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Hidden Agenda [1990]

Hidden Agenda [1990]

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Director: Ken Loach
Actors: Frances Mcdormand, Brian Cox, Brad Dourif, Mai Zetterling, Bernard Archard
Studio: MGM Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: £15.99
Buy New: £2.98
You Save: £13.01 (81%)



New (11) from £2.58

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 7650

Format: Pal, Widescreen
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired), Danish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Italian (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), Swedish (Subtitled), Norwegian (Subtitled), Polish (Subtitled), Finnish (Subtitled), Hungarian (Subtitled), Greek (Subtitled)
Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Region: 2
Discs: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.77:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 104 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

EAN: 5050070009545
ASIN: B00008OP6O

Theatrical Release Date: January 1991
Release Date: April 28, 2003
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

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Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A lesson for today from recent history   February 24, 2008
frannie (uk)
7 out of 8 found this review helpful

A very good film. i recommend that you watch it to understand the politics of northwern ireland intertwined with the mainland during the troubles. It shows the danger of unchecked and unaccountable security services operating in an enviornment where they can get away with murder and become a law unto themselves, and where civil liberties are trampled upon in the name of a so-called war on terror. A warning for today. You cant help see similarities with todays situation whereby we have repressive legislation and the assasination of Jean Charles Demenezes. I am reminded of a quote from Wilhelm Reich that goes 'who guards the guards, who polices the police'.


4 out of 5 stars there are not democracy without some agenda   September 9, 2003
Carlos Vazquez Quintana (Linares- Spain)
7 out of 42 found this review helpful

When the cinema, literature or any form of art contains a strong ideological or political component as it’s the case with this movie, it’s difficult to distinguish if the work is truly good, bad, or simply it’s that we sympathize with it or not. The own “Battleship Potemkim” I think doesn’t escape to these prejudices. Leni Riefenstahl is just dead with his films of Nazi apology. “Hidden agenda” is a paradigmatic case: is this an extraordinary movie? I believe yes owing the topic it treats, but not so much as for the form, that shows the good and sober performances usual in British actors. This said, well, the director exhibits a few unjust facts and irregular behaviour by the part of the British government, but he does not show so clearly the other side of the agenda corresponding to the terrorists. A problem that has affected many democratic countries of Europe, since when there is no democracy, the terrorism is much more difficult or impossible, although perhaps yes an open war: this problem couldn’t happen neither in the USRR, nor in Hitler's Germany nor in firsts years of Franco's Spain nor Mussolini's Italy, but yes in all these countries at present included France, which was at the edge of the civil war at the beginning of the 1960’s, facts that are reflected in "Day of the Jackal", though in a very different way. Spanish cinema had many years ago also some poor movies intended for domestic consumers showing the fight of the Guardia Civil against the “Maquis” or Republicans hardened in the fight of Civil war and anti Nazi resistance after WW II. These films in black & white were truly coarse propaganda. Today we are more sophisticated, but the fight against ETA Basque terrorism has shown some real crude episodes.


3 out of 5 stars As Wet as Northern Ireland Itself   August 17, 2004
ianrmillard
13 out of 57 found this review helpful

Frankly, this film is a disappointment. The initial shots show a press conference: an American is approached by a Republican operative or sympathiser. He goes to meet the IRA (a chance for some mild pro-Republican comments from the driver en route) and is shot dead with the man driving, after an ambush by British (?) SAS or (?) "int. operatives".

After the opening, the film is low key but never builds to even a suspicion of a climax. A policeman arrives from the British mainland to investigate, soon finds himself up against two smug Tory-type politicos in a country house, who more or less tell him to keep to his job of suppressing the underclass and keep out of political matters (good idea that, wonder why the British police of today are not told that regularly?!) and then more or less dismissed from their company. Things happen of an unsettling nature and the policeman eventually gives up the struggle for "truth and justice" and flies home.

Applying the fine dictum of Lord Reith ("inform, educate and entertain"), this film (like the BBC and other media of today) falls flat: no information, no education and little entertainment. However, it deserves a few points simply for being dull and low-key, like the "Troubles" Northern Ireland has brought upon itself from, at least, 1969.

 

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