The Quiet American (2002 film)
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| Directed by | Phillip Noyce |
| Produced by | Staffan Ahrenberg William Horberg |
| Written by | Christopher Hampton Robert Schenkkan |
| Based on | The Quiet American by Graham Greene |
| Starring | Michael Caine Brendan Fraser Do Thi Hai Yen |
| Music by | Craig Armstrong |
| Cinematography | Christopher Doyle |
| Editing by | John Scott |
| Distributed by | Miramax Films |
| Release date(s) | September 9, 2002 (TIFF) November 22, 2002 (United States) May 22, 2003 (Germany) |
| Running time | 101 minutes |
| Country | Germany United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $30 million |
| Box office | $12,988,801 |
The Quiet American is a 2002 film adaptation of Graham Greene's bestselling novel of the same name. It was directed by Phillip Noyce and starred Michael Caine, Brendan Fraser, and Do Thi Hai Yen.
The 2002 version of The Quiet American, in contrast to the 1958 version, depicted Greene's original ending and treatment of the principal American character, Pyle. Like the novel, the film illustrates Pyle's moral culpability in fostering intrigue within the South Vietnamese government. Going beyond Greene's original work, the film used a montage ending with superimposed images of American soldiers from the intervening decades of the Vietnam War.
Miramax had paid $5.5 million for the rights to distribute the film in North America and some other territories,[1] and this film went on to gross US$12.9 million in limited theatrical release in the United States. Michael Caine was nominated for the Oscar as Best Actor.
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[edit] Plot
Set in the early 1950s in Saigon, Vietnam, during the end of the First Indochina War, on one level The Quiet American is a love story about the triangle that develops between Thomas Fowler, a British journalist in his fifties, a young American idealist, supposedly an aid worker, named Alden Pyle, and Phuong, a Vietnamese girl. On another level it is also about the political turmoil and growing American involvement that led to the Vietnam War.
Thomas Fowler (Michael Caine), who narrates the story, is involved in the war only as an observer, apart from one crucial instant. Pyle (Brendan Fraser), who represents America and its policies in Vietnam, is an OSS (Office of Strategic Services) operative sent to steer the war according to America’s interests, and is passionately devoted to the ideas of York Harding, an American foreign policy theorist who said that what Vietnam needed was a "third player" to take the place of both the colonialists and the Vietnamese rebels and restore order. This third player was plainly meant to be America, and so Pyle sets about creating a "Third Force" against the Viet Minh by using a Vietnamese splinter group headed by corrupt militia leader General Thé (based on the actual Trinh Minh The). His arming of Thé's militia with American weaponry leads to a series of terrorist bombings in Saigon. These bombings, dishonestly blamed on the Communists in order to further American outrage, kill a number of innocent people, including women and children.
Meanwhile, Pyle has stolen Fowler's Vietnamese mistress Phuong (Do Thi Hai Yen), promising her marriage and security. When Fowler finds out about Pyle's involvement in the bombings, he takes one definitive action to seal all of their fates. He indirectly agrees to let his assistant, Hinh (Tzi Ma), and his Communist cohorts confront Pyle; when Pyle tries to flee, Hinh fatally stabs him. Phuong subsequently returns to Fowler, and while the local French police commander (Rade Šerbedžija) suspects Fowler's role in Pyle's murder, he has no evidence and does not pursue the matter.
[edit] Cast
- Michael Caine as Thomas Fowler
- Brendan Fraser as Alden Pyle
- Do Thi Hai Yen as Phuong
- Rade Šerbedžija as Inspector Vigot
- Tzi Ma as Hinh
- Robert Stanton as Joe Tunney
- Holmes Osborne as Bill Granger
- Quang Hai as General Thé
[edit] Accolades
Michael Caine was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Thompson, Anne (October 17, 2002). "Films With War Themes Are Victims of Bad Timing". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 26, 2012. http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/17/movies/films-with-war-themes-are-victims-of-bad-timing.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm. Retrieved January 26, 2012.
[edit] External links
- The Quiet American at the Internet Movie Database
- The Quiet American at AllRovi
- The Quiet American at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Quiet American at Box Office Mojo
- "By the Bombs' Early Light" - essay by H. Bruce Franklin on the historical context of the novel and the 2002 film
- "Michael Caine Makes Noise: He dismisses claims that The Quiet American is somehow anti-American" - Interview with film critic Joe Leydon on controversies surrounding the film
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- 2002 films
- German films
- American films
- English-language films
- French-language films
- 2000s drama films
- 2000s thriller films
- Cold War films
- Films about journalists
- Films about war correspondents
- Films based on novels
- Films based on works by Graham Greene
- Films directed by Phillip Noyce
- Films set in the French colonial empire
- Films shot in Vietnam
- Miramax Films films
- Political thriller films
- Vietnam War films