The Spanish Prisoner
Writer-director David Mamet crafted this unusual, Hitchcockian thriller in which no one is who they appear to be. Campbell Scott is Joe Ross, who has just created a "process" that stands to make his company and his boss, Klein (Ben Gazzara), millions of dollars. At a clandestine meeting in the Caribbean, Ross discusses the details of the process with company executives. There, purely by chance, or so he believes, he meets the wealthy, enigmatic Jimmy Dell (Steve Martin), and the two strike up an unusual friendship. Dell informs Ross that he's naïve to believe that his company will fairly compensate him for his valuable work. Upon returning home, Ross becomes paranoid that Dell is right, and he takes steps to protect his invention, becoming unsure if he can trust Klein or even his own love-struck assistant (Rebecca Pidgeon). When Ross discovers that Dell has lied to him about his identity, he contacts the FBI -- he then finds himself set up as a murder suspect who learns, almost too late, to trust no one. The title of the film refers not to any of the characters but to a classic con artist's scam. more..
Director: David Mamet
Starring: Campbell Scott, Rebecca Pidgeon, Steve Martin,Ben Gazzara, Ricky Jay
This is his sleekest and most engaging film thus far. If you like a good cat-and-mouse game with a keen ear for language, then go.
The Spanish Prisoner resembles Alfred Hitchcock in the way that everything takes place in full view, on sunny beaches and in brightly lit rooms, with attractive people smilingly pulling the rug out from under the hero and revealing the abyss.
It's a treat to encounter the deadpan light-handedness with which Mamet goes about his business.
A thriller so tricky that figuring it out is half the fun.
For once, too, David Mamet the director outshines David Mamet the writer.
Best Screenplay
Chlotrudis Awards (1999)
Best Motion Picture
Edgar Allan Poe Awards (1999)
Best Screenplay
Independent Spirit Awards (1999)
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