Killer Elite - De Nero, Jason Statham and Clive Owen (1 Viewer)

The Military Workshop

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Hi Guys,

This movie is being released 23 SEPT in USA. Not a remake of the James Caan movie.

Based on a true story, Killer Elite pits two of the worlds' most elite operatives - Danny, an ex-special ops agent (Jason Statham) and Hunter, his longtime mentor (Robert De Niro) - against the cunning leader of a secret military society ('Clive Owen' ). Covering the globe from Australia to Paris, London and the Middle East, Danny and Hunter are plunged into a highly dangerous game of cat and mouse - where the predators become the prey. Written by Anonymous.

Some filming in Oz and some Aussies in the cast.

Note the "true story" and "Anonymous" mystery but then read my Mirbat SAS posts under Historical thread.

Will be interesting to see what real events get mentioned as the book this is based on is written by former SAS member Sir Ranulph Fiennes (he is credited in the movie).

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1448755/


Regards
Brett
 
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This is now in the cinemas. Anybody seen it yet ?

Film is still being promoted as based on a true story. Below is something I posted in a historical thread last year. Will be interesting to see the "'true'' bits in the movie.

Mirbat 1972 - 9 v 400
Thought some members might be interested in this story. One of the Fijians in this battle was later a member of the SAS assault on the Iranian Embassy.

Now recognised as the most heroic action the SAS ever fought, it remains unknown to most people because it was part of a secret war, one that officially Britain had no part in.

A book to be published later this month describes that extraordinary battle and reveals how close the SAS came to death and defeat as they stood their ground against an army counted in hundreds.

Click for Daily Mail article
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...s-bullets.html

SAS Operation Storm: Nine Men Against Four Hundred, by Roger Cole and Richard Belfield, is published by Hodder & Stoughton today at £18.99.

An interesting side story followed this battle.

The officer in charge subsequently died in an SAS training exercise (or did he ?). A former SAS member Ranulph Fiennes who also fought in Oman subsequently wrote a book called The Feather Men.

The book tells the story of four British Army soldiers, including two members of the Special Air Service (ie officer who died in training) , who are assassinated by a hit squad known as "The Clinic". The murders are carried out over a 17-year period, on the orders of a Dubai sheikh whose son was killed by British forces in Oman during a battle with Communist guerrillas.

Fiennes claimed that he himself was targeted by the group, but was saved by a group of vigilantes calling themselves the "Feather Men".

The novel caused considerable controversy over the claim that it was based on real events. Publisher Bloomsbury described it as a "true adventure" when it was published in 1991. Fiennes claimed that the Feather Men had shown him detailed dossiers on the assassins and their victims, and requested that he write an "authorised" history of the group. A source in the Ministry of Defence told The Daily Telegraph:

Many events Fiennes describes simply never took place. Frankly, it's just another example of the Special Forces' reputation being exploited for commercial gain.

Fiennes himself remained vague on the story's veracity, asserting that it was up to the reader to decide whether it was fact or fiction, and suggested journalists subject events and people described in the book to "forensic examination", and to draw their own conclusions. Fiennes describes his novels as "factional", meaning a blend of fact and fiction. The hardcover editions had the words "Fact or fiction?" printed on the covers, and contained an index, maps and photographs as a non-fiction book would. The paperback editions, however, presented the book as purely fiction and omitted the index and illustrations.

However, there is a paperback copy of The Feather Men which includes photographs of the victims and other real life characters, a map (Oman in 1976) and other illustrations (e.g. a block diagram of the modification of the BMW car brake system to incorporate remote radio control) and an index and seems, by its back cover blurb, to claim the book to be a factual account. It was published by Signet in 1992 - ISBN 0 45 11.7455 0

In June 2010, Alice Clarke, the daughter of SAS soldier Major Mike Kealy whose death is depicted in The Feather Men at the hands of The Clinic, spoke out, saying that her father had died during an endurance exercise in the Brecon Beacons in 1979. Describing Fiennes' claims as "disgraceful", she stated that her mother had confronted the author at the Hay Festival, and he had admitted to her that the story was a work of fiction

A film adaptation of the book is currently underway, entitled Killer Elite. Filming took place in 2010 in Melbourne, Australia and South Wales, UK. The film is directed by Gary McKendry and stars Jason Statham, Clive Owen, Robert De Niro, Yvonne Strahovski and Dominic Purcell. It is scheduled to be released in September 2011

Fiennes himself has an interesting background, ex SAS and is a well known explorer and was even shortlisted as Bond when Roger Moore got the job.

This 2010 article also interesting (family of the officer not happy with Fiennes)


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/cele...wood-film.html

Note how the movie release date 23 SEPT in USA is being promoted http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1448755/

Based on a true story, Killer Elite pits two of the worlds' most elite operatives - Danny, an ex-special ops agent (Jason Statham) and Hunter, his longtime mentor (Robert De Niro) - against the cunning leader of a secret military society ('Clive Owen' ). Covering the globe from Australia to Paris, London and the Middle East, Danny and Hunter are plunged into a highly dangerous game of cat and mouse - where the predators become the prey. Written by Anonymous

Regards
Brett
 
I watched this movie earlier tonite and was not very impressed. If those guys were the Killer Elite the 'average' killer in the 80's must have been very ordinary as these guys could have solved their situation in the first 15 minutes of the movie if they had any sense at all. The movie was full of cliches and the acting was not up to the standard you would expect from such high profile actors. I have not read the book but apparently the movie varied from the book in several key aspects, I suspect that these variations did not do the movie any favors. The Mirbat battle was mentioned a few times but that was it. It isn't a bad movie as such, just not very good, and maybe I was expecting too much, something like 'Ronin' because it is similar in some aspects and also includes Robert De Niro.
 
this was a really good show...Statham has come into his own with the big boys now...De Niro is getting old but nailed his character too...Owens role was well acted too...an action packed thriller...I would watch this one again...
 

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