Jan 20, 2015 From Fair Game (1995) - Dir. Andrew Sipes. This feature is not available right now. Please try again later. Find trailers, reviews, synopsis, awards and cast information for Fair Game (1995) - Andrew Sipes on AllMovie - Supermodel and sex symbol Cindy Crawford made her. Find trailers, reviews, synopsis, awards and cast information for Fair Game (1995) - Andrew Sipes on AllMovie - Supermodel and sex symbol Cindy Crawford made her. Nov 03, 1995 Stallone had previously starred in Cobra (1986) which was also based on the same Paula Gosling novel as Fair Game (1995) See more » Goofs In an otherwise correct list of international currency codes, the bank computer displays the Japanese Yen as YEN instead of JPY. Fair Game is a 1995 American action film directed by Andrew Sipes. It stars Cindy Crawford as family law attorney Kate McQuean and William Baldwin as Max Kirkpatrick, a Florida police officer. Kirkpatrick ends up on the run to protect McQuean when she is targeted for murder by ex-members of the KGB with interests in a ship owned by a Cuban man who may lose it in a divorce case being pursued by McQuean. Fair Game (1995) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.
Fair Game |
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Directed by | Doug Liman |
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Produced by | |
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Screenplay by |
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Based on | Fair Game by Valerie Plame The Politics of Truth by Joseph C. Wilson |
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Starring |
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Music by | John Powell |
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Cinematography | Doug Liman |
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Edited by | Christopher Tellefsen |
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River Road Entertainment[1] |
Distributed by | Summit Entertainment |
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- May 20, 2010 (Cannes)
- October 2, 2010 (USA)
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108 minutes |
Country | - United States
- United Arab Emirates
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Language | English |
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Budget | $22 million[2] |
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Box office | $24.2 million |
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Fair Game is a 2010 biographicalpoliticaldrama film directed by Doug Liman and starring Naomi Watts and Sean Penn.[3] It is based on Valerie Plame's memoir, Fair Game,[3] and Joseph C. Wilson's memoir, The Politics of Truth.
Watts stars as Plame and Penn as her husband, Joseph C. Wilson.[3] It was released in 2010 and was one of the official selections competing for the Palme d'Or at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival.[4] The film won the 'Freedom of Expression Award' from the National Board of Review. The film marked Watts' and Penn's third collaboration, having previously co-starred in the films 21 Grams and The Assassination of Richard Nixon.
Plot[edit]
Valerie Plame is employed by the Central Intelligence Agency, a fact known outside the agency to no one except her husband and parents. She is an intelligence officer involved in a number of sensitive and sometimes dangerous covert operations overseas.
Her husband, Joseph C. Wilson, is a diplomat who most recently has served as the U.S. ambassador to Gabon. Due to his earlier diplomatic background in Niger, Wilson is approached by Plame's CIA colleagues to travel there and glean information as to whether yellowcake uranium is being procured by Iraq for use in the construction of nuclear weapons. Wilson determines to his own satisfaction that it is not.
After military action is taken by George W. Bush, who justifies it in a 2003 State of the Union address by alluding to the uranium's use in building weapons of mass destruction, Wilson submits an op-ed piece to The New York Times, claiming these reports to be categorically untrue.
Plame's status as a CIA operative is subsequently revealed in the media, the leak possibly coming from White House officials, including the Vice President's chief of staff and national security adviser, Scooter Libby, in part to discredit her husband's allegation that the Bush administration had manipulated intelligence to justify the invasion of Iraq. As a result, Plame is instantly dismissed from the agency, leaving several of her delicate operations in limbo and creating a rift in her marriage.
Plame leaves her husband, further angered by his granting of television and print interviews, which expose them both to public condemnation and death threats. Wilson ultimately persuades her, however, that there is no other way to fight a power as great as that of the White House for citizens like them. Plame returns to him and testifies before a Congressional committee, while Libby is convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice and given a 30-month prison sentence, although President Bush commutes the jail time on Libby's behalf.
Main cast[edit]
Fair Game 1995 Cast And Crew
- Naomi Watts as Valerie Plame
- Sean Penn as Joseph Wilson
- Noah Emmerich as Bill
- Ty Burrell as Fred
- Sam Shepard as Sam Plame
- Bruce McGill as James Pavitt
- Brooke Smith as Diana
- Michael Kelly as Jack
- Liraz Charhi as Dr. Zahara
- Khaled El Nabawy as Hamed
- Anand Tiwari as Hafiz
- David Denman as Dave
- David Andrews as Scooter Libby
- Geoffrey Cantor as Ari Fleischer
- Adam LeFevre as Karl Rove
- Nassar as Mr. Tabir
- Satya Bhabha as Jason Neal
Production[edit]
Nicole Kidman[5] and Russell Crowe[6] were originally cast in the lead roles in 2008. Ao oni game.
Production took place in Washington, D.C.[7] and New York City.[8] In October 2009 the film news website Corona's Coming Attractions published an exclusive review from a source that had been invited to a test screening of the film. The reviewer gave the rough cut a positive recommendation calling it, 'A wonderful human drama with political suspense that should interest anybody no matter how they vote.'[9]
The film had a public screening during the Abu Dhabi film festival on October 21, 2010 and it got a generally positive review. There was also a Q&A session with the director afterwards.
There was a second preview screening in Brisbane, Australia as part of the Brisbane International Film Festival (BIFF) on October 28, 2010.
Critical reception[edit]
Fair Game received positive reviews. Review aggregate Rotten Tomatoes reports a 79%, 'fresh' accumulated critical reaction.[10]
Historical accuracy[edit]
There has been dispute as to the historical accuracy of Fair Game. Two claims in the film caused vastly differing responses among political analysts. The first is that Joe Wilson's fact-finding trip to Niger served to debunk a British claim that Saddam Hussein had earlier tried to obtain uranium from Niger. In a November 2010 Washington Post column about the film, Walter Pincus and Richard Leiby, two reporters who had covered the Plame affair, wrote that this characterization was accurate.[11] In National Review, journalist Clifford May disagreed, writing that, rather than debunking the uranium claim, Wilson's trip and report had actually bolstered it, because 'the most important piece of information Wilson brought back from his mission to Africa was that a high-level Iraqi trade mission had visited Niger in 1999.'[12] A December 2010 Washington Post editorial also disagreed with Pincus and Leiby, citing the 2004 British Butler Review, which stated that the original claim by the British government was accurate.[13] In response, journalist David Corn, writing in Mother Jones, wrote that, contrary to the Butler Review, the CIA had stated in a private memo that the British uranium claim had been an exaggeration.[14]
The film also explains that Niger's main uranium mine is operated by Cogema, 'a French company jointly controlled by the Japanese and Germans'. In fact Cogema, now a subsidiary of Areva, is a French parastatal company and uranium extraction in Niger was exclusively controlled by French interests until 2006, when bids for exploration permits were opened to some foreign companies led by other interests.
The second controversial allegation in the film was the suggestion that Plame's name had been leaked to the press, and specifically to Robert Novak, by someone in the White House, as retribution for Wilson's critical public comments about the uranium claim. The Washington Post editorial and May both stated that the source for the leak was instead State Department official Richard Armitage, who was himself an opponent of the Iraq War and thus would have no reason to try to discredit Wilson.[12][13] (Armitage is not mentioned in Fair Game, other than in a text script at the end of the film.[15]) Pincus and Leiby, on the other hand, called this portion of the film accurate.[11] Corn agreed, writing that, though Armitage had been a source for the leak, he may not have been the only source, and that Karl Rove may have also leaked the information. Rove had in fact confirmed Plame's identity to Novak, but only after Novak had already heard the information from another source.[16] Rove had also mentioned Plame, though not by name, to another reporter, Time Magazine's Matthew Cooper, although Cooper did not publish this information before Novak's revelation.[17]
There was more consensus about other aspects of Fair Game. In the film, Valerie Plame is shown working closely, and covertly, with a group of Iraqi scientists until her cover is blown; it is implied that the scientists were then abandoned as a result. Pincus and Leiby, May and the Washington Post editorial all agreed that Plame never worked directly with the scientists, and that the program did not end when her name was revealed.[11][12][13]
Pincus and Leiby also took issue with the film's depiction of Plame and Wilson's appearance in a profile in Vanity Fair magazine after Plame's outing – the two are shown in the film agonizing over whether to appear in the profile, but it is not shown that their decision to appear in a fashion-style photograph alongside the profile ended up becoming, in Pincus and Leiby's words, 'a PR debacle for them.'[11]
On the other hand, Pincus and Leiby praised the film for accuracy on several other points, including the indication that Plame had been a covert operative at the time of her outing (some reports indicated that she was not), and that, contrary to the original Novak column, Wilson had not been chosen to go on the Niger fact-finding trip due to a recommendation from his wife.[11]
Home media[edit]
Fair Game was released on DVD and Blu-ray for Region 1/Region A on March 29, 2011,[18] and for Region 2/Region B on July 11, 2011.[19]
Director's cut[edit]
A director's cut of the film was released on Netflix in 2018, running six minutes longer.[20]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
Fair Game 1995 Cast Members
- ^AFI Catalog: Fair Game Linked 2014-07-11
- ^'Fair Game (2010) (2010) – Box Office Mojo'. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved November 14, 2010.
- ^ abcMichael Fleming (February 23, 2009). 'Sean Penn in talks for Plame 'Game''. Variety. Retrieved May 30, 2009.
- ^'Hollywood Reporter: Cannes Lineup'. The Hollywood Reporter.
- ^'Nicole Kidman Outed As Valerie Plame'. Huffington Post. February 14, 2008.
- ^Fair Game trivia, IMDb
- ^Sean Penn Films 'Fair Game' Scene in the District
- ^CIA spy flick 'Fair Game' staying in Manhattan
- ^Corona's Coming Attractions: Test Screening Review of Fair Game
- ^'Fair Game Reviews, Pictures'. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved July 20, 2011.
- ^ abcdePincus, Walter; Leiby, Richard (November 7, 2010). ''Fair Game' gets some things about the Valerie Plame case right, some wrong'. The Washington Post.
- ^ abcVanity Fair Game, Clifford May, National Review, December 16, 2010
- ^ abc'Hollywood myth-making on Valerie Plame controversy'. The Washington Post. December 4, 2010. Retrieved December 4, 2010.
- ^'Washington Post: Still Spinning the CIA Leak Case'. Mother Jones. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
- ^Hollywood hit job: ‘Fair Game’ propagates easily disprovable myths about lead up to Iraq War, Jamie Weinstein, The Daily Caller, November 10, 2010[deprecated source]
- ^Rove Reportedly Held Phone Talk on C.I.A. Officer, David Johnston and Richard W. Stevenson, The New York Times, July 15, 2005 ('Correction: [..] According to the account, Mr. Rove said I heard that, too after hearing about the officer [Valerie Plame] from the columnist [Robert Novak].')
- ^What I Told the Grand Jury, Matthew Cooper, Time Magazine, July 17, 2005 ('As for Wilson's wife, I told the grand jury I was certain that Rove never used her name and that, indeed, I did not learn her name until the following week, when I either saw it in Robert Novak's column or Googled her, I can't recall which.')
- ^Amazon US: Fair Game (2010) Linked 2014-07-11
- ^Amazon UK: Fair Game [DVD] Linked 2014-07-11
- ^http://collider.com/doug-liman-fair-game-directors-cut-netflix/#poster
External links[edit]
- Fair Game at the American Film Institute Catalog
- Fair Game on IMDb
- Fair Game at AllMovie
- Fair Game at Rotten Tomatoes
- Fair Game at Metacritic
- Fair Game at Box Office Mojo
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fair_Game_(2010_film)&oldid=913681525'
EditDirected by
Writing Credits(WGA)
Paula Gosling | .. | (novel) |
Charlie Fletcher | .. | (screenplay) |
Cast (in credits order) verified as complete
William Baldwin | .. | Det. Max Kirkpatrick |
Cindy Crawford | .. | Kate McQuean |
Steven Berkoff | .. | Colonel Ilya Pavel Kazak |
Christopher McDonald | .. | Lieutenant Meyerson |
Miguel Sandoval | .. | Emilio Juantorena |
Johann Carlo | .. | Jodi Kirkpatrick |
Salma Hayek | .. | Rita |
John Bedford Lloyd | .. | Det. Louis Aragon |
Olek Krupa | .. | Zhukov |
Jenette Goldstein | .. | Rosa |
Marc Macaulay | .. | Navigator |
Sonny Carl Davis | .. | Baker |
Frank Medrano | .. | Graybera |
Don Yesso | .. | Beanpole |
Paul Dillon | .. | Hacker |
Gustav Vintas | .. | Stefan |
Christian Bodegaard | .. | Farm Boy |
Gary Francis Hope | .. | Smiler |
Hank Stone | .. | Ratso |
Ski Zawaski | .. | Bail Bondsman |
Nancy Ann Nahra | .. | Nancy (as Nancy Nahra) |
Anthony Giaimo | .. | Cafe Romano Manager |
Carmen López | .. | Angry Mother (as Carmen Lopez) |
Erika Navarro | .. | 4-Year-Old Girl |
Pamela Berrard | .. | Hotel Desk Clerk |
Mark Wheatle | .. | Stop & Shop Clerk |
Bubba Baker | .. | Hog Truck Driver |
Scott Michael Campbell | .. | Adam |
Ruben Rabasa | .. | Computer Store Manager |
James R. Greene | .. | Tow Truck Driver (as Jim Greene) |
Antoni Corone | .. | Codebreaker |
Rest of cast listed alphabetically: |
Orlando Delbert | .. | Convict (uncredited) |
Dan Hedaya | .. | Walter Hollenbach (uncredited) |
Produced by
Thomas M. Hammel | .. | executive producer |
Alan Schechter | .. | associate producer |
Joel Silver | .. | producer |
Music by
Cinematography by
Film Editing by
David Finfer |
Steven Kemper |
Christian Wagner |
Casting By
Production Design by
James H. Spencer | .. | (as James Spencer) |
Art Direction by
Set Decoration by
Costume Design by
Makeup Department
Jeni Lee Dinkel | .. | makeup artist: Cindy Crawford / personal makeup artist |
Sharon Ilson | .. | makeup artist |
Barbara Lorenz | .. | hair stylist |
Ronnie Specter | .. | makeup artist (as Ronnie Spector) |
Gunnar Swanson | .. | hair stylist |
Patty York | .. | makeup artist |
Jay Cannistraci | .. | special makeup effects (uncredited) |
Production Management
Debbi Bossi | .. | post-production supervisor |
Stephen Lim | .. | unit production manager |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Martin Jedlicka | .. | assistant director |
Charlie Picerni | .. | second unit director (as Charles Picerni) |
Gary Sales | .. | first assistant director: second unit |
David Sosna | .. | assistant director |
James H. Spencer | .. | underwater unit director |
Denis L. Stewart | .. | assistant director |
Art Department
Lewis Bowen | .. | scenic artist |
Shawn Boyachek | .. | buyer |
Rick Chavez | .. | assistant property master |
Laureen Clarke | .. | art department coordinator |
James P. Crapser | .. | propmaker |
Rod England | .. | set dresser |
Nicklas Farrantello | .. | scenic painter |
Michael J. Flynn | .. | set dresser |
Mark Garner | .. | set designer |
Darryl Henley | .. | illustrator |
Richard E. Kruder | .. | set dresser |
Kevin Long | .. | set dresser |
Deborah Marsh | .. | contruction production assistant |
William D. McLane | .. | sets buyer |
Peter Olexiewicz | .. | construction foreman |
Edward V. Pannozzo | .. | set estimator |
Michael Papac | .. | property master (as Mike Papac) |
Jeremy Alan Read | .. | set dresser |
Peter Mitchell Rubin | .. | storyboard artist |
Fred Schwendel | .. | set dresser |
Jerry Blohm | .. | assistant property master (uncredited) |
Arturo Mendez | .. | scenic painter (uncredited) |
Jack Reeves | .. | scenic artist (uncredited) |
Sound Department
Christopher Assells | .. | sound effects editor |
Bob Bowman | .. | assistant sound editor |
Rick Bozeat | .. | sound effects editor |
Kevin Cerchiai | .. | utility sound |
Richard S. Church | .. | sound mixer |
Zack Davis | .. | adr editor |
Peter J. Devlin | .. | sound mixer |
Rickley W. Dumm | .. | assistant sound editor |
Jason England | .. | assistant dialogue editor |
Scott Martin Gershin | .. | sound designer |
Nerses Gezalyan | .. | foley recordist |
Eric Gotthelf | .. | foley mixer |
Laura Graham | .. | adr editor |
Jeffrey J. Haboush | .. | re-recording mixer |
Per Hallberg | .. | supervising sound editor |
Darrell Hanzalik | .. | adr editor |
Stephen Janisz | .. | adr editor (as Stephen Janiaz) |
Chris Jargo | .. | adr editor |
Larry Kemp | .. | supervising foley editor |
Tony Lamberti | .. | sound effects editor |
Peter J. Lehman | .. | sound effects editor |
Robert J. Litt | .. | re-recording mixer |
Brian McPherson | .. | sound effects editor |
Anthony Miceli | .. | supervising sound editor |
Glenn T. Morgan | .. | supervising sound editor |
Rick Morris | .. | sound editor |
Mark Ormandy | .. | additional sound |
Mark P. Stoeckinger | .. | supervising sound editor |
Donald Sylvester | .. | adr editor (as Don Sylvester) |
Elliot Tyson | .. | re-recording mixer |
Bill Voigtlander | .. | adr editor (as Bill Voightlander) |
Scott Warren | .. | boom operator |
David Behle | .. | sound recordist (uncredited) |
Hilda Hodges | .. | foley artist (uncredited) |
Jack Keller | .. | sound recordist (uncredited) |
Mary Jo Lang | .. | foley mixer (uncredited) |
John Roesch | .. | foley artist (uncredited) |
Donald C. Rogers | .. | technical director of sound (uncredited) |
James M. Tanenbaum | .. | sound mixer: additional photography (uncredited) |
Carolyn Tapp | .. | foley recordist (uncredited) |
Special Effects by
Mike Edmonson | .. | first unit supervisor |
Ken Gorrell | .. | special effects technician |
Dennis Petersen | .. | second unit special effects coordinator |
Blumes Tracy | .. | special effects technician |
Bruno Van Zeebroeck | .. | special effects coordinator |
Gretchen Van Zeebroeck | .. | special effects office coordinator |
Visual Effects by
Scott Dougherty | .. | visual effects producer: Cinesite |
Joe Dubs | .. | digital artist |
Steve Grumette | .. | computer effects supervisor |
Chris Holmes | .. | digital compositor |
Brad Kuehn | .. | visual effects supervisor |
Kevin Lingenfelser | .. | digital paint supervisor: Cinesite |
William Mings | .. | digital artist |
Gregory Pyros | .. | visual effects supervisor |
Susan Pyros | .. | visual effects |
Liz Radley | .. | computer graphics supervisor |
Doug Tubach | .. | digital compositor |
David Watkinson | .. | computer artist |
Stunts
Fair Game
Jay Amor | .. | assistant stunt coordinator |
Bob Arnold | .. | stunts |
Kenny Bates | .. | stunts |
Chick Bernhard | .. | stunts (as Chick Bernhardt) |
Grady Allen Bishop | .. | stunts (as Grady A. Bishop) |
Nick Brett | .. | stunts |
Butch Brickell | .. | stunts |
Bob Brown | .. | stunts |
Thomas Bruggemann | .. | stunts (as Tom Bruggeman) |
David T. Byrd | .. | stunts |
David Cadiente | .. | stunts |
Jeff Cadiente | .. | stunts |
David Wayne Campbell | .. | precision driver |
James M. Churchman | .. | stunts |
Sophia Crawford | .. | stunt double: Jenette Goldstein |
Tom Deakman | .. | stunts |
Mitchell Dean | .. | stunt driver |
Kent Demaine | .. | stunts (as Windsor Kent Demaine) |
Jared DePasquale | .. | precision driver |
Jared DePasquale | .. | stunts precision driver |
John DePasquale | .. | stunts |
Alex Edlin | .. | stunts |
Debbie Evans | .. | stunt double: Cindy Crawford / stunts (as Debbie Evans Leavitt) |
Bill Flaherty | .. | stunt car rigger |
Frankie 'G' Garbutt | .. | stunts |
Shannon Gartman | .. | stunts |
Ralph Gonzalez | .. | stunts |
Johnny Gray | .. | stunt driver |
Anita Hart | .. | stunt double: Cindy Crawford / stunts |
Steve Hart | .. | stunts |
Kane Hodder | .. | stunts |
Philip Hoelcher | .. | stunts (as Phil Hoelcher) |
Josh Kemble | .. | stunts |
Larry A. Lee | .. | stunt double: Steven Berkoff / stunts |
Randolph LeRoi | .. | stunts |
Johnny Martin | .. | stunts |
Chuck Picerni Jr. | .. | stunts (as Charles Picerni Jr.) |
Charlie Picerni | .. | stunt coordinator |
Steve Picerni | .. | stunts |
Christina Ritzi | .. | stunts (as Christina Fetters) |
J.C. Robaina | .. | stunts |
Patrick Selts | .. | stunts |
Gar Stephen | .. | stunts |
Jim Ramos Vickers | .. | stunts (as Jim Vickers) |
Glenn R. Wilder | .. | stunts |
Nancy Young | .. | assistant to the stunt coordinator / stunt double: Ms. Crawford #1 / stunts |
Ski Zawaski | .. | stunts |
John Zimmerman | .. | stunts |
Christopher E. Hadley | .. | precision driver (uncredited) |
Victor Paul | .. | stunts (uncredited) |
Tommy Mack Turvey | .. | stunts (uncredited) |
Camera and Electrical Department
Mitchell Amundsen | .. | camera operator: 'a' camera (as Mitch Amundsen) |
Kurt Beckler | .. | grip |
Alan R. Disler | .. | first assistant camera 'A' camera |
Erik Emerson | .. | second assistant camera: second unit |
Jon Baronn Farmer | .. | still photographer (as Jon Farmer) |
Megan Forste | .. | additional second assistant camera |
Loren Johnson | .. | electrician |
Jordan Klein Sr. | .. | underwater photographer (as Jordan Klein) |
Dwight Joseph Lavers | .. | dolly grip |
Marvin Lee | .. | camera loader |
Josh Levy | .. | video assist operator |
Bill McConnell Jr. | .. | second assistant camera: 'b' camera |
Mike McGowan | .. | second assistant camera: second unit |
Pat Miller | .. | electrician |
Greg Morse | .. | 24 frame video |
David Norris | .. | camera operator: Wescam camera |
Neal Norton | .. | b camera / steadicam operator |
Greg Patterson | .. | best boy rigging grip |
Tom Priestley Jr. | .. | director of photography: second unit (as Tom Priestly) |
Dan Reilly | .. | key grip |
Gary Ryan | .. | rigging gaffer |
Patrick Shellenberger | .. | chief lighting technician (as Pat Shellenberger) |
Herb Silverman | .. | electrician |
Fred Valentine | .. | electrician |
Leopoldo Tamargo | .. | first assistant camera (uncredited) |
Animation Department
Brenton Fletcher | .. | computer animator |
William Mings | .. | computer animator |
Gregory Pyros | .. | computer animator |
Costume and Wardrobe Department
Chris Debiec | .. | wardrobe buyer (as Christopher A. Debiec) |
Barbara Marko Friedman | .. | costumer |
Richard Schoen | .. | set costumer |
Editorial Department
Fair Game 1995 Cast List
Margaret Adachi | .. | assistant editor |
Clark Campbell | .. | assistant editor |
Alessandra Carlino | .. | assistant editor |
John Currin | .. | first assistant editor |
Jordan Dawes | .. | assistant editor |
Julie Dole | .. | assistant editor |
Fair Game | .. | dailies advisor |
Jeff Gullo | .. | assistant editor |
Mo Henry | .. | negative cutter |
Martha Pike | .. | assistant editor |
Bob Putynkowski | .. | color timer |
Nicholas 'Nikko' Tsiotsias | .. | assistant editor |
Joan Wrzala | .. | assistant editor |
Ofe Yi | .. | assistant editor |
Location Management
Maria K. Chavez | .. | location manager |
Peter J. Novak | .. | location manager |
Jennifer Radzikowski | .. | assistant location manager |
Music Department
James Burt | .. | assistant music editor |
Sandy DeCrescent | .. | orchestra contractor |
Daryl B. Kell | .. | supervising music editor |
Steve Kempster | .. | score engineer |
Gregg Silk | .. | assistant score engineer |
John Van Tongeren | .. | composer: additional music |
Christopher Ward | .. | composer: additional music |
Zigmund Gron | .. | music editor (uncredited) |
Transportation Department
Tom Bahr | .. | boat driver |
Dennis Junt | .. | driver: honeywagon |
K.C. Colebrooke | .. | driver (uncredited) |
Other crew
Josué D. Aguilar | .. | on-set production assistant (as Josue Aguilar) |
Justin Escher Alpert | .. | production assistant |
Sondra Dee Boyachek | .. | production coordinator |
Ricou Browning Jr. | .. | marine coordinator |
James Burgin | .. | marine crew |
David Wayne Campbell | .. | production assistant |
Monica Castellanos | .. | assistant: William Baldwin |
Laureen Clarke | .. | underwater unit coordinator |
Kristen M. D'Angelo | .. | assistant to technical advisor |
Tom Deakman | .. | stand-in |
Frank J. Ellison | .. | production accountant |
Samantha Goodowens | .. | assistant production coordinator (as Samantha Berger) |
Michael Goosen | .. | assistant accountant |
Ronald L. Kaplan | .. | on-set teacher |
Aurora Karine | .. | photo double: Cindy Crawford |
Marc H. Katz | .. | craft service |
Michael Kolko | .. | accountant |
Arthur J. Miller Jr. | .. | railroad coordinator (as Art Miller) |
Brian Moon | .. | production assistant |
John Patteson | .. | armorer: second unit |
Susana Preston | .. | script supervisor: second unit |
Marlis Pujol | .. | assistant production coordinator |
Jake Richter | .. | assistant: Joel Silver |
Chris Romberg | .. | assistant accountant |
Peter J. Silbermann | .. | unit publicist |
Ingrid Urich-Sass | .. | script supervisor |
Matt Woodard | .. | production assistant |
Christian Byrd | .. | marine crew (uncredited) |
Bill Daly | .. | post-production accountant manager (uncredited) |
Tom Lent | .. | adr voice (uncredited) |
Anthony Petzold | .. | production assistant (uncredited) |
Kenny Rivenbark | .. | remote head technician (uncredited) |