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The Spanish Prisoner

PG 1998 1h 52m Crime Drama List
89% Tomatometer 63 Reviews 81% Audience Score 5,000+ Ratings
Everything changes for rising corporate star Joe Ross (Campbell Scott) when he meets the wealthy and mysterious Jimmy Dell (Steve Martin) at a tropical resort. Dell offers to help Ross protect his new business process invention, but in short order Ross finds himself falsely accused of murder. Working with the FBI and his assistant, Susan Ricci (Rebecca Pidgeon), Ross sets out to prove his innocence and disentangle himself from the diabolical entrapment. Read More Read Less
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The Spanish Prisoner

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Critics 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.

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Critics Reviews

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Mike Clark USA Today There are enough twists and grown-up intrigue to keep one asking, "Hey, what's going on here?" Rated: 3/4 Jan 9, 2018 Full Review Leonard Klady Variety David Mamet has a penchant for sleight-of-hand thrillers, and The Spanish Prisoner is his craftiest to date. Nov 20, 2008 Full Review Andrew Sarris Observer The Spanish Prisoner shares with Glengarry Glen Ross a vision of life as a cosmic con game in which the victimizers feed the fantasies of the victims. Apr 27, 2007 Full Review Wesley Lovell Cinema Sight “The Spanish Prisoner” is the kind of film that makes you glad you went... Rated: 3.5/4 Oct 5, 2023 Full Review Rob Gonsalves Rob's Movie Vault I realize this is a different kind of movie, one that demands to be plot-driven, not messy or discursive, but Mamet’s true gifts lie elsewhere. Rated: B Sep 1, 2022 Full Review Michael Clark Epoch Times A neo-noir thriller cut from a fine bolt of Hitchcockian gabardine laced with silken Chekhovian thread, “The Spanish Prisoner” gets its title from a passage presented in the third act that Mamet calls “the oldest con in the book.” Rated: 4.5/5 Jul 3, 2022 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Kyle J Keeps you twisting and turning to the very end. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 07/29/24 Full Review Shioka O I want to like this thriller, but I couldn't get into it maybe because the characters are being bland and speak emotionless. Given that smart and theatrical dialogs, I would like to have more intensity. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 12/10/22 Full Review chuck r This one remains an all time favorite of mine. One of the best that David Mamet ever put forth with a great performance by Campbell Scott and a memorable dramatic turn for Steve Martin. Check this out! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member Why does no one is this film have any emotions? Why is it that David Mamet told everyone to be as stoic as humanly possible? I just watched this movie for the second time not realizing I had seen it 20 years ago. Films usually aren't forgettable but I remember feeling this way the first time. It's uneventful and we have no reason to care for the main characters survival. I can see how this movie could be on stage, maybe it would have been better suited there. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 06/22/21 Full Review Audience Member What I remember most about The Spanish Prisoner is the music. The score is marked by strange and beautiful melodies whose notes are hard to anticipate; downbeats are occasionally accented with the ringing of a bell. The movie goes along like this too. The main character is unwittingly wrangled into a sinister and inscrutable plot. His most precious possession, an extremely lucrative innovation referred to as "the Process," has been compromised. He strains to piece together what's happening to him and who's behind it all. From time to time, he realizes some small truth -- a bell is rung -- but then the melody moves on and he's too late. It's already "in the movie," as the Merry Pranksters might say. What I don't remember about the movie is the emotion. There's a man who by the end of the film appears to have been fooled by everyone. He's even been framed for murder. He's lost the thing that is most important to him. And yet we never see him overly emotive, let alone hysterical. We don't see any other characters like that either. This isn't a bad thing. There's a logic to the movie, even if we don't understand it, and for those wheels to turn smoothly they can't be gummed up by any sort of "why me?" kind of sentiment. It's also helps to let the aesthetic in. It's a cold one but that's what makes it unique. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/26/23 Full Review Milo M The Spanish Prisoner is about a man that invented something worth lots of money but his boss is not saying much about his bonus. So he tries to find help but someone near him is playing him, trying to steal the invention. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 08/20/20 Full Review Read all reviews
The Spanish Prisoner

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Movie Info

Synopsis Everything changes for rising corporate star Joe Ross (Campbell Scott) when he meets the wealthy and mysterious Jimmy Dell (Steve Martin) at a tropical resort. Dell offers to help Ross protect his new business process invention, but in short order Ross finds himself falsely accused of murder. Working with the FBI and his assistant, Susan Ricci (Rebecca Pidgeon), Ross sets out to prove his innocence and disentangle himself from the diabolical entrapment.
Director
David Mamet
Producer
Jean Doumanian
Screenwriter
David Mamet
Production Co
Magnolia Films, Sweetland Films, Jasmine Productions Inc., Jean Doumanian Productions
Rating
PG
Genre
Crime, Drama
Original Language
English
Release Date (Streaming)
Nov 22, 2018
Box Office (Gross USA)
$9.6K
Runtime
1h 52m
Sound Mix
Surround, Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio
35mm
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