In the Line of Fire

In the Line of Fire

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Wolfgang Petersen
Produced by Jeff Apple
Written by Jeff Maguire
Starring Clint Eastwood
John Malkovich
Rene Russo
Dylan McDermott
Music by Ennio Morricone
Cinematography John Bailey
Edited by Anne V. Coates
Production
company
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
  • July 9, 1993 (1993-07-09)
Running time
128 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $40 million[1]
Box office $177 million

In the Line of Fire is a 1993 American action thriller film directed by Wolfgang Petersen, and starring Clint Eastwood, John Malkovich and Rene Russo.[2] Written by Jeff Maguire, the film is about a disillusioned and obsessed former CIA agent who attempts to assassinate the President of the United States and the Secret Service agent who tracks him. Eastwood's character is the sole active-duty Secret Service agent remaining from the detail guarding John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas, at the time of his assassination in 1963. The film also stars Dylan McDermott, Gary Cole, John Mahoney, and Fred Thompson.

The film was co-produced by Columbia Pictures and Castle Rock Entertainment, with Columbia handling distribution. Eastwood and Petersen also originally offered the role of Leary to Robert De Niro, who turned it down due to scheduling conflicts with A Bronx Tale.[3] In the Line of Fire was the final film Eastwood starred in that he did not direct by himself until 2012's Trouble with the Curve.

Plot

United States Secret Service Agents Frank Horrigan and Al D'Andrea meet with members of a counterfeiting group at a marina. The group's leader, Mendoza, tells Horrigan that he has identified D'Andrea as an undercover agent, and forces him to prove his loyalty by putting a gun to D'Andrea's head and pulling the trigger. Horrigan shoots Mendoza's men, identifies himself as an agent, and arrests the counterfeiter.

Horrigan investigates a complaint from a landlady about an apartment's absent tenant. He finds a collage of photographs and newspaper articles on famous assassinations, a model building magazine, and a Time cover with the President's head circled. When Horrigan and his partner return with a search warrant, only one photograph remains, which shows a much younger Horrigan standing behind John F. Kennedy in Dallas in 1963 in a modified version of Ike Altgens' picture.[4] He is the only remaining active agent who was guarding the President that day, but guilt over his failure to react quickly enough to the first shot, which could have enabled him to shield Kennedy from the subsequent fatal bullet, caused Horrigan to begin drinking excessively and his family to eventually leave him.

Horrigan receives a phone call from the tenant, who calls himself "Booth". He tells Horrigan that like John Wilkes Booth and Lee Harvey Oswald, he plans to kill the President, who is running for reelection and is making many public appearances around the country. Horrigan asks to return to the Presidential Protective Detail despite his age, where he begins a relationship with fellow agent Lilly Raines.

Booth continues to call Horrigan as part of his "game", even though he is well-aware that his calls are tapped and traced. He mocks the agent's failure to protect Kennedy, but calls him a "friend". Booth escapes Horrigan and D'Andrea after one such call from Lafayette Park, but leaves fingerprints. The FBI matches the print, but the person's identity is classified, so the bureau cannot disclose it to the Secret Service; but the FBI does notify the CIA.

At a campaign event in Chicago Booth pops a decorative balloon which Horrigan, who has the flu, mistakes for a gunshot. Due to the error he is removed from the protective detail but remains in charge of the Booth case. Horrigan and D'Andrea learn from the CIA that Booth is Mitch Leary, a former operative (a "wetboy") who has suffered a mental breakdown and is now a "predator". Leary, who has already killed several people as he prepares for the assassination, uses his modelmaking skills to build a composite zip gun to evade metal detectors and hides the bullets and springs in a keyring.

D'Andrea confides to Horrigan that he is going to retire immediately because of nightmares about the Mendoza incident, but Horrigan is able to dissuade him. After Leary taunts Horrigan about the President facing danger in California, the assassin kills D'Andrea after the two agents chase him across Washington rooftops. Horrigan asks Raines to reassign him to the protective detail as the President visits Los Angeles, but a television crew films him mistaking a bellboy at the Westin Bonaventure Hotel for a security threat, and he must again leave the detail.

Horrigan connects Leary to a bank employee's murder and learns that Leary, who has made a large campaign contribution, is among the guests of a campaign dinner at the hotel. He sees the President approach the assassin and jumps in front of his bullet. As the Secret Service quickly removes the President, Leary uses Horriganwho is wearing a bulletproof vestas a hostage to escape to the hotel's external elevator. The agent uses his earpiece to tell Raines and sharpshooters where to aim; although they miss Leary, Horrigan defeats him. The would-be-assassin chooses to fall to his death from the elevator.

Horrigan, now a hero, retires as his fame no longer lets him do his job. He and Raines find a farewell message from Leary on Horrigan's answering machine. Horrigan and Raines leave the house and visit the Lincoln Memorial.

Cast

Production

Producer Jeff Apple began developing In the Line of Fire in the mid-1980s. His previous credits included Zapped!, a teen comedy starring Scott Baio. For Fire, Apple made several research trips to Secret Service headquarters in Washington, D.C. and recruited Secret Service agents, including Robert Snow, to consult. Snow helped lead Apple to the real Secret Service Agent the Clint Eastwood character is modeled on. The Secret Service also gave an official nod to Apple's project.

Apple planned on making a movie about a U.S. Secret Service Agent on detail during the Kennedy assassination since his boyhood. Apple was inspired and intrigued by a vivid early childhood memory of meeting Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson in person surrounded by Secret Service Agents with earpieces in dark suits and sunglasses. The concept later struck Apple as an adolescent watching televised replays of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. In 1991, writer Jeff Maguire came aboard and completed the script that would become the movie.[5]

Filming began in late 1992 in Washington, D.C.[1] Scenes in the White House were filmed on a pre-built set, while an Air Force One interior set had to be built at a cost of $250,000.[1]

A sub-plot of the film is the President's reelection campaign. For the scenes of campaign rallies the filmmakers used digitally-altered scenes from President George Herbert Walker Bush's and then-Governor Bill Clinton's 1992 campaign events.[1]

The movie also uses digitized imagery from 1960s Clint Eastwood movies inserted into the Kennedy assassination scenes. As Jeff Apple described it to the Los Angeles Times, Clint "gets the world's first digital haircut".[6]

Reception

Critical response

In the Line of Fire was released in United States theaters in July 1993. The film received mostly positive reviews, receiving a 95% "Certified Fresh" positive rating by top film critics based on 64 reviews with an average rating of 7.8 out of 10 and a 79% positive audience rating based on 53,265 reviews.[7] Roger Ebert gave the film three and a half stars out of four, writing: "Most thrillers these days are about stunts and action. In the Line of Fire has a mind."[8]

Box office

The film was a considerable financial success as well, earning $187,343,874 worldwide[9] (over $102 million in North America and $85.1 million in other territories), while its budget was about $40 million.

Accolades

Television series

In September 2015, it was announced that the film will be adapted into a television series.[12]

References

Citations
  1. 1 2 3 4 Hughes, p.80
  2. Eller, Claudia (July 13, 1993). "In the Line of Fire: Whose Movie Is It, Anyway?". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 27, 2010.
  3. Crocker, John (22 September 2011). "MOVIE FEATURE: 10 THINGS YOU DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT... ROBERT DE NIRO". Red Bull. Archived from the original on May 30, 2015. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  4. "In the Line of Fire (1993) Trivia". IMDB. Retrieved November 27, 2013.
  5. Turan, Kenneth (July 9, 1993). "'Fire' lines up a worthy villain for Clint". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
  6. Galbraith, Jane (July 11, 1993). "A look inside Hollywood and the movies 'Line of Fire' Gives Crowd Control a New Meaning". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 13, 2011.
  7. "In the Line of Fire (1993)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  8. Ebert, Roger (July 9, 1993). "In the Line of Fire". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
  9. Box Office Information for In the Line of Fire. The Numbers. Retrieved September 6, 2013.
  10. "Awards for In the Line of Fire". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
  11. "The 50 greatest heroes and the 50 greatest villains of all time" (PDF). American Film Institute. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
  12. Porter, Matt (21 September 2015). "IN THE LINE OF FIRE SERIES IN THE WORKS AT NBC". IGN. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
Bibliography
  • Hughes, Howard (2009). Aim for the Heart. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84511-902-7. 

External links

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