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The Crying Game
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Synopsis
In this successful psychological thriller, a reluctant agent of the Irish Republican Army discovers that some people just aren't who you expect them to be. Fergus (Stephen Rea) is an IRA "volunteer" who, despite personal misgivings, takes part in the kidnapping of a black British soldier, Jody (Forest Whitaker), stationed in Northern Ireland. The IRA hopes to use Jody as a bargaining chip to win the release of IRA operatives behind bars, but, while guarding Jody, Fergus becomes fast friends with his prisoner. Jody makes Fergus promise him that if he dies, Fegus will look in on his girlfriend, Dil (Jaye Davidson), and see if she's all right. Jody escapes, and Fergus doesn't have the heart to shoot him; as fate would have it, Jody runs from the woods into a street only to be run over by a British police vehicle, which then flushes out the IRA compound. Fergus escapes to London, where he's wanted by the law for Jody's kidnapping and also by his former girlfriend, IRA operative Jude (Miranda Richardson), who thinks he knows too much to fall into the hands of the British authorities. Good to his word, Fergus tracks down Dil, and soon the two outcasts find themselves entering into a love affair, although Fergus discovers that Dil is not the sort of woman he thought she was. Writer/director Neil Jordan won an Academy Award for his screenplay; the title song, which was a U.K. hit for Dave Berry in 1965, was re-recorded for the film by one-time Culture Club vocalist Boy George with backing by the Pet Shop Boys. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide


Production Crew

Chris Seagers Art Director
Paul Cowan Associate Producer
Susie Figgis Casting
Ian Wilson Cinematographer
Elizabeth Karlsen Co-producer
Anne Dudley Composer (Music Score)
Sandy Powell Costume Designer
Neil Jordan Director
Kant Pan Editor
Nik Powell Executive Producer
Redmond Morris First Assistant Director
Morag Ross Makeup
Stephen Woolley Producer
Jim Clay Production Designer
Neil Jordan Screenwriter
Martin Childs Set Designer
Peter Hutchinson Special Effects
Year: 1992
Runtime: 112
Country: UK
MPAA Rating: R
for sexuality, strong violence and language
Category: Feature

Genre
Drama

Color type
Metrocolor

Sound
Dolby

Produced by
British Screen
Channel Four Films
Eurotrustees
Miramax
Nippon Film Development and Finance
Palace Films
Palace Pictures

Release
November 25, 1992 (USA)
by Mayfair Entertainment
Miramax

Awards
1991 - Best Foreign Film - L.A. Film Critics Association
1991 - Best Foreign Film - Los Angeles Film Critics Association
1992 - Best Film (Drama) - Golden Globe
1992 - Best Foreign Film - Independent Spirit Award
1992 - Best Picture - Academy
1992 - Best Picture - National Board of Review
1992 - Best Picture (Runner-up) - National Society of Film Critics
1992 - Best Picture - Academy
1992 - Best Picture - Drama - Golden Globe
1992 - Best Picture - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie
1992 - Best Picture - National Board of Review
1992 - Best Foreign Film - Independent Spirit Awards
1992 - Best Picture (Runner-up) - National Society of Film Critics
1992 - Film Presented - Telluride Film Festival
1992 - Best Picture - Drama - Hollywood Foreign Press Association
1993 - Best Foreign Film - Australian Film Institute Awards