- Title: VARIOUS: PREMIERE OF THE FILM "RULES OF ENGAGEMENT"
- Date: 12th April 2000
- Summary: LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES (APRIL 2, 2000)(REUTERS) SLV PAN EXTERIOR THEATRE HOLDING WORLD PREMIERE OF "RULES OF ENGAGEMENT" MV SAMUEL L. JACKSON ARRIVES AT PREMIERE SCU ZOOM OUT TOMMY LEE JONES TALKING TO THE PRESS MV JAMES WEBBB TALKING TO A REPORTER SCU ANNE ARCHER TALKING WITH THE PRESS SCU AUSTRALIAN ACTOR GUY PEARCE TALKING TO REPORTERS SLV RED CARPET AR
- Embargoed: 27th April 2000 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATES AND VARIOUS FILM LOCATIONS
- Country: USA
- Reuters ID: LVA2NEC3UZRTB48LW11LMS88OO57
- Story Text: Veteran US actors Samuel L.Jackson and Tommy Lee Jones were joined by co-stars and the former US Naval Secretary James Webb for the premiere of "Rules of Engagement" in Los Angeles.
"Rules of Engagement" is a nuts-and-bolts, ramrod-straight military thriller that uses a distinctly unsavory case to defend the honor of the U.S.Marines' way of life.
Taking a broad and obvious approach to ambiguous material that's virtually all plot mechanics with little nuance or characterization, William Friedkin's combat-and-courtroom drama possesses sufficient action and conflict to put it over as a solid commercial attraction, and it will be easy for Paramount to suggest to the public that the picture is this season's "A Few Good Men" or "The General's Daughter," big hits both.
The specifics of the situation, which were elaborated into a screenplay by TV writer Stephen Gaghan from a story by former Marine infantry commander and Secretary of the Navy James Webb, may be distinct from other screen military melodramas, but the dynamics, the honor of the military view vs.the incomprehension and hostility of civilians, are pretty familiar.
Probably the film "Rules" most resembles, notably in its stress on decisions made under difficult battle conditions and its concern with the truth about how and why tragic events occurred, is the 1996 "Courage Under Fire," which also dealt with combat in the Middle East.
A ten-minute prologue illustrates the defining moment in the lifelong bond between Terry Childers (Samuel L.Jackson) and Hays Hodges (Tommy Lee Jones), which was cemented when the former saved the latter's life during a mission in Vietnam.
Twenty-eight years later, Col.Childers presents Col.
Hodges with a sword at his retirement party from the Marines before heading off for another arena of conflict, this time in Yemen.
With angry crowds besieging the American Embassy, Childers commands three Marine choppers that are sent to rescue the cowering ambassador (Ben Kingsley), his wife (Anne Archer) and son.
By the time the colonel and his men arrive, snipers are firing from rooftops across the street, and the mob is launching rocks and knocking down the doors to the ancient palace.Childers only barely manages to spirit out the government representative in the nick of time.But the fighting continues, Marines start to be killed, and Childers finally gives the order to start firing into the crazed crowd.
The result is an international scandal: Eighty-three Arabs are dead, including many women and children, with scores more wounded.Snapping into action, the transparently evil National Security Adviser, William Sokal (Bruce Greenwood), demands that the blame for the slaughter be placed squarely upon Col.Childers for giving illegal orders to "murder"
unarmed people, so as to take responsibility off the United States in general.
In other words, the fix is in from the start, and there's nothing that even sympathetic military higher-ups can do about it.
Rightly sensing he's being hung out to dry, Childers asks his old buddy Hodges, who went to law school after Nam, to represent him at the court-martial.
Although Hodges insists, "I'm a weak lawyer," he can hardly refuse his friend, who flatly states the film's point of view when he says, "If I'm guilty of this, I'm guilty of everything I've done in combat for the last 30 years."
Hodges takes a quick trip to Yemen in search of anything or anyone possibly helpful to his client, but all he finds is heated anti-Americanism and mutilated victims, mostly children, of Marine bullets.
He returns mad as hell at Childers, but then the audience gets to see something that no one else sees: a videotape taken by an embassy security camera that clearly shows many of the "innocent" men, women and, yes, children in the crowd firing guns at the American compound and its defenders.Finding this evidence at odds with his intentions, Sokal tosses the one and only tape in the fire.
The final 45 minutes of the film are devoted to the trial, in which callow bulldog prosecutor Maj.Mark Biggs (Guy Pearce) relentlessly attacks Childers' alleged recklessness.
Hodges chips away at the government's case as best he can, even managing to suggest that Sokal destroyed the tape he proves was sent to the State Deptartment from Yemen, but it just doesn't look like it's going to be enough, especially in light of the weasely ambassador's lies on the stand and Childers' own unfortunate outburst at a crucial point.
The anti-Arab defamation crowd could conceivably mobilize itself for this one, since all Yemeni adults but one are seen as hate-filled marauders.Still, none of them is as clearly nefarious as the National Security Adviser, who, rather than the military, is meant to represent the poison that infects the American establishment. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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