission to Africa was that a high-level Iraqi trade mission had visited Niger in 1999."[18] Separately a December 2010 Washington Post editorial also disagreed with Pincus and Leiby, citing the 2004 British Butler Review, which stated that the original claim by the British government was accurate.[19] In response, journalist David Corn wrote in Mother Jones that, contrary to the Butler Review, the CIA had stated in a private memo that the British uranium claim had been an exaggeration.[20]

Another contested issue in the film was that Plame's name had been leaked to conservative political commentator Robert Novak by someone in the White House, as retribution for Wilson's public comments about the uranium deal. The Washington Post editorial and Clifford May both stated that the leak was from the State Department, specifically Richard Armitage, who was himself an opponent of the Iraq War and thus would have no reason to try to discredit Wilson.[18][19] Pincus and Leiby, on the other hand, called this portion of the film accurate.[17] Corn agreed, writing that, though Armitage had been a source for the leak, he may not have been the only source, and that Karl Rove may have also leaked the information. Rove had in fact confirmed Plame's identity to Novak, but only after Novak had already heard the information from another source.[21] Rove had also mentioned Plame, though not by name, to another reporter, Time magazine's Matthew Cooper, although Cooper did not publish this information before Novak's revelation.[22]

There was more consensus about other aspects of Fair Game. In the film, Valerie Plame is shown working closely, and covertly, with a group of Iraqi scientists until her cover is blown; it is implied that the scientists were then abandoned as a result. Pincus and Leiby, May and the Washington Post editorial all agreed that Plame never worked directly with the scientists, and that the program did not end when her name was revealed.[17][18][19]

Pincus and Leiby also took issue with the film's depiction of Plame and Wilson's appearance in a profile in Vanity Fair magazine after Plame's outing – the two are shown in the film agonizing over whether to appear in the profile, but it is not shown that their decision to appear in a fashion-style photograph alongside the profile ended up becoming, in Pincus and Leiby's words, "a PR debacle for them."[17]

On the other hand, Pincus and Leiby praised the film for accuracy on several other points, including the indication that Plame had been a covert operative at the time of her outing (some reports indicated that she was not), and that, contrary to the original Novak column, Wilson had not been chosen to go on the Niger fact-finding trip due to a recommendation from his wife.[17]

Home media Edit

Fair Game was released on DVD and Blu-ray for Region 1/Region A on March 29, 2011,[23] and for Region 2/Region B on July 11, 2011.[24]

Director's cut Edit

A director's cut of the film was released on Netflix in 2018, running six minutes longer.[25]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d . British Film Institute. Archived from the original on August 23, 2017.
  2. ^ AFI Catalog: Fair Game Linked July 11, 2014
  3. ^ a b c "Fair Game (2010) (2010) – Box Office Mojo". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved November 14, 2010.
  4. ^ a b c Michael Fleming (February 23, 2009). "Sean Penn in talks for Plame 'Game'". Variety. Retrieved May 30, 2009.
  5. ^ Scott, A. O. (November 5, 2010). "Marital Strife and C.I.A. Obligations". The New York Times. p. C8.
  6. ^ "Hollywood Reporter: Cannes Lineup". The Hollywood Reporter.
  7. ^ "WeCrashed: where is WeWork's Rebekah Neumann now?". South China Morning Post. March 24, 2022. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
  8. ^ Smail, Gretchen (March 18, 2022). "Rebekah Neumann Once Made A Bizarre Short Film Starring Rosario Dawson". Bustle.
  9. ^ "Nicole Kidman Outed As Valerie Plame". Huffington Post. February 14, 2008.
  10. ^ Fair Game trivia, IMDb
  11. ^ Sean Penn Films "Fair Game" Scene in the District
  12. ^ CIA spy flick 'Fair Game' staying in Manhattan
  13. ^ Corona's Coming Attractions: Test Screening Review of Fair Game
  14. ^ "Fair Game (2010)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  15. ^ "Fair Game (2010) Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  16. ^ Finke, Nikki (November 7, 2010). "#1 'Megamind', #2 'Due Date', #3 'For Colored Girls' All Meet Expectations; Long Lines And Sell-Outs For '127 Hours'". Deadline. Receiving an "a-" CinemaScore, the film skewed older while attendance was evenly split between men and women.
  17. ^ a b c d e Pincus, Walter; Leiby, Richard (November 7, 2010). "'Fair Game' gets some things about the Valerie Plame case right, some wrong". The Washington Post.
  18. ^ a b c Vanity Fair Game, Clifford May, National Review, December 16, 2010
  19. ^ a b c "Hollywood myth-making on Valerie Plame controversy". The Washington Post. December 4, 2010. Retrieved December 4, 2010.
  20. ^ "Washington Post: Still Spinning the CIA Leak Case". Mother Jones. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
  21. ^ Rove Reportedly Held Phone Talk on C.I.A. Officer, David Johnston and Richard W. Stevenson, The New York Times, July 15, 2005 ("Correction: ... According to the account, Mr. Rove said I heard that, too after hearing about the officer [Valerie Plame] from the columnist [Robert Novak].")
  22. ^ , Matthew Cooper, Time, July 17, 2005 ("As for Wilson's wife, I told the grand jury I was certain that Rove never used her name and that, indeed, I did not learn her name until the following week, when I either saw it in Robert Novak's column or Googled her, I can't recall which.")
  23. ^ Amazon US: Fair Game (2010) Linked July 11, 2014
  24. ^ Amazon UK: Fair Game [DVD] Linked July 11, 2014
  25. ^ "Doug Liman to Release Fair Game Director's Cut on Netflix". Collider. October 9, 2018.

External links Edit

fair, game, 2010, film, fair, game, 2010, biographical, political, drama, film, directed, doug, liman, starring, naomi, watts, sean, penn, based, valerie, plame, 2007, memoir, fair, game, joseph, wilson, 2004, memoir, politics, truth, fair, gametheatrical, rel. Fair Game is a 2010 biographical political drama film directed by Doug Liman and starring Naomi Watts and Sean Penn 4 It is based on Valerie Plame s 2007 memoir Fair Game 4 and Joseph C Wilson s 2004 memoir The Politics of Truth 5 Fair GameTheatrical release posterDirected byDoug LimanWritten byJez Butterworth John ButterworthBased onFair Gameby Valerie PlameThe Politics of Truthby Joseph C WilsonProduced byJez Butterworth Akiva Goldsman Doug Liman Bill Pohlad Jerry Zucker Janet ZuckerStarringNaomi Watts Sean PennCinematographyDoug LimanEdited byChristopher TellefsenMusic byJohn PowellProductioncompaniesParticipant Media 1 River Road Entertainment 2 Weed Road Pictures 1 Hypnotic 1 Zucker Productions 1 Distributed bySummit Entertainment United States Gulf Film United Arab Emirates 3 Release datesMay 20 2010 2010 05 20 Cannes October 1 2010 2010 10 01 United States Running time108 minutesCountriesUnited States United Arab EmiratesLanguageEnglishBudget 22 million 3 Box office 24 2 million 3 Watts stars as Plame and Penn as her husband Joseph C Wilson 4 It was released in 2010 and was one of the official selections competing for the Palme d Or at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival 6 The film won the Freedom of Expression Award from the National Board of Review The film marked Watts and Penn s third collaboration having previously co starred in the films 21 Grams and The Assassination of Richard Nixon Contents 1 Plot 2 Main cast 3 Production 4 Critical reception 5 Historical accuracy 6 Home media 7 Director s cut 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksPlot EditValerie Plame is employed by the Central Intelligence Agency a fact known outside the agency to no one except her husband and parents She is an intelligence officer involved in a number of sensitive and sometimes dangerous covert operations overseas Her husband Joseph C Wilson is a diplomat who most recently has served as the U S ambassador to Gabon Due to his earlier diplomatic background in Niger Wilson is approached by Plame s CIA colleagues to travel there and glean information as to whether yellowcake uranium is being procured by Iraq for use in the construction of nuclear weapons Wilson determines to his own satisfaction that it is not After military action is taken by George W Bush who justifies it in a 2003 State of the Union address by alluding to the uranium s use in building weapons of mass destruction Wilson submits an op ed piece to The New York Times claiming these reports to be categorically untrue Plame s status as a CIA operative is subsequently revealed in the media the leak possibly coming from White House officials including the vice president s chief of staff and national security adviser Scooter Libby in part to discredit her husband s allegation that the Bush administration had manipulated intelligence to justify the invasion of Iraq As a result Plame is instantly dismissed from the agency leaving several of her delicate operations in limbo and creating a rift in her marriage Plame leaves her husband further angered by his granting of television and print interviews which expose them both to public condemnation and death threats Wilson ultimately persuades her however that there is no other way to fight a power as great as that of the White House for citizens like them Plame returns to him and testifies before a Congressional committee while Libby is convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice and given a 30 month prison sentence although President Bush commutes the jail time on Libby s behalf Main cast EditNaomi Watts as Valerie Plame Sean Penn as Joseph Wilson Noah Emmerich as Bill Ty Burrell as Fred Sam Shepard as Sam Plame Polly Holliday as Diane Plame Bruce McGill as James Pavitt Brooke Smith as Diana Michael Kelly as Jack Liraz Charhi as Dr Zahara Khaled El Nabawy as Hamed Anand Tiwari as Hafiz David Denman as Dave David Andrews as Scooter Libby Geoffrey Cantor as Ari Fleischer Adam LeFevre as Karl Rove Nassar as Mr Tabir Satya Bhabha as Jason Neal Norbert Leo Butz as Steve Rebekah Neumann as United Nations Diplomat 7 8 Production EditNicole Kidman 9 and Russell Crowe 10 better source needed were originally cast in the lead roles in 2008 Production took place in Washington D C 11 and New York City 12 In October 2009 the film news website Corona s Coming Attractions published an exclusive review from a source that had been invited to a test screening of the film The reviewer gave the rough cut a positive recommendation calling it A wonderful human drama with political suspense that should interest anybody no matter how they vote 13 The film had a public screening during the Abu Dhabi film festival on October 21 2010 and it got a generally positive review There was also a Q amp A session with the director afterwards citation needed There was a second preview screening in Brisbane Australia as part of the Brisbane International Film Festival BIFF on October 28 2010 citation needed Critical reception EditOn review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 79 based on 174 reviews with an average rating of 6 89 10 The website s critics consensus reads It struggles with the balance between fact based biopic and taut political thriller but Fair Game brims with righteous anger and benefits from superb performances by Naomi Watts and Sean Penn 14 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 69 out of 100 based on 35 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 15 Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave it a grade A on a scale from A to F 16 Historical accuracy EditThe film s premise that Joe Wilson s fact finding trip to Niger debunked the British claim that Saddam Hussein had tried to obtain uranium there remained contested by some political writers In a November 2010 Washington Post column about the film Walter Pincus and Richard Leiby two reporters who had covered the Plame affair wrote that Wilson s assessment of the situation was accurate 17 while National Review journalist Clifford May disagreed writing that the most important piece of information Wilson brought back from his mission to Africa was that a high level Iraqi trade mission had visited Niger in 1999 18 Separately a December 2010 Washington Post editorial also disagreed with Pincus and Leiby citing the 2004 British Butler Review which stated that the original claim by the British government was accurate 19 In response journalist David Corn wrote in Mother Jones that contrary to the Butler Review the CIA had stated in a private memo that the British uranium claim had been an exaggeration 20 Another contested issue in the film was that Plame s name had been leaked to conservative political commentator Robert Novak by someone in the White House as retribution for Wilson s public comments about the uranium deal The Washington Post editorial and Clifford May both stated that the leak was from the State Department specifically Richard Armitage who was himself an opponent of the Iraq War and thus would have no reason to try to discredit Wilson 18 19 Pincus and Leiby on the other hand called this portion of the film accurate 17 Corn agreed writing that though Armitage had been a source for the leak he may not have been the only source and that Karl Rove may have also leaked the information Rove had in fact confirmed Plame s identity to Novak but only after Novak had already heard the information from another source 21 Rove had also mentioned Plame though not by name to another reporter Time magazine s Matthew Cooper although Cooper did not publish this information before Novak s revelation 22 There was more consensus about other aspects of Fair Game In the film Valerie Plame is shown working closely and covertly with a group of Iraqi scientists until her cover is blown it is implied that the scientists were then abandoned as a result Pincus and Leiby May and the Washington Post editorial all agreed that Plame never worked directly with the scientists and that the program did not end when her name was revealed 17 18 19 Pincus and Leiby also took issue with the film s depiction of Plame and Wilson s appearance in a profile in Vanity Fair magazine after Plame s outing the two are shown in the film agonizing over whether to appear in the profile but it is not shown that their decision to appear in a fashion style photograph alongside the profile ended up becoming in Pincus and Leiby s words a PR debacle for them 17 On the other hand Pincus and Leiby praised the film for accuracy on several other points including the indication that Plame had been a covert operative at the time of her outing some reports indicated that she was not and that contrary to the original Novak column Wilson had not been chosen to go on the Niger fact finding trip due to a recommendation from his wife 17 Home media EditFair Game was released on DVD and Blu ray for Region 1 Region A on March 29 2011 23 and for Region 2 Region B on July 11 2011 24 Director s cut EditA director s cut of the film was released on Netflix in 2018 running six minutes longer 25 See also EditPlame affairReferences Edit a b c d Fair Game 2010 British Film Institute Archived from the original on August 23 2017 AFI Catalog Fair Game Linked July 11 2014 a b c Fair Game 2010 2010 Box Office Mojo Box Office Mojo Retrieved November 14 2010 a b c Michael Fleming February 23 2009 Sean Penn in talks for Plame Game Variety Retrieved May 30 2009 Scott A O November 5 2010 Marital Strife and C I A Obligations The New York Times p C8 Hollywood Reporter Cannes Lineup The Hollywood Reporter WeCrashed where is WeWork s Rebekah Neumann now South China Morning Post March 24 2022 Retrieved April 17 2022 Smail Gretchen March 18 2022 Rebekah Neumann Once Made A Bizarre Short Film Starring Rosario Dawson Bustle Nicole Kidman Outed As Valerie Plame Huffington Post February 14 2008 Fair Game trivia IMDb Sean Penn Films Fair Game Scene in the District CIA spy flick Fair Game staying in Manhattan Corona s Coming Attractions Test Screening Review of Fair Game Fair Game 2010 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved May 22 2020 Fair Game 2010 Reviews Metacritic Retrieved May 22 2020 Finke Nikki November 7 2010 1 Megamind 2 Due Date 3 For Colored Girls All Meet Expectations Long Lines And Sell Outs For 127 Hours Deadline Receiving an a CinemaScore the film skewed older while attendance was evenly split between men and women a b c d e Pincus Walter Leiby Richard November 7 2010 Fair Game gets some things about the Valerie Plame case right some wrong The Washington Post a b c Vanity Fair Game Clifford May National Review December 16 2010 a b c Hollywood myth making on Valerie Plame controversy The Washington Post December 4 2010 Retrieved December 4 2010 Washington Post Still Spinning the CIA Leak Case Mother Jones Retrieved December 22 2010 Rove Reportedly Held Phone Talk on C I A Officer David Johnston and Richard W Stevenson The New York Times July 15 2005 Correction According to the account Mr Rove said I heard that too after hearing about the officer Valerie Plame from the columnist Robert Novak What I Told the Grand Jury Matthew Cooper Time July 17 2005 As for Wilson s wife I told the grand jury I was certain that Rove never used her name and that indeed I did not learn her name until the following week when I either saw it in Robert Novak s column or Googled her I can t recall which Amazon US Fair Game 2010 Linked July 11 2014 Amazon UK Fair Game DVD Linked July 11 2014 Doug Liman to Release Fair Game Director s Cut on Netflix Collider October 9 2018 External links EditFair Game at the American Film Institute Catalog Fair Game at IMDb Fair Game at AllMovie Fair Game at Box Office Mojo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fair Game 2010 film amp oldid 1180149708, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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