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    The Fourth Protocol [ Region 2, PAL, Import - Spain ] [Region 2]

    The Fourth Protocol [ Region 2, PAL, Import - Spain ] [Region 2]
    Director: John Mackenzie
    Actors: Michael Caine, Pierce Brosnan, Ned Beatty, Joanna Cassidy, Julian Glover
    Studio: Filmax
    Category: DVD

    Buy New: $24.99



    New (1) Used (1) from $24.99

    Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
    Sales Rank: 126765

    Format: Pal
    Languages: English (Unknown), English (Subtitled), English (Original Language), Spanish (Original Language)
    Rating: R (Restricted)
    Region: 2
    Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
    Number Of Discs: 1
    Running Time: 119 Minutes

    UPC: 842001833320
    EAN: 0842001833320
    ASIN: B000BMTBI4

    Theatrical Release Date: August 28, 1987
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    Spain released, PAL/Region 2 DVD:it WILL NOT play on standard US DVD player. You need multi-region PAL/NTSC DVD player to view it in USA/Canada: LANGUAGES: English ( Dolby Digital 2.0 ),Portuguese ( Dolby Digital 2.0 ),Spanish ( Dolby Digital 2.0 ),English ( Subtitles ),Portuguese ( Subtitles ),Spanish ( Subtitles ),WIDESCREEN, SPECIAL FEATURES: Interactive Menu, Making Of, Photo Gallery, Scene Access, Trailer(s),SYNOPSIS: Scripted by Frederick Forsyth from his own novel, The Fourth Protocol is a fact-based spy thriller. The titular protocol is a secret agreement between America, Britain and Russia to cease smuggling nuclear weapons into their respective countries. This figures into the schemes of several rogue spies, who hope to destroy NATO by embarking on just such a smuggling endeavor. Russian agent Valeri Petrofsky (Pierce Brosnan) is ordered to stage a nuclear accident in England, then arrange the evidence to point to the Americans. British intelligence agent John Preston (Michael Caine) begins wondering why such nuclear-weapon components like lithium are showing up in the unlikeliest places. Ignored by his superiors, who figure that Preston is merely an old-line anti-Commie paranoic, Preston gathers the clues that will enable him to find out who's behind the potential breaking of The Fourth Protocol.


    Amazon.com
    Frederick Forsyth wrote the novel and screenplay for this story about a plot to stage an enormous nuclear accident in England, a catastrophe so large that its source can never be identified but will lead to assumptions that America is behind it. Michael Caine plays an aging intelligence agent who picks up clues that the ingredients for such an apocalypse are being smuggled piece-by-piece into the U.K.--but he cannot seem to get his superiors to care. Caine is outstanding in a role that seems tailor-made for him, and Pierce Brosnan is very good as the Russian agent working undercover in England to effect the planned tragedy. The film perfectly captures a spreading suspicion and resentment toward superpower adventurism, even though such sentiments are, in fact, being exploited by the bad guys. Caine, as always, suggests a man walking a narrow line through a gauntlet of moral compromises. --Tom Keogh


    Customer Reviews:   Read 12 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars The greatest spy movie of all time   October 9, 2002
    Brian W. Hudgins (Norfolk, NE USA)
    13 out of 13 found this review helpful

    This is the greatest spy thriller ever produced. Pierce Brosnan is the quintessential cold-blooded, mission-bound, Cold War Soviet spy, and Michael Caine is superb as an exasperated, mid-level British intelligence agent, on a fast-track to burnout. There were some good supporting performances, but Brosnan and Caine carried the show; they were at the top of their game in this nailbiter. Had Brosnan not been under contract with the Remington Steele show at the time (before 007 went p.c.), and the Bond franchise gotten its wish, he would have been the greatest Bond, too - you can see it so clearly in this show. Frederick Forsythe wrote The Fourth Protocol, and it was excellent, and the movie followed it faithfully. This same textual fidelity served the industry and fans well with another of Forsythe's works, The Day of the Jackal (the original, not the remake with Bruce Willis and Richard Gere, which was trash). If you like well-conceived, well-written, and well-acted spy movies, this is it. Everything else is make-believe.


    4 out of 5 stars Why do British actors make the best movie spies?   June 30, 2004
    Joseph Haschka (Glendale, CA USA)
    12 out of 12 found this review helpful

    After watching THE FOURTH PROTOCOL, I'm left wondering why British actors seem to make the most accomplished spies in releases for the Silver Screen, both big and small. In my mind, the top trio is Michael Caine (as Harry Palmer), Sean Connery (as "007"), and Alec Guinness (as George Smiley). Perhaps it's because, in real life, the UK's international spy agency, the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6), has so much more traditional panache than the Yanks' CIA. In MI6, martinis are no doubt "shaken, not stirred". It wouldn't surprise me to learn that the drink of choice in the Central Intelligence Agency is simply light beer.

    Here, Michael Caine plays John Preston, a domestic Security Service (MI5) agent on the wrong side of his boss. After being banished to Ports and Harbours, Preston stumbles across evidence that the Soviets are smuggling an atomic bomb into the UK. And indeed they are, as part of a renegade plot by KGB Director Govershin (Alan North) to re-heat the Cold War during the days of detente in the late 1980s. Govershin's infiltrates his superagent, Valeri Petrofsky (Pierce Brosnan), who's assumed the English identity of James Ross, to co-ordinate assembly of the explosive device next to a U.S. air base that stores nuclear bombs. Detonation of the Red nuke will thus be blamed on American carelessness, causing stress on the Anglo-American alliance.

    More than a decade after the collapse of the U.S.S.R, the plot of THE FOURTH PROTOCOL, which is above average in entertainment value, approaches being quaint, though the danger of a "suitcase nuke" remains real enough in today's world of pan-national terrorism. The real joy of the film is watching Caine's portrayal of the cheekily insubordinate Preston. (Cheekiness is what defines Caine's acting style and makes him so consistently engaging.)

    Brosnan's Petrofsky/Ross is baby-faced and not much beyond just sullen. Pierce has yet to acquire the patina of age that makes him one of the better, though never the best, James Bonds. (Brosnan, sure and begorry, was born in the Republic of Ireland, and is decidedly not British. Perhaps his best spy role - and it was truly excellent - was as the Bond-gone-to-seed secret agent in THE TAILOR OF PANEMA.)

    Also eminently watchable is Ian Richardson as the MI6 wallah who has more use for Preston than the latter's boss. (Richardson, if you recall, played the Soviet's mole in MI6 in the refreshingly intelligent TINKER, TAILOR, SOLDIER SPY, in which Alec Guinness debuted as superspy George Smiley, my most favorite of that actor's screen roles.) I'm always mesmerized by Richardson as his character of the moment swings from smooth charm to understated menace.

    Michael Caine's ability to play a believable spook has evolved over a continuum from such of his early films as FUNERAL IN BERLIN and THE IPCRESS FILE to the relatively recent THE QUIET AMERICAN. Whereas Sean Connery has abandoned the genre, and the late great Alec Guinness limited his participation to TTSS and SMILEY'S PEOPLE, Caine continues to venture into the espionage shadow world and THE FOURTH PROTOCOL is a rewarding mission impossible from the past.


    4 out of 5 stars A very good action-thriller   February 16, 2000
    12 out of 12 found this review helpful

    This is a really good suspense-thriller (based on the Frederick Forsythe nove) which involves a ruthless Russian agent (Pierce Brosnan) who is sent on a mission by a KGB operative to smuggle in and detonate an atomic bomb at the British NATO air-base in hopes that the British will kick out the American bomber-force and thus disrupt NATO. Michael Caine replays his Ipcress File character and plays a smart British operative who stops Brosnan. I enjoyed this movie because it has a plot that makes sense, and it is well-acted and well-directed. If you are fans of Pierce Brosnan, you would enjoy this movie because Brosnan plays a ruthless Russian agent who does not hesitate to use his "license to kill." If you are fans of Michael Caine, you would definitely like this one. The only thing I did not like about the movie was its inexplicable and abrupt ending. Other than that, I felt that it was a suspenseful movie which built up to a good climax. This is one of the better pre-Bond Brosnan movies. Incidentally, Roger Ebert gave this movie three and a half stars.


    5 out of 5 stars First Rate Cold War Thriller   October 27, 2003
    riccotto (Vienna, Austria)
    15 out of 16 found this review helpful

    I first saw this film on the same night as -- and as an antidote to the utter silliness of -- Kevin Costner's "No Way Out" (don't get me started). It was by far the better film. Like most movies made from Frederick Forsyth novels ("Day of the Jackal," "Dogs of War," "The Odessa File" etc.) the film cannot be expected to convey all the detail of the book, but serves as a useful introduction to it. It is in any case clearly better than most films on similar themes because the novel on which it is based is so carefully crafted and well researched. Although the Cold War is over, the combination of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction that the film protrays can certainly resonate with modern audiences. Both Pierce Brosnan and Michael Caine are excellent in their roles. My only questions are: Why is this film only available on DVD in Europe? And why are the European (Region 2 - PAL) versions not issued as a single DVD with multiple language tracks (E/Fr/G/Sp/I is customary) instead of one separate (expensive) DVD in English only ("The Fourth Protocol") and a less expensive DVD in German only ("Das Vierte Protokoll"). Who makes these nutty decisions, anyway? When the US DVD is issued (and I hope soon) it should have E/Sp/Fr/Port languages and subtitles. If the distributor wants to do us us a real favor it should add the German language track and subtitles, since the these are already available in the European version anyway. Do have a look at this film, however -- it is a very good and unusually intelligent thriller, and the book is even better!


    4 out of 5 stars IMPECCABLY CRAFTED SPY THRILLER WITH TENSE DRAMA   May 15, 2004
    Shashank Tripathi (Gadabout)
    9 out of 9 found this review helpful

    Michael Caine and Pierce Brosnan in a cold war spy thriller...you know with those credentials you're in for some topnotch cinema and The Fourth Protocol does not disappoint.

    The "thriller" face of the movie is cleverly crafted, it absorbs the viewer with long stretches of drama. The theme veers around the politics of the cold war and the power struggles of governments, both within and without.

    As such, the film is thus more about the political conscience and the mindgames of those involved in international sabotage than it is about exploding bombs or rattling guns, a point which some reviewers obviously missed when they lament the lack of "action".

    The beauty of the film is in its character development. Brosnan's rendition of a dark, brooding Russian with an outwardly cheerful disposition and a perfect British accent, is marvellous. One can see why he is where he is today as an actor. Michael Caine, needless to say, is sharp yet amusing as an independent-minded but loyal British secret services officer.

    A fascinating rental if you aren't expecting a Lethal Weapon. This is so much more of a thriller and so much less of Hollywood.


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