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The Devil's Own

  • 1997
  • R
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
75K
YOUR RATING
Brad Pitt and Harrison Ford in The Devil's Own (1997)
A police officer uncovers the real identity of his house-guest, an I.R.A. terrorist in hiding.
Play trailer2:23
3 Videos
76 Photos
Psychological DramaActionCrimeDramaThriller

A police officer uncovers the real identity of his house-guest, an I.R.A. terrorist in hiding.A police officer uncovers the real identity of his house-guest, an I.R.A. terrorist in hiding.A police officer uncovers the real identity of his house-guest, an I.R.A. terrorist in hiding.

  • Director
    • Alan J. Pakula
  • Writers
    • Kevin Jarre
    • David Aaron Cohen
    • Vincent Patrick
  • Stars
    • Harrison Ford
    • Brad Pitt
    • Margaret Colin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    75K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alan J. Pakula
    • Writers
      • Kevin Jarre
      • David Aaron Cohen
      • Vincent Patrick
    • Stars
      • Harrison Ford
      • Brad Pitt
      • Margaret Colin
    • 157User reviews
    • 64Critic reviews
    • 52Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos3

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:23
    Official Trailer
    The Devil's Own
    Trailer 2:20
    The Devil's Own
    The Devil's Own
    Trailer 2:20
    The Devil's Own
    The Devil's Own
    Trailer 0:31
    The Devil's Own

    Photos76

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    Top cast55

    Edit
    Harrison Ford
    Harrison Ford
    • Tom O'Meara
    Brad Pitt
    Brad Pitt
    • Rory Devaney
    Margaret Colin
    Margaret Colin
    • Sheila O'Meara
    Rubén Blades
    Rubén Blades
    • Edwin Diaz
    • (as Ruben Blades)
    Treat Williams
    Treat Williams
    • Billy Burke
    George Hearn
    George Hearn
    • Peter Fitzsimmons
    Mitchell Ryan
    Mitchell Ryan
    • Chief Jim Kelly
    Natascha McElhone
    Natascha McElhone
    • Megan Doherty
    Paul Ronan
    Paul Ronan
    • Sean Phelan
    Simon Jones
    Simon Jones
    • Harry Sloan
    Julia Stiles
    Julia Stiles
    • Bridget O'Meara
    Ashley Acarino
    Ashley Acarino
    • Morgan O'Meara
    • (as Ashley Carin)
    Kelly Singer
    • Annie O'Meara
    David O'Hara
    David O'Hara
    • Martin MacDuff
    David Wilmot
    David Wilmot
    • Dessie
    Anthony Brophy
    Anthony Brophy
    • Gerard
    Shane Dunne
    • Young Frankie
    Martin Dunne
    • Frankie's Father
    • Director
      • Alan J. Pakula
    • Writers
      • Kevin Jarre
      • David Aaron Cohen
      • Vincent Patrick
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews157

    6.274.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8BrandtSponseller

    Better if you do not expect an action (and especially not a thriller) film

    As a child in Ireland, Frankie McGuire (Brad Pitt) sees his dad gunned down for his involvement with the Irish Republican Army (IRA). As an adult, McGuire has followed in his dad's footsteps. When the IRA decides it needs more firepower, they hatch a plan that involves McGuire going to the United States to pick up a shipment of Stinger missiles. Through American IRA contacts, McGuire adopts a false identity and housing is arranged with a non-involved Irish family headed by New York City cop Tom O'Meara (Harrison Ford).

    There is an impression that The Devil's Own is an action film. The Internet Movie Database has it listed as "Action/Drama/Thriller". Although there are some action elements in the film, this is really a tragic drama, almost in a classical sense, and it's best to approach the film with only that genre in mind. The plot is fairly complex and the film tends to move slowly--much more slowly than a typical actioner or thriller.

    The heart of the story is McGuire's relationship with O'Meara and his family. All of the other material--the IRA stuff, the mob and terrorist stuff, the New York City cop stuff, and so on, are not the focus. Those elements are present to help establish characterization, to build the relationship and understanding between McGuire and O'Meara, and to provide a justification for the developments in the film, and particularly the conclusion, which all have poignant things to say about the decisions that we make and why we make them.

    The film largely succeeds if seen from this dramatic perspective. It's not quite a 10, however, as it always seems slightly distanced from the viewer. It's an 8 out of 10 for me.

    (This comment was originally posted on January 16, 2005 and ended with the above. The following was added much later after reading through some other user comments:) We should not forget that even though it takes elements from the real world to construct its story, The Devil's Own is NOT intended to be journalistic or a documentary. There is no claim that it is giving an accurate portrayal of political situations, and it's not intended to campaign for one side or another in a real-world political situation. This is fiction, folks, and should be judged _as fiction_. For that, you should forget about what you know of the real world, and assess the story, images and sounds you experience from your television. Does the story work as a self-contained entity? Are the performances good? Is it visually attractive/rewarding? Those are the kinds of things we should be judging.

    For me, The Devil's Own succeeded as a drama about relationships, with its poignancy arrived at primarily by making two people from very different worlds, with very different outlooks, learn to see things from different perspectives.

    That's great if you're very knowledgeable about Northern Ireland in the real world and if you have strong opinions about terrorism. However, your knowledge and opinions on that stuff have nothing to do with this film.
    7waterman1976

    A tasty sunday afternoon snack

    I love movies from this timeperiod. They carry a vibe that's gone in modern day movies. Different camera action, less pace (even action movies) and a different psychology of the characters. TDO is not the best movie of it's genre, but Ford and Pitt bring a lot of weight to it. Pitt is charming as always, but is also convincing portraying a ruthless IRA commander. A decent script, lovely irish accents and convincing motives for the characters make this a nice movie for a sunday afternoon.
    tprb

    A romanticised view of a merciless foe

    What is it with American-Irish? Some of their richest and most respectable members have poured millions of Dollars into the IRA, harboured some of their members, idealised the notion of a "fight for freedom". Believe me, as a Scot, with William Wallace et al I've always had a certain affinity for heroes. But the IRA are no heroes. They've become Northern Ireland's drug-dealers, extortioners, gangsters. The people of Ireland as whole have had enough of them and their way of terrorising innocent people. May it be the IRA or the UDP, the notion of a Catholic V Protestant jihad has long ago turned into a simple cycle of self-perpetuating violence. These men and women are no longer anything resembling the oh-so glorious Michael Collins, they are terrorists who don't know when to quit and never knew anything but how to fight. These men aren't the Brad Pitts of the world, nor is the British Army an oppressor anymore (considering that over 90% of the locals support the Army, simply because it provides protection). Yet in 1997 we still got the great toss of this movie, showing us how brave Irishmen fight against an onslaught of British stormtroopers and evil S(I)S men. Somehow it seems that America is hell-bent on keeping up the idea of the stiff upper-lip English villain. May it be The Devil's Own, Braveheart, U-571 or most recently The Patriot, Hollywood seems bent on demonising the US' closest ally, both politically and culturally. I may not be a great fan of the English, but even I know what harm stereotypes can do. Perhaps the writer should have gone out to the streets of Belfast and asked ordinary people what they think of the IRA. Perhaps the writer should have also approached a soldier and asked him what it's like to occupy Northern Ireland. Somehow, I have severe doubts that a movie about the post-WW2 SS-"Werwölfe" guerillas would be quite so romanticised.

    And this movie has a Riverdance sequence. Oh please....
    Allie-18

    One Sorry Mess

    There seems to be a certain template for making "Oirish" movies in Hollywood. Add some or all of the following ingredients to your movie script - Aran Sweaters, a sub-Deliverance rural setting, comely maidens with red hair, a village idiot (teeth optional), impromptu céilís and dancing at the crossroads, priests, drunken violence and the obligatory "Ooh arr, begorrah" accents and you have an Irish film. And if you want some controversy, why not try to tackle the situation in Northern Ireland by adding in some IRA men for good measure. Unfortunately, the Devil's Own has quite a few of the aforementioned clichés in abundance.

    It is a great shame that with a cast and director of this calibre, they couldn't have come up with something better. There have been very few, if any, decent films ever made about Northern Ireland and perhaps it's time Hollywood stopped trying to put forward its own take on it, especially when it is as cack-handed as The Devil's Own. Not only is the whole movie grossly offensive to Irish people, and anyone else with a brain, but it is a dangerous message to be sending out to gullible Irish Americans. It's time film-makers stopped buying into the idea that the IRA are noble warriors when in fact they and others of their ilk are terrorists, pure and simple.

    Avoid this like the plague. Brad Pitt's accent is the least of the problems in this film. He just isn't convincing as the cold-blooded killer he is supposed to be - he's far too nice. Harrison Ford is his usual reliable self but too much of the movie is taken up with a largely irrelevant sub-plot featuring himself and Ruben Blades as his police partner. At times, The Devil's Own seems like an IRA film mixed up with NYPD Blue.
    6Howlin Wolf

    Why must Hollywood meddle in things it doesn't understand?

    I say this making no pretense at completely understanding the Irish conflict myself (you'd have to ask someone with experience of Belfast for a more authentic take on the situation), but the irresponsible way the troubles were used here as a backdrop to what is supposed entertainment staggers me. It isn't as if it needed this detail; the terrorist could have been from any unspecified organisation. In the incompetent handling of sensitive issues that the makers really have no idea of, the production team involved in this really have let themselves down. Brad Pitt realised this too late and henceforth disowned the film, a fact which made me admire and respect him even more.

    For this I wanted to hate the film, and yet found myself unable to. Beneath the misbegotten attempts at 'political comment', there is a decent little thriller struggling to get out. Pitt is great as the terrorist (dodgy accent aside) and Ford is as reliable as ever in the role of the honest cop. Director Pakula keeps the story moving at all times and stages the action well. Despite all these pluses, I constantly felt uncomfortable at the ways in which the script tried to manipulate my sympathies. While it's not quite enough to make me downgrade the film on an enjoyment level, it loses big points from an ethical perspective. Shame on you Tinseltown.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Brad Pitt wanted to leave the production, but was threatened by a lawsuit. In the February 2, 1997, issue of Newsweek, Pitt called the film a "disaster", and said that "it was the most irresponsible bit of filmmaking - if you can even call it that - that I've ever seen. I couldn't believe it". Rumors of fighting on the set (especially over which star would be the focus of the film) plagued the production. The original script was discarded and there were at least seven subsequent rewrites. Pitt said the final version was "a mess". "The script that I had loved was gone," he said. "I guess people just had different visions and you can't argue with that. But then I wanted out and the studio head said, 'All right, we'll let you out, but it'll be $63 million for starters." (Harrison Ford later noted that Pitt "forgot for a moment that he was talking to someone whose job it was to write this s*** down".)
    • Goofs
      When taking Rory/Frankie in to the police station, Tom and his partner leave him alone, though handcuffed, in the rear seat. It is standard police practice to have one officer in back with the suspect, and seated directly behind the driver. This prevents any assault on the driver, or attempt to escape without being observed - or seen too late by way of the rear view mirror as happened here.
    • Quotes

      Rory: Don't look for a happy ending. It's not an American story. It's an Irish one.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Liar Liar/The Graduate/Selena/Crash/Kolya (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Gonna Fly Now
      Music by Bill Conti

      Lyrics by Carol Connors and Ayn Robbins

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 26, 1997 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Enemigo íntimo
    • Filming locations
      • Clogherhead, County Louth, Ireland
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $90,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $42,868,348
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $14,274,503
      • Mar 30, 1997
    • Gross worldwide
      • $140,807,547
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 51 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • SDDS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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