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Body of Lies (2008)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
10 October 2008 (USA) moreTagline:
Trust no one. Deceive everyone. morePlot:
Roger Ferris uncovers a lead on a major terrorist leader suspected to be operating out of Jordan. | full synopsisNewsDesk:
(69 articles)
Scott discusses War on Terror flops (From digitalspy. 20 November 2008, 7:48 AM, PST)
Guns N Roses World Premiering Entire Album Chinese Democracy on MySpace
(From toxicshock. 20 November 2008, 6:51 AM, PST)
User Comments:
A marvelous character study moreUS Showtimes:
(register to personalize)Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Leonardo DiCaprio | ... | Roger Ferris | |
| Russell Crowe | ... | Ed Hoffman | |
| Mark Strong | ... | Hani | |
| Golshifteh Farahani | ... | Aisha | |
| Oscar Isaac | ... | Bassam | |
| Ali Suliman | ... | Omar Sadiki | |
| Alon Abutbul | ... | Al-Saleem (as Alon Aboutboul) | |
| Vince Colosimo | ... | Skip | |
| Simon McBurney | ... | Garland | |
| Mehdi Nebbou | ... | Nizar | |
| Michael Gaston | ... | Holiday | |
| Kais Nashif | ... | Mustafa Karami | |
| Jamil Khoury | ... | Marwan (as Jameel Khoury) | |
| Lubna Azabal | ... | Aisha's Sister Cala | |
| Ghali Benlafkih | ... | Aisha's Nephew Rowley |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Chatter (USA) (working title)House of Lies (USA) (working title)
Penetration (USA) (working title)
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MPAA:
Rated R for strong violence including some torture, and for language throughout.Parents Guide:
View content advisory for parentsRuntime:
128 minCountry:
USAColor:
ColorAspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 moreCertification:
USA:R (certificate #44537) | Ireland:15A | Finland:K-15 | Canada:13+ (Québec) | Canada:14A (Alberta/Ontario) | UK:15 | Netherlands:16 | South Africa:16LV | Canada:18A (British Columbia/Manitoba) | Australia:MA | Singapore:NC-16 | New Zealand:R16 | Philippines:R-13 (MTRCB) | Germany:16 | Hong Kong:IIB | South Korea:15 | Portugal:M/16MOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
While the derelict-but-surviving US neighborhood where the Manchester Scenes were filmed had plenty of its own street litter and urban debris, the Hollywood crew (in the effort to make the area look like an English slum) had left certain piles of prop rubbish in precise places. For scene continuity, such rubbish needed to remain present --even when scenes took multiple days to film. To protect against unwitting community litter cleanup, "essential" debris was flagged overnight and on weekends with "hot set" tape (a specialized version of other American yellow hazard tapes which say things like "caution caution caution", "wet paint", or "police line do not cross"). moreGoofs:
Continuity: In the first half of the movie, Roger Ferris (Leonardo DiCaprio) goes to Aisha's (Golshifteh Farahani) apartment to meet her sister and nephews. While having a meal at the apartment when Aisha's sister questions Ferris about America's involvement in Iraq, Aisha says to her sister "we are having LUNCH" in an attempt to dissuade her from being rude. Later on when Ferris believes Aisha has been kidnapped by terrorists and goes to the CIA for help, while he is interrogated/interviewed by the Americans they all refer to his visit to Aisha's apartment as "Dinner". moreQuotes:
[from trailer]Ed Hoffman: Our world as we know it is much simpler... to put to an end than you might think.
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Soundtrack:
If The World moreFAQ
Is "Body of Lies" based on a book?Is there really a new Guns 'N' Roses song during the end credits?
Where were the explosion scenes shot?
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Amidst all the slam-bang, Body of Lies is actually a superb character study of two preening, bumbling CIA (presumably) agents trying to save the world in the Middle East. Roger Ferris (Di Caprio) is the agent on the ground, and Ed Hoffman (Crowe) is his remote-control boss in Washington. Their collective M.O. is to overreact and improvise at every turn, aided and abetted by their deep attachment to high-tech gadgetry and fundamental disregard for human lives. Their ally and foil, the Jordanian head of intelligence (Mark Strong), prefers more patient methods informed by a less skin-deep understanding of the people(s) involved.
All three are trying to penetrate and take out a shadowy, violent Islamic fundamentalist group and its leader. The plot is serviceable, the elements familiar, but it all works well to coax out Scott's and screenwriter William Monahan's critiques of the American way of unconventional war in the Middle East. The movie itself is funny, visually fine (Scott's touch hasn't deserted him), and engaging. Its center is the uneasy but highly entertaining partnership between Di Caprio and Crowe. At times verging on pure comedy (their semi-serious macho argument over which of them could beat up the other 10 years ago is a high point), the film never tips too far in this direction thanks to the two actors' easy skill and Scott's sure hand at maintaining a certain tone.
Is Body of Lies an antiwar statement? I don't think so - it's possible Monahan and Scott even think the Americans' grotesque imperial venture has a chance, if only they could learn a few lessons from the likes of the self-possessed Jordanian. But this seems unlikely. At the beginning, Crowe makes the very good point that it's precisely the Americans' mastery of (by?) their high-tech appurtenances that makes it nearly impossible for them to see their foes, who use much more down-to-earth techniques - like passing instructions by word of mouth. He then proceeds to ignore his own advice throughout the movie. Di Caprio rips into Crowe for his disregard of the lives of their local operatives, then goes on to thoughtlessly place in mortal danger an architect and an Iranian refugee nurse with whom he's infatuated.
They just don't learn. If they did, they wouldn't be who they are: the gallant spreaders of justice, democracy, and casual calamity. If that's what Scott and Monahan are trying to tell us, it's antiwar statement enough, the same news that Graham Greene brought us over 50 years ago with The Quiet American, updated and just as pertinent.