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The Devil's Own

The Devil's Own

1997Movie⏱️ 1h 51mR🏆 #5011 Top Rated
ActionCrimeDramaThriller
6.2
IMDB Rating
76,736 votes

A police officer uncovers the real identity of his house-guest, an I.R.A. terrorist in hiding.

Director
Alan J. Pakula
Writers
Kevin Jarre, David Aaron Cohen, Vincent Patrick
Stars
Harrison Ford, Brad Pitt, Margaret Colin
Release Date
March 26, 1997
Language
English, Spanish
Country
United States
🎯 1
Nominations
💬 158
Reviews
📋 63.1K
Watchlists
📽️ View on IMDB

🎭 Top Cast

Harrison Ford
Harrison Ford
as Tom O'Meara
Brad Pitt
Brad Pitt
as Rory Devaney
Margaret Colin
Margaret Colin
as Sheila O'Meara
Rubén Blades
Rubén Blades
as Edwin Diaz
Treat Williams
Treat Williams
as Billy Burke
George Hearn
George Hearn
as Peter Fitzsimmons
Mitchell Ryan
Mitchell Ryan
as Chief Jim Kelly
Natascha McElhone
Natascha McElhone
as Megan Doherty
Paul Ronan
Paul Ronan
as Sean Phelan
Simon Jones
Simon Jones
as Harry Sloan

💰 Box Office

$140,807,547
Worldwide Gross
$42,868,348
Domestic Gross
$14,274,503
Opening Weekend

🎬 Technical Specs

Aspect Ratio
2.39 : 1
Sound
SDDS
Sound
Dolby Digital
Color
Color
Filming Location
Clogherhead, County Louth, Ireland
Production
Columbia Pictures

🏷️ Keywords

boatmurder of fatherjudgehusband wife relationshippolice partner

🎯 Categories

Psychological DramaActionCrimeDramaThriller

⭐ Featured Review

Worth checking out at least once
by slightlymad222014-08-10
6/10

"A thriller about an IRA gunman (Brad Pitt) who draws an American family into the crossfire of terrorism. Frankie McGuire is one of the IRA's deadliest assassins. But when he is sent to the U.S. to buy weapons, Frankie is housed with the family of Tom O'Meara, a New York cop (Harrison Ford) who knows nothing about Frankie's real identity. Ford last appeared in a movie two years before this one in 1995's Sabrina (one of Ford's few financial flops) a remake of the 1954 film with its trio of stars, Audrey Hepburn, Humphrey Bogart, and William Holden. Before that he'..."

💡 Did You Know?

Brad Pitt wanted to leave the production, but was threatened by a lawsuit. In the February 2, 1997, issue of Newsweek, Pitt called the film a "disaster", and said that "it was the most irresponsible bit of filmmaking - if you can even call it that - that I've ever seen. I couldn't believe it". Rumors of fighting on the set (especially over which star would be the focus of the film) plagued the production. The original script was discarded and there were at least seven subsequent rewrites. Pitt said the final version was "a mess". "The script that I had loved was gone," he said. "I guess people just had different visions and you can't argue with that. But then I wanted out and the studio head said, 'All right, we'll let you out, but it'll be $63 million for starters." (Harrison Ford later noted that Pitt "forgot for a moment that he was talking to someone whose job it was to write this s*** down".)

📖 Synopsis

A police officer uncovers the real identity of his house-guest, an I.R.A. terrorist in hiding.