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The Kingdom (film)

The Kingdom is a 2007 action thriller film directed by Peter Berg and starring Jamie Foxx, Chris Cooper, and Jennifer Garner. The film is set in Saudi Arabia, and is based on the 1996 bombing of the Khobar housing complex, also on the 2004 Khobar massacre and the two 2003 bombings of four compounds in Riyadh. It was released in the United States on September 28, 2007.

The Kingdom
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPeter Berg
Written byMatthew Michael Carnahan
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyMauro Fiore
Edited by
Music byDanny Elfman
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release dates
  • August 22, 2007 (2007-08-22) (EIFF)
  • September 28, 2007 (2007-09-28) (United States)
  • October 11, 2007 (2007-10-11) (Germany)
Running time
110 minutes
Countries
LanguageEnglish
Budget$70–72.5 million[3][4]
Box office$87 million[4]

Plot edit

Al-Qaeda terrorists in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, detonate an explosive at an American oil company housing compound, killing both American and Saudi citizens. A suicide bomber, disguised as a police officer, blows himself up and terrorists shoot at the survivors before they are stopped by Sergeant Haytham of the Saudi State Police. Francis Manner, the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Legal Attaché in Saudi Arabia, alerts his colleague, Special Agent Ronald Fleury, to the attacks before being killed by a second bomb.

At FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C., Fleury briefs his rapid deployment team on the attack recruiting forensic examiner Janet Mayes, intelligence analyst Adam Leavitt, and bomb technician Grant Sykes to his team. Although the U.S. Justice Department and the U.S. State Department hinder FBI efforts to investigate, Fleury blackmails the Saudi ambassador into allowing his team into Riyadh. On arrival, they are met by Colonel Faris al-Ghazi, the commander of the Saudi State Police Force providing security at the compound, and General Al Abdulmalik of the Saudi Arabian National Guard, whose inexperience in criminal investigation hinders Fleury's team.

The team is invited to the palace of Saudi Prince Ahmed bin Khaled where Fleury convinces the Prince that Colonel al-Ghazi is a better fit to lead the investigation. With this change in leadership, the Americans are allowed direct to the crime scene. While searching for evidence, Sergeant Haytham and Sykes discover the second bomb was detonated in an ambulance and that the brother of one of the dead terrorists had access to ambulances and police uniforms. Al-Ghazi orders a raid by the Saudi Emergency Force on a terrorist stronghold, killing several of them. Afterward, Fleury's team discovers clues, including photos of the U.S. and other Western embassies in Riyadh. The U.S. Embassy Deputy Chief of Mission Damon Schmidt notifies Fleury and his team that they have been ordered to return to the United States.

On their way to King Khalid International Airport, the team's convoy is attacked and Leavitt is kidnapped. Al-Ghazi commandeers a civilian vehicle and the team chases the car holding Leavitt into the dangerous Al-Suwaidi neighborhood. As they pull up, a gunman fires rocket-propelled grenades at them and a fierce firefight starts. Leavitt is carried into a room inside a complex, where the terrorists prepare to film his execution.

While Sykes and Haytham watch the entrance to the complex, al-Ghazi, Fleury, and Mayes follow a blood trail and kill many gunmen inside. Mayes, separated from the others, finds the room holding Leavitt and saves him just in time. As al-Ghazi and the team start to leave. Fleury then realizes there is a trail of blood leading to the back of the apartment, where a family stays. After noticing several clues, al-Ghazi realizes the grandfather, Abu Hamza, is the terrorist leader. Hamza's teenage grandson walks out of the bedroom and shoots al-Ghazi in the neck, then points his gun at Mayes, prompting Fleury to kill him. Al-Ghazi bleeds out in Fleury's arms. Hamza pulls out an assault rifle and is killed by Haytham. As Hamza dies he whispers something to his other grandchild.

At Al-Ghazi's house, Fleury and Haytham meet and comfort his family. Fleury and his team return to the U.S., where they are commended by the FBI Director for their work. Leavitt asks Fleury what he whispered to Mayes, earlier in the film, to get her to stop crying over Manner. Fleury responds that he had told Mayes "we were gonna kill 'em all". Elsewhere, Hamza's daughter asks her son about his grandfather's last words; The boy tells his mother, "Don't fear them, my child. We are going to kill them all".

Cast edit

Production edit

Prior to filming, director Peter Berg spent two weeks in Saudi Arabia researching the film.[5] Filming began on July 10, 2006, on the west side of the old Maricopa County Courthouse in Phoenix, Arizona. 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.[6] In some of the trailer frames, saguaro cacti not native to Saudi Arabia are visible in the background. The scenes in the men's locker room at the beginning of the film were filmed in the men's locker room and detention area of the Gilbert Police Department. The FBI briefing scene was filmed in the media amphitheater/classroom in the same police building. The high speed driving scenes were filmed on Loop 202, which runs through Mesa and Gilbert, just prior to its opening for public use only a few miles from the ASU campus.

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

On-location filming took place in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates for two weeks in mid-September.[5] 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.[9] Filming also took place at the Emirates Palace hotel in Abu Dhabi.[10][11]

The film's production cost an estimated $70–72.5 million.[3][4]

Reception edit

Critical response edit

Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports an approval rating of 51% based on 189 reviews, with an average rating of 5.8/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "While providing several top-notch action scenes, The Kingdom ultimately collapses under the weight of formula and muddled politics."[12] At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating to reviews, the film has an average weighted score of 56 out of 100, based on 37 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[13] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[14]

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.[15] The 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 do-over of the aftermath of the Vietnam War, The Kingdom can be seen as a wishful revisionist scenario for the American response to Islamic fundamentalist terrorism."[16] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the film three stars out of four, remarking "Fleury goes John Wayne on their ass."[17] 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."

The A.V. Club's Scott Tobias gave the movie a C, criticizing the movie's "queasy brand of escapism" by offering the audience the pleasure of "[w]inning imaginary wars" and giving an idealized portrayal of the efficiency of American intelligence. He says the film appeals to the audience's "basest instincts" and that, despite one sympathetic Arab character, the film could be tarred as racist.[18] Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly accused the film of "treating its audience like cash-dispensing machines".[19] 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." Scholar Moustafa Bayoumi has critiqued the racialization of Arabs in the film (along with The Siege) and suggested it is representative of an emerging sub-genre he says is defined by "the notion of African-American leadership of the Arab world, intertwined with friendship with it."[20]

Middle Eastern reception edit

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]

In a review titled One good Arab for The Guardian, Palestinian writer Sharif Nashashibi argues the film is one in a long tradition of Western works where Arabs are vilified and Americans are portrayed as heroes, only that this time it bothered to add "a token Arab 'good guy'", equating good with pro-American, "to make up for the fact that the rest of the Arab characters are bad." All other Arab characters in the movie, he says, "are portrayed negatively – from the brutal, hate-filled, anti-western, religiously fanatical terrorists, to the inept, corrupt, heavy-handed, secretive and frustratingly bureaucratic Saudi authorities", as opposed to the "humanity, grief, compassion, determination, ability and patriotism of most of the American characters". He concludes that "The Kingdom perpetuates negative stereotypes for a quick buck and an adrenaline rush, at a time in the world where breeding such ignorance and prejudice has proven catastrophic." He also took issue with what he perceived to be star Jamie Foxx's anti-Arab comments to Jon Stewart on the Daily Show, despite being "treated 'like royalty' in the United Arab Emirates" during the shooting.[22]

Box office performance edit

The Kingdom grossed $47.5 million in the United States and $39 million in other territories for a worldwide gross of $86.6 million.[23]

The film grossed $17.1 million in 2,733 theatres in the United States and Canada in its opening weekend, ranking #2 at the box office.[24] It also grossed £919,537 in the United Kingdom,[3] about $1.9 million.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . British Film Institute. Archived from the original on July 13, 2012. Retrieved July 3, 2014.
  2. ^ "The Kingdom". Lumiere. European Audiovisual Observatory. Retrieved July 3, 2014.
  3. ^ a b c "The Kingdom". Box Office Mojo.
  4. ^ a b c "The Kingdom (2007) – Financial Information". Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  5. ^ a b "Exclusive: The Kingdom 's Peter Berg - ComingSoon.net". 21 September 2007. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  6. ^ . ASU State Press. October 1, 2007. Archived from the original on October 13, 2007.
  7. ^ . CNN. 2008-08-08. Archived from the original on August 14, 2008. Retrieved 2008-09-14.
  8. ^ "Lawsuit dropped against director Berg". ContactMusic. 2008-12-08. Archived from the original on 2012-07-24. Retrieved 2009-07-30.
  9. ^ Jaafar, Ali (December 3, 2006). "Dubai surfaces as regional film hub". Variety.
  10. ^ "Nos. 51 and 52: Peter Berg, Director of The Kingdom". 19 September 2007. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  11. ^ Gorov, Lynda (September 23, 2007). "Feeling the heat". The Boston Globe.
  12. ^ "The Kingdom (2007)". Rotten Tomatoes. IGN Entertainment. Retrieved January 13, 2023.
  13. ^ "The Kingdom: Reviews". Metacritic. CNET Networks. Retrieved January 13, 2009.
  14. ^ "Home". CinemaScore. Retrieved 2022-03-23.
  15. ^ Podhoretz, John (October 8, 2017). "One for the Good Guys". The Weekly Standard. Retrieved January 24, 2017.
  16. ^ Scott, A. O. (September 28, 2007). "F.B.I. Agents Solve the Terrorist Problem". The New York Times. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  17. ^ Travers, Peter (October 4, 2007). "The Kingdom". Rolling Stone. Retrieved January 24, 2017.
  18. ^ "The Kingdom". The A.V. Club. Sep 27, 2007.
  19. ^ "Movie Review: The Kingdom". Entertainment Weekly.
  20. ^ Bayoumi, Moustafa. "The Race is On." Middle East Report, March 10, 2010. Accessed on January 13, 2022.
  21. ^ Asharq Alawsat Newspaper (English) October 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ "One good Arab". The Guardian. October 29, 2007.
  23. ^ "The Kingdom (2007) – International Box Office". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2007-10-21.
  24. ^ "The Kingdom (2007) – Weekend Box Office". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2007-10-24.
  25. ^ "Currency Converter – Yahoo! Finance". Archived from the original on 13 July 2012. Retrieved 17 March 2017.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • The Kingdom at IMDb  
  • The Kingdom at AllMovie
  • Article about the banning of "The Kingdom" from Babylon & Beyond, the Los Angeles Times' Middle East blog

kingdom, film, 2019, japanese, film, kingdom, film, miniseries, kingdom, miniseries, kingdom, 2007, action, thriller, film, directed, peter, berg, starring, jamie, foxx, chris, cooper, jennifer, garner, film, saudi, arabia, based, 1996, bombing, khobar, housin. For the 2019 Japanese film see Kingdom film For the miniseries see The Kingdom miniseries The Kingdom is a 2007 action thriller film directed by Peter Berg and starring Jamie Foxx Chris Cooper and Jennifer Garner The film is set in Saudi Arabia and is based on the 1996 bombing of the Khobar housing complex also on the 2004 Khobar massacre and the two 2003 bombings of four compounds in Riyadh It was released in the United States on September 28 2007 The KingdomTheatrical release posterDirected byPeter BergWritten byMatthew Michael CarnahanProduced byMichael Mann Scott StuberStarringJamie Foxx Chris Cooper Jennifer Garner Jason Bateman Jeremy Piven Danny Huston Richard JenkinsCinematographyMauro FioreEdited byColby Parker Jr Kevin StittMusic byDanny ElfmanProductioncompaniesRelativity Media Forward Pass Stuber ParentDistributed byUniversal PicturesRelease datesAugust 22 2007 2007 08 22 EIFF September 28 2007 2007 09 28 United States October 11 2007 2007 10 11 Germany Running time110 minutesCountriesUnited States Germany 1 2 LanguageEnglishBudget 70 72 5 million 3 4 Box office 87 million 4 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Critical response 4 2 Middle Eastern reception 4 3 Box office performance 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksPlot editAl Qaeda terrorists in Riyadh Saudi Arabia detonate an explosive at an American oil company housing compound killing both American and Saudi citizens A suicide bomber disguised as a police officer blows himself up and terrorists shoot at the survivors before they are stopped by Sergeant Haytham of the Saudi State Police Francis Manner the Federal Bureau of Investigation s Legal Attache in Saudi Arabia alerts his colleague Special Agent Ronald Fleury to the attacks before being killed by a second bomb At FBI Headquarters in Washington D C Fleury briefs his rapid deployment team on the attack recruiting forensic examiner Janet Mayes intelligence analyst Adam Leavitt and bomb technician Grant Sykes to his team Although the U S Justice Department and the U S State Department hinder FBI efforts to investigate Fleury blackmails the Saudi ambassador into allowing his team into Riyadh On arrival they are met by Colonel Faris al Ghazi the commander of the Saudi State Police Force providing security at the compound and General Al Abdulmalik of the Saudi Arabian National Guard whose inexperience in criminal investigation hinders Fleury s team The team is invited to the palace of Saudi Prince Ahmed bin Khaled where Fleury convinces the Prince that Colonel al Ghazi is a better fit to lead the investigation With this change in leadership the Americans are allowed direct to the crime scene While searching for evidence Sergeant Haytham and Sykes discover the second bomb was detonated in an ambulance and that the brother of one of the dead terrorists had access to ambulances and police uniforms Al Ghazi orders a raid by the Saudi Emergency Force on a terrorist stronghold killing several of them Afterward Fleury s team discovers clues including photos of the U S and other Western embassies in Riyadh The U S Embassy Deputy Chief of Mission Damon Schmidt notifies Fleury and his team that they have been ordered to return to the United States On their way to King Khalid International Airport the team s convoy is attacked and Leavitt is kidnapped Al Ghazi commandeers a civilian vehicle and the team chases the car holding Leavitt into the dangerous Al Suwaidi neighborhood As they pull up a gunman fires rocket propelled grenades at them and a fierce firefight starts Leavitt is carried into a room inside a complex where the terrorists prepare to film his execution While Sykes and Haytham watch the entrance to the complex al Ghazi Fleury and Mayes follow a blood trail and kill many gunmen inside Mayes separated from the others finds the room holding Leavitt and saves him just in time As al Ghazi and the team start to leave Fleury then realizes there is a trail of blood leading to the back of the apartment where a family stays After noticing several clues al Ghazi realizes the grandfather Abu Hamza is the terrorist leader Hamza s teenage grandson walks out of the bedroom and shoots al Ghazi in the neck then points his gun at Mayes prompting Fleury to kill him Al Ghazi bleeds out in Fleury s arms Hamza pulls out an assault rifle and is killed by Haytham As Hamza dies he whispers something to his other grandchild At Al Ghazi s house Fleury and Haytham meet and comfort his family Fleury and his team return to the U S where they are commended by the FBI Director for their work Leavitt asks Fleury what he whispered to Mayes earlier in the film to get her to stop crying over Manner Fleury responds that he had told Mayes we were gonna kill em all Elsewhere Hamza s daughter asks her son about his grandfather s last words The boy tells his mother Don t fear them my child We are going to kill them all Cast editJamie Foxx as Special Agent Ronald Fleury Chris Cooper as Special Agent Grant Sykes Jennifer Garner as Special Agent Janet Mayes Jason Bateman as Special Agent Adam Leavitt Ashraf Barhom as Colonel Faris Al Ghazi Saudi State Police Ali Suliman as Sergeant Haytham Saudi State Police Jeremy Piven as Damon Schmidt Richard Jenkins as FBI Director Robert Grace Tim McGraw as Aaron Jackson Kyle Chandler as Special Agent Francis Manner Frances Fisher as Elaine Flowers Danny Huston as US Attorney General Gideon Young Kelly AuCoin as Ellis Leach Anna Deavere Smith as Maricella Canavesio Minka Kelly as Miss Ross Amy Hunter as Lyla Fleury T J Burnett as Kevin Fleury Omar Berdouni as Saudi Prince Ahmed Bin Khaled Raad Rawi as Prince Thamer Mahmoud Said as Brigadier General Al Abdulmalik Tom Bresnahan as DSS Agent Rex Burr Trevor St John as Earl Ripon Ashley Scott as Janine RiponProduction editPrior to filming director Peter Berg spent two weeks in Saudi Arabia researching the film 5 Filming began on July 10 2006 on the west side of the old Maricopa County Courthouse in Phoenix Arizona 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 6 In some of the trailer frames saguaro cacti not native to Saudi Arabia are visible in the background The scenes in the men s locker room at the beginning of the film were filmed in the men s locker room and detention area of the Gilbert Police Department The FBI briefing scene was filmed in the media amphitheater classroom in the same police building The high speed driving scenes were filmed on Loop 202 which runs through Mesa and Gilbert just prior to its opening for public use only a few miles from the ASU campus While shooting on location in Mesa Berg was involved in a fatal accident that resulted in the death of another crew member The SUV he was riding in collided with a John Deere Gator all terrain vehicle driven by assistant property master Nick Papac Papac died three hours later On August 8 2008 Papac s parents Michael Papac and Michele Bell filed a lawsuit against the director a driver and the production company 7 The lawsuit was dropped in 2008 8 Filming resumed one day after the incident On location filming took place in Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates for two weeks in mid September 5 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 9 Filming also took place at the Emirates Palace hotel in Abu Dhabi 10 11 The film s production cost an estimated 70 72 5 million 3 4 Reception editCritical response edit Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports an approval rating of 51 based on 189 reviews with an average rating of 5 8 10 The site s critical consensus reads While providing several top notch action scenes The Kingdom ultimately collapses under the weight of formula and muddled politics 12 At Metacritic which assigns a normalized rating to reviews the film has an average weighted score of 56 out of 100 based on 37 critics indicating mixed or average reviews 13 Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of B on an A to F scale 14 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 15 The 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 do over of the aftermath of the Vietnam War The Kingdom can be seen as a wishful revisionist scenario for the American response to Islamic fundamentalist terrorism 16 Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the film three stars out of four remarking Fleury goes John Wayne on their ass 17 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 The A V Club s Scott Tobias gave the movie a C criticizing the movie s queasy brand of escapism by offering the audience the pleasure of w inning imaginary wars and giving an idealized portrayal of the efficiency of American intelligence He says the film appeals to the audience s basest instincts and that despite one sympathetic Arab character the film could be tarred as racist 18 Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly accused the film of treating its audience like cash dispensing machines 19 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 Scholar Moustafa Bayoumi has critiqued the racialization of Arabs in the film along with The Siege and suggested it is representative of an emerging sub genre he says is defined by the notion of African American leadership of the Arab world intertwined with friendship with it 20 Middle Eastern reception edit 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 In a review titled One good Arab for The Guardian Palestinian writer Sharif Nashashibi argues the film is one in a long tradition of Western works where Arabs are vilified and Americans are portrayed as heroes only that this time it bothered to add a token Arab good guy equating good with pro American to make up for the fact that the rest of the Arab characters are bad All other Arab characters in the movie he says are portrayed negatively from the brutal hate filled anti western religiously fanatical terrorists to the inept corrupt heavy handed secretive and frustratingly bureaucratic Saudi authorities as opposed to the humanity grief compassion determination ability and patriotism of most of the American characters He concludes that The Kingdom perpetuates negative stereotypes for a quick buck and an adrenaline rush at a time in the world where breeding such ignorance and prejudice has proven catastrophic He also took issue with what he perceived to be star Jamie Foxx s anti Arab comments to Jon Stewart on the Daily Show despite being treated like royalty in the United Arab Emirates during the shooting 22 Box office performance edit The Kingdom grossed 47 5 million in the United States and 39 million in other territories for a worldwide gross of 86 6 million 23 The film grossed 17 1 million in 2 733 theatres in the United States and Canada in its opening weekend ranking 2 at the box office 24 It also grossed 919 537 in the United Kingdom 3 about 1 9 million 25 See also edit nbsp Germany portal nbsp Film portal nbsp United States portal nbsp Saudi Arabia portal Insurgency in Saudi Arabia Counter terrorism War on terrorReferences edit The Kingdom 2007 British Film Institute Archived from the original on July 13 2012 Retrieved July 3 2014 The Kingdom Lumiere European Audiovisual Observatory Retrieved July 3 2014 a b c The Kingdom Box Office Mojo a b c The Kingdom 2007 Financial Information Retrieved 17 March 2017 a b Exclusive The Kingdom s Peter Berg ComingSoon net 21 September 2007 Retrieved 17 March 2017 ASU Campus makes big screen debut in Kingdom ASU State Press October 1 2007 Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Hancock director sued over death CNN 2008 08 08 Archived from the original on August 14 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 14 Lawsuit dropped against director Berg ContactMusic 2008 12 08 Archived from the original on 2012 07 24 Retrieved 2009 07 30 Jaafar Ali December 3 2006 Dubai surfaces as regional film hub Variety Nos 51 and 52 Peter Berg Director of The Kingdom 19 September 2007 Retrieved 17 March 2017 Gorov Lynda September 23 2007 Feeling the heat The Boston Globe The Kingdom 2007 Rotten Tomatoes IGN Entertainment Retrieved January 13 2023 The Kingdom Reviews Metacritic CNET Networks Retrieved January 13 2009 Home CinemaScore Retrieved 2022 03 23 Podhoretz John October 8 2017 One for the Good Guys The Weekly Standard Retrieved January 24 2017 Scott A O September 28 2007 F B I Agents Solve the Terrorist Problem The New York Times Retrieved May 25 2010 Travers Peter October 4 2007 The Kingdom Rolling Stone Retrieved January 24 2017 The Kingdom The A V Club Sep 27 2007 Movie Review The Kingdom Entertainment Weekly Bayoumi Moustafa The Race is On Middle East Report March 10 2010 Accessed on January 13 2022 Asharq Alawsat Newspaper English Archived October 10 2007 at the Wayback Machine One good Arab The Guardian October 29 2007 The Kingdom 2007 International Box Office Box Office Mojo Retrieved 2007 10 21 The Kingdom 2007 Weekend Box Office Box Office Mojo Retrieved 2007 10 24 Currency Converter Yahoo Finance Archived from the original on 13 July 2012 Retrieved 17 March 2017 External links editOfficial website The Kingdom at IMDb nbsp The Kingdom at AllMovie Article about the banning of The Kingdom from Babylon amp Beyond the Los Angeles Times Middle East blog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Kingdom film amp oldid 1215270198, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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