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Fair Game

Fair Game

date : June 23rd, 2011

Drama
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  1. R. Kyle // June 23rd, 2011 at 11:26 am
    53 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Compelling spy thriller and domestic drama, November 22, 2010
    By 
    R. Kyle (USA) –
    (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
      
    (VINE VOICE)
      
    (REAL NAME)
      

    Remember Joe Wilson, the man who called a US President a liar?

    No, I don’t mean the Congressman from South Carolina who shouted out a spontaneous “You Lie!” at President Barack Obama during the State of the Union address. I’m referring to Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson who wrote a New York Times editorial entitled “What I Didn’t Find In Africa” contradicting President George W. Bush regarding the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

    “Fair Game” relates to the latter Joe Wilson (played by Sean Penn), who served as a diplomat in Africa during the 1990′s and was asked to visit Niger prior to the Iraqi war to determine if there was yellowcake uranium there. Ambassador Wilson did not find the uranium on his visit and when the President referred to the uranium being there, he wrote a contradiction.

    As a result of that contradiction, Wilson’s wife CIA agent Valerie Plame (Naomi Watts) was determined to be ‘fair game’ by the Bush Administration. Her cover was blown and the operations she engaged in were all scrapped, including getting Iraqi nuclear scientists who had been involved in Iraq’s nuclear program before it was destroyed during a previous US invasion and their families free from their war-torn country.

    The film’s a tightly paced combination spy thriller and domestic drama. On one hand, you see the front page news of “Plamegate”. Valerie’s discredited and her career is dismantled. She goes from being a well-traveled agent with highly critical projects to ‘a secretary’ or a ‘low level flunky’ depending on what you read.

    On the other, you see the Wilson homelife unraveling. The idealistic Joe is counterpointed strongly by his realistic wife as the country turns against them both. They receive countless threats, to the point of Valerie having to remove her children from their home.

    This investigation resulted in the case, US vs. Libby in which Vice President Dick Cheney’s aide Scooter Libby was tried on five federal felony counts. Libby was convicted on four of those charges, involving false statements, perjury, and obstruction of justice, none of which related directly to the Plame revelation but rather to his failure to cooperate with the subsequent investigation into the revelation. Libby was sentenced to 30 months in prison and a fine of $250,000. President Bush subsequently commuted Libby’s sentence.

    If you’re interested in Wilson’s memoirs, check out: The Politics of Truth: A Diplomat’s Memoir: Inside the Lies that Led to War and Betrayed My Wife’s CIA Identity

    Rebecca Kyle, November 2010

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  2. D. Barbour // June 23rd, 2011 at 11:57 am
    65 of 77 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    A Political Film Triumph, February 9, 2011
    By 
    D. Barbour (MA) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Fair Game [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray)

    Fair Game is one of the best politically themed films in quite some time – an equally riveting and well told story of the Bush administration’s leak of CIA agent Valerie Plame’s identity to the general public. I highly recommend this movie no matter what side of the political spectrum you are on – if for nothing more than two see the two Oscar-worthy performances of Naomi Watts and Sean Penn. The movie is great, and the final sequence of the film is one of the year’s best.

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  3. Craig Whittle // June 23rd, 2011 at 12:55 pm
    61 of 73 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Fair Game Review, February 22, 2011
    By 
    Craig Whittle (Phoenix, AZ) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Fair Game [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray)

    FAIR GAME

    STARRING: Naomi Watts, Sean Penn, Ty Burrell, Brooke Smith, Thomas McCarthy, Jessica Hecht, Noah Emmerich, Bruce McGill and Sam Shepard

    WRITTEN BY: Jez Butterworth and John Henry Butterworth; based on the books, The Politics of Truth, by Joseph Wilson, and Fair Game by Valerie Plame

    DIRECTED BY: Doug Liman

    Rated: PG – 13
    Genre: Drama
    Release Date: 05 November 2010
    Review Date: 09 November 2010

    A very rewarding and not highly practiced treat in cinema, is sitting down in your seat at a theater and having no idea what kind of movie you’re about to watch; not the premise, not the rating, not the genre.

    I’ve been fortunate to do this a few times and it can be awesome. If you’re wondering how you can do this, well – every once in a while for whatever reason, a studio will release a film with A-list talent but only put it in a selected handful of theaters across the country. As such was the case for me when I drove 15 miles to see Fair Game at my city’s `artsy’ theater, knowing only that it was the new Sean Penn.

    I was also surprised to learn at the film’s close, that it was based very largely on a true story. Fair Game shows a couple who was sabotaged by the media when they exposed that the government had blatantly lied about where Iraq may or may not have gotten their supposed nuclear warheads, way back at the brink of the Iraq war.

    Now before you get all fussy due to the touchy political subject matter, RELAX. I’m a proud American and served in the Military and I didn’t find the film offensive. We are all aware that Sean Penn is known for voicing his lefty political views rather radically; but I strongly think 99 percent of us with brain stems will agree with his character’s speech at the end of the film.

    This movie isn’t about bashing Bush or his administration and it’s not about being anti-American and painting a portrait that displays Iraqi terrorists as the good guys and us as the bad guys. If anything, it’s a film showcasing both our beautiful God-given rights to freedom of speech and that if you KNOW firsthand that someone lied, then you may want to do something about it; sometimes no matter what the cost.

    I’m not going to say whether or not the film is 100 percent accurate because I don’t know that and you don’t know that. Hell, the filmmakers probably don’t even know that. But we ALL know that things were shady to say the least for a while there, and that surely somewhere, SOMEONE lied – big or small, they did; and it was most likely more than one person.

    Anyway – Fair Game shows us a character named Joe Wilson (Sean Penn) who volunteered to go to Africa on behalf of the CIA’s request, to investigate if and or how weapons of mass destruction could have been shipped from there. The film shows us very clearly, that they could not have been. Our character knows this. Oh, and he was asked to do this by the way, because his wife Valerie (Naomi Watts) is a CIA operative, and Joe has some experience in this field, the details of which I’ll leave for you to discover.

    When Joe returns, he is baffled to soon learn that we are going to war, and that the President and the Pentagon have more or less claimed that it was proven that these WMDs did in fact come from Africa, and that Iraq has them and that we need to step in. Being one of, if not THEE only American who knows this to be not true, Joe naturally feels a duty to report this. So he writes and article, has it published and all hell breaks loose for him and his wife, and that’s all I’m going to tell.

    There are however, a slew of small additional things to mention to you. The acting is sensational; specifically from both Penn and Watts, no shocker there I’m sure. The cinematography is terrific as is the direction by Doug Liman who also brought us The Bourne Identity and Mr. and Mrs. Smith. And the film is brilliantly written and it displays scenes of realistic moments we can all relate to; such as political discussions at a dinner table with friends or family who are quick to run their mouths about things of which they have no personal experience with. You know, dinners where everyone at the table is an expert and can solve all the world’s problems? Yeah, dinners like that.

    If anything, aside from being entertaining from start to finish, Fair Game is a movie that makes you think. It makes us realize how the media will often twist and skew things to be interpreted the way they see fit; and don’t worry – I’m not blind to the fact that Hollywood does this as well.

    Although the odds are high that it will never happen to you or me, each and every one of us could be `fair game’ to the media or the government’s vendetta driven shenanigans at any moment. But what’s great about America, and what this film is trying to…

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