DVDs HiDef CDs Video Games Books Magazines Bargain Books Media Storage Cell Phones Fun Stuff Posters
     Search      

New Soundtrack!
Film Opens Nov. 21st!

Soundtrack: Twilight
Only: $10.98

The Spanish Prisoner
Enlarge Image

Why pay:  $19.95?
Our Price:

$14.26

You Save: $5.69
Add to Wish List
Email a friend



The Spanish Prisoner
Widescreen Full Screen
Director:  David Mamet
Year: 1998
Runtime: 110
Rating: PG (MPAA)
Language:  Original: English; Dubbed: French, Spanish; Subtitled: English, French, Spanish; Closed Captioned: English
Color: Y
Closed Captioned: Y
UPC: 043396026087
Item Number: COL002608
Moody, austere, and unabashedly clever, THE SPANISH PRISONER is familiar ground for puzzle-loving writer-director David Mamet. Campbell Scott plays the Hitchcockian hero Joe Ross, an unassuming fall guy who has invented a mysterious process worth an unnamed, but presumably enormous, figure. Joe's share in the reward is uncertain, however, and his growing nervousness is subtly stoked by Jimmy Dell (Steve Martin), a charming and apparently wealthy new friend. Suddenly Joe finds himself wondering who he can trust: his boss, his friends, Jimmy, the FBI, or even the girl at work who has a crush on him (Rebecca Pidgeon, speaking her husband's lines as only she can). The big con is always fun to watch from the inside, but Mamet knows it's even more fun when the audience is on the outside, left to imagine the con as all-encompassing so that everyone and everything is suspect. The fine ensemble acting and terse, loaded dialogue add to the atmosphere of total suspense while the muted but rich production design produces a too-believable longing in Joe, whose tiniest greedy qualm is still enough to spell disaster.

Joe Ross (Campbell Scott) is the inventor of a secret process that will make the company he works for very rich. But Joe isn't sure he'll get a piece of the pie, and his dissatisfaction makes him the perfect prey for con artists and manipulators. Director David Mamet manages to pull off the big con--even though Joe and the audience both know it's coming--then packs in more twists than a Bavarian pretzel factory.

Filmed on location in Boston, New York City, and Florida.

Star Rebecca Pidgeon (Susan Ricci) is married to writer-director David Mamet.

Mamet and friend Ricky Jay (George Lang) have collaborated in the past; Mamet directed a television program showcasing Jay's world-class sleight-of-hand routine.
Mamet claims that he got the idea for the film when he encountered a real-life con man--a practitioner of the big con--at a convention in Las Vegas. Mamet was not taken for any money.

The film was screened at the Sundance Film Festival.

  Similar Titles
Why pay: 
$39.95?
Our Price:
Why pay: 
$9.99?
Our Price:
Why pay: 
$14.95?
Our Price:
$32.36
Buy House of Games Now!
$8.10
Buy The Sting Now!
$9.66
Buy Hard Eight Now!



Track your previous orders.


View or change your orders in Your Account.


Questions about your orders?



Shipping rates, timeframes & policies.


Need to Return an item? Check out our Returns Policy first.



New customer? Click here to learn about searching, browsing and shopping at our store.


Forgot your password? Click here.




MRC - Merchant Risk Council