The Spanish Prisoner

The Spanish Prisoner is a 1997 American neo-noir suspense film, written and directed by David Mamet and starring Campbell Scott, Steve Martin, Rebecca Pidgeon, Ben Gazzara, Felicity Huffman and Ricky Jay.The Swiss bank account that Jimmy opened for him makes it look as though he is hiding assets, and the certificate he signed to join the club turns out to be a request for political asylum in Venezuela, which has no extradition treaty with the United States.David Mamet is famous for the style of dialogue he writes, which is characterized by incomplete sentences, foul language, stutters, restarts, and interruptions; it is known as "Mamet-speak".Often they punctuate their dialogue with four-letter words, but in The Spanish Prisoner there is not a single obscenity, and we picture Mamet with a proud grin on his face, collecting his very first PG rating".By disdaining to look and sound like anything overly serious, Mr. Mamet's Pinteresque speech rhythms succeed as nothing since Glengarry Glen Ross (1984 on stage, 1992 on screen) in capturing something pervasively paranoid in contemporary life.[8] James Berardinelli of Reelviews.net, who gave it 3 out of 4 stars, compared it to Hitchcock's works, claiming that it "supplies us with a seemingly-endless series of twists and turns, only a fraction of which are predictable" as well as praising the actors by saying that "nearly every major performance is impeccable".The strong supporting cast features fine work... Barbara Tulliver's editing is crisp—the pacing never flags for a moment—and Carter Burwell's score is fabulously moody and evocative".[12] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a rating of 89% from 61 reviews with the consensus: "The Spanish Prisoner delivers just what fans of writer-director David Mamet expect: a smart, solidly constructed drama that keeps viewers guessing... and entertained along the way.
Spanish PrisonerDavid MametJean DoumanianBen GazzaraFelicity HuffmanRicky JaySteve MartinRebecca PidgeonCampbell ScottGabriel BeristainCarter BurwellSony Pictures ClassicsToronto International Film Festivalneo-noirsuspense filmconfidence gameMystery Writers of AmericaEdgar AwardBest Motion Picture Screenplaydrug mulesSwiss bank accountSwiss francsextradition treatytranquilizedUS MarshalsEd O'NeillJonathan KatzClark GreggRoger EbertAndrew SarrisPinteresqueGlengarry Glen RossFilm Journal InternationalHouse of GamesAlfred HitchcockJames BerardinelliStrangers on a TrainThe Man Who Knew Too MuchRotten TomatoesEdgar Allan Poe Award for Best Motion Picture ScreenplayChlotrudis AwardIndependent Spirit Award for Best ScreenplayThe Huffington PostHuffington Post Media GroupSalon Media GroupAirplane!Seattle Repertory TheatreThe DissolveEbert, RogerChicago Sun-TimesSun-Times Media GroupSarris, AndrewThe New York ObserverObserver MediaPrometheus Global MediaBerardinelli, JamesTurner Broadcasting SystemsBox Office MojoThe Duck VariationsSexual Perversity in ChicagoSquirrelsAmerican BuffaloReunionThe Water EngineA Life in the TheatreThe WoodsLakeboatEdmondThe Frog PrinceThe ShawlSpeed-the-PlowBobby Gould in HellOleannaThe CryptogramThe Old NeighborhoodBoston MarriageFaustusRomanceNovemberThe AnarchistChina DollThe PenitentThe Postman Always Rings TwiceThe VerdictThe UntouchablesWe're No AngelsThe EdgeWag the DogLanskyHannibalThe PrinceThings ChangeHomicideThe Winslow BoyState and MainSpartanRedbeltLost Masterpieces of PornographyPhil SpectorOn Directing FilmThree Uses of the KnifeThe Wicked SonThe UnitLindsay CrouseZosia MametClara MametLynn Mamet