+

poster of The Jackal
Rating: 6.375/10 by 1864 users

The Jackal (1997)

Hired by a powerful member of the Russian mafia to avenge an FBI sting that left his brother dead, a psychopathic hitman known only as The Jackal proves an elusive target for the people charged with the task of bringing him down: a deputy FBI director, a Russian MVK Major, and a jailed IRA terrorist who can recognize him.

Directing:
  • Michael Caton-Jones
  • Bill Westley
  • Libbie Barr
  • Jane Burgess
  • Buddy Joe Hooker
  • Adam Goodman
  • Martin Krauka
Writing:
  • Chuck Pfarrer
  • Kenneth Ross
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Nov 14, 1997

Rating: 6.375/10 by 1864 users

Alternative Title:
Schakalen - SE
The Day of the Jackal - US
Sakal - SI
Chacal - ES
Der Schakal - The Jackal - DE
狙击职业杀手 - CN
狙擊職業殺手 - HK

Country:
Canada
France
Germany
Japan
United Kingdom
United States of America
Language:
English
Pусский
Runtime: 02 hour 04 minutes
Budget: $60,000,000
Revenue: $159,300,000

Plot Keyword: showdown, hitman, politics, bratva (russian mafia), cold war, fbi, montreal, canada, revenge, terrorism, ira (irish republican army), pretending to be gay

Bruce Willis
The Jackal
Richard Gere
Declan Mulqueen
Sidney Poitier
Carter Preston
Diane Venora
Major Valentina Koslova
J.K. Simmons
FBI Agent T. I. Witherspoon
Mathilda May
Isabella Zanconia
John Cunningham
FBI Director Donald Brown
Jack Black
Ian Lamont
Tess Harper
The First Lady
David Hayman
Terek Murad
Ravil Isyanov
Ghazzi Murad
Richard Lineback
FBI Agent McMurphy
Steve Bassett
George Decker
Jonathan Aris
Alexander Radzinski
Richard Cubison
General Belinko
Bob Kingdom
Ambassador Koldin
Jim Grimshaw
Green Beret Colonel
Terrence Currier
Surgeon General
Sophie Okonedo
Jamaican Girl
Laura Viederman
Woman in Video
Murphy Guyer
NSC Representative
Philip LeMaistre
Bored Teenage Clerk
James McCauley
CIA Representative #1
Serge Christianssens
Immigration Officer
Boris Boscovic
Interrogator
Ewan Bailey
Prison Guard
Danette Alberico
Woman with Champagne #1
Debra Gano
Woman with Champagne #2
Eddie Bo Smith Jr.
Washington Cop
Dan Ziskie
CIA Representative #2
Yuri Stepanov
Victor Politovsky

Wuchak

Globetrotting pursuit of a master-of-disguise assassin RELEASED IN 1997 and directed by Michael Caton-Jones, "The Jackal” is an international crime thriller about a joint FBI/MVD mission (led by Sidney Poitier and Diane Venora) that enlists the aid of an imprisoned IRA combatant (Richard Gere) to stop a brutal master-of-disguise assassin known as The Jackal (Bruce Willis) from completing a big hit in Washington DC. This was a loose remake of the film “The Day of the Jackal” (1973), which was based on the 1971 novel by Frederick Forsyth. The first act is too convoluted for my tastes as the story globetrots from Moscow to Helsinki to Canada to the USA. But the movie finds its footing and settles into an entertaining political action flick not far removed from the tone of “The Saint” with Val Kilmer, released the same year. Both films are from the same genre, have the same tone, were made for the same amount ($60 million), feature an antagonist who’s a master-of-disguise and are named after that person. While both movies made roughly the same in North America ($55-60 million), “The Jackal” proved more popular worldwide, making almost $160 million, which was $50 million more than “The Saint.” IMHO “The Jackal” is the more all-around entertaining picture. Critics love to lambaste this movie because (1.) it deviates too much from the original film and (2.) because of the mounting nonsensical elements. But (1.) “The Jackal” was made to stand on its own in late 90’s cinema and (2.) why do other action thrillers like James Bond get a pass when it comes to ridiculous plot holes? Besides, many of the supposed nonsensical moments can easily be cleared up if you pay attention to the details; not all of them, of course, but many of them. What I don’t like is the disingenuousness of many of the criticisms. For instance, Roger Ebert’s opening criticism of the film was to mock the way The Jackal sneaks into the USA from Canada by purchasing a sailboat and entering a race from Mackinaw to Chicago. Ebert reasoned that there are easier ways to enter the US inconspicuously along the 3000-mile border, but he left out an important detail: The Jackal was smuggling a huge computerized machine gun and its formidable mount. THAT is why he bought the yacht and used the race as a means to enter the country unnoticeably amidst a crowd of other crafts. Aduh. One of the best aspects of this flick is the great cast and seeing them work together. Poitier was 69 during filming and looks very distinguished; this was incidentally his last theatrical release (although he appeared in four TV movies in the ensuing four years). Jack Black is effective in a peripheral role tailor-made for him. But it’s Gere and Willis who steal the show, naturally. The latter is particularly entertaining in an almost shocking departure from his typical easy-going, friendly persona. As The Jackal, Willis is relaxed, carefree, cold, malicious, cunning, calculating, smart, icy and ruthless; a charming psychopath. I shouldn't close without mentioning the excellent score by Carter Burwell mixed with an edgy alternative rock soundtrack, featuring cuts by Massive Attack ("Superpredators" and "Dissolved Girl") and the like. THE MOVIE RUNS 2 hour, 4 minutes and was shot in Moscow, Finland, Montreal, London, the Carolinas, Virginia and Chicago. SCREENPLAY: Chuck Pfarrer. GRADE: B-/C+

JPV852

This is one I've seen several times over the years and while certainly not great and it is funny hearing Richard Gere with an Irish accent and the numerous hair changes with Bruce Willis, I still find it watchable and somewhat entertaining. That said, how the Jackal was written was a problem because while for most of the movie he's a cold-blooded and calculating character, his actions of going after Isabella was strange to do in the midst of planning an assassination versus going for revenge (which itself didn't make sense) after he completed his mission and got paid, and that's not to mention giving away his true target with a line about Declan unable to protect his women, though even then not sure how Declan came to that (albeit correct) conclusion. Probably just lazy script writing. However, there are some cool shots (in the days when they used helicopters for aerial shots compared to using drones) and the direction from Michael Caton-Jones was solid. **3.0/5**

Niko

The Jackal is the kind of Thriller that does everything by the book. Most of the movie is comprised out of well-known and established tropes, it's got a packed cast and decent action scenes. It may not reinvent the wheel or keep you on your toes, but it does offer some solid 90's entertainment for about two hours.


My Favorite

Welcome back!

Support Us

Like Movienade?

Please buy us a coffee

scan qr code