The Fugitive (1993 film)

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The Fugitive

Movie poster for The Fugitive
Directed by Andrew Davis
Produced by Arnold Kopelson
Written by Roy Huggins (Characters),
David Twohy (Story and screenplay),
Jeb Stuart (Screenplay)
Starring Harrison Ford
Tommy Lee Jones
Sela Ward
Julianne Moore
Joe Pantoliano
L. Scott Caldwell
Neil Flynn
Music by James Newton Howard
Cinematography Michael Chapman
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) August 6, 1993
Running time 130 min.
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Fugitive is a 1993 Academy Award and Golden Globe Award winning feature film, based on the television series The Fugitive. The film was directed by Andrew Davis and stars Harrison Ford as Dr. Richard Kimble, and Tommy Lee Jones as Deputy United States Marshal Samuel Gerard. Jones won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance. The film also featured Andreas Katsulas as the one-armed man, Sela Ward as Kimble's wife, Jeroen Krabbé (who replaced Richard Jordan), Julianne Moore, and Joe Pantoliano. The film was also nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture, one of the few films associated with a television series to be so honored.

Contents

The plot is based loosely on that of the 1960s TV series, The Fugitive which is generally thought to have been inspired by the case of Sam Sheppard.

Richard Kimble (Harrison Ford) is a successful Chicago based vascular surgeon who returns home from a party to find his wife (Sela Ward) dying following a brutal attack. He fights with a mysterious one-armed man, but the man escapes. Despite his attempts to save his wife and his testimony about the one-armed man, Kimble is convicted of first-degree murder, and sentenced to death by lethal injection.

While being transported to prison by bus, the bus crashes through a guardrail, rolls down a hill, and lands on a set of train tracks. Kimble manages to pull himself, another convict and a guard to safety before the train rams the bus. He is freed from his chains and flees the scene on foot. As a fugitive from justice, he becomes the quarry of Deputy United States Marshal Samuel Gerard (Tommy Lee Jones), who leads a team of from the US Marshals Service. Fugitive Task Force.

Although wounded and on the run, Kimble is determined to prove his innocence. With the hunters never far behind, there are many close calls. Several times he is almost captured, mostly brought on by Kimble's instincts as a doctor. On one occasion, he escapes by leaping down the spillway of a dam into the river below.

"I don't care!" - Sam Gerard is held at gunpoint by Richard Kimble, uttering the famous line.
"I don't care!" - Sam Gerard is held at gunpoint by Richard Kimble, uttering the famous line.

Kimble returns to Chicago to search for the one-armed man who killed his wife. He also makes contact with many of his former friends and associates from the medical community, virtually all of whom have never believed him to be guilty and are more than willing to help him. He also meets his old friend and colleague Dr. Charles Nichols (Jeroen Krabbé), who gives Kimble money, becomes a contact for him, and offers to help in any way.

Kimble's innate intelligence keeps him one step ahead of Gerard, who begins to have doubts as to Kimble's guilt.

Dr. Nichols is later revealed to be conspiring against Kimble. The showdown occurs at a medical conference, where Kimble publicly confronts Nichols with evidence that an experimental drug was causing serious liver damage. Nichols, who is now working for a pharmaceutical corporation, has faked test results and stands to benefit greatly if the drug is approved. Kimble was on the path to discovering the truth about the drug when Nichols sent the one-armed man to kill his wife. As Kimble and Nichols fight, Chicago police are on their trail, believing that Kimble is a cop-killer; the officer was in fact shot by the one-armed man during a struggle with Kimble. The US Marshals are determined to get to Kimble first.

Gerard calls off the police and follows Kimble to the basement. While searching for him, he explains the reasons why he knows Kimble is innocent. Nichols reveals himself and attempts to shoot Gerard, but Kimble disables him.

The Fugitive opened strongly in the United States box office, grossing $23,758,855 in its first weekend and holding the top spot for six weeks. It eventually went on to gross an estimated $183,875,760 in the US, and $353,900,000 worldwide. [1]

It was nominated for seven Academy Awards, of which it only won Best Actor in a Supporting Role for Tommy Lee Jones. The other Oscars it was nominated for were Best Picture; Best Cinematography; Sound Effects Editing; Film Editing; Original Music Score; and Sound. Jones also received numerous other awards for his role, including the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture.

It also received largely enthusiastic reviews from film critics. As of April 2007, it received a 92% score and has been certified "Fresh" on RottenTomatoes.com. Roger Ebert gave it 4 stars, calling it "one of the year's best films." [2]

Although almost half of the movie is set in rural Illinois, a large portion of the principal filming was actually shot in Jackson County, North Carolina in the Great Smoky Mountains. The famous scene involving Kimble's prison transport bus and a freight train wreck was filmed along the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad just outside of Dillsboro, North Carolina. Riders on the excursion railroad can still see the wreckage on the way out of the Dillsboro depot. Scenes in a hospital after Kimble's escape were filmed at Harris Regional Hospital in Sylva, North Carolina.

The rest of the movie was filmed in Chicago, Illinois, including some of the dam scene, which were filmed in the remains of the Chicago Freight Tunnels (and also at Deals Gap, North Carolina)[1]. The "one armed man" lived in the historic Pullman neighborhood of Chicago (see Pullman, Chicago). Harrison Ford used the pay phone in the local bar (the Pullman Pub), at which point he climbs a ladder and runs down the roofline of the historic rowhomes towards the one armed man's house. There are several other scenes that show the rowhouses of the historic neighborhood George Pullman built in the 1870s for his factory workers. During the parade chase scene, then Illinois Attorney General, Roland W. Burris, is prominently shown as a participant in the parade.

Jones returned as Gerard in a spin-off released in 1998, U.S. Marshals, which also featured Wesley Snipes, Robert Downey Jr. and Joe Pantoliano. While the second movie also features Gerard's team of marshals hunting down an escaped fugitive accused of murder, it does not involve Kimble or the events of the first movie in any way. However, the fictional hospital at which Kimble works, Chicago Memorial, is featured.

  • The movie Wrongfully Accused spoofs this movie.
  • In an episode of Crossing Jordan, Jordan stumbles across the "one armed man"'s body in her Boston morgue who a California Death Row inmate has claimed was responsible for a murder she was convicted of. The film The Fugitive was mentioned once by name and later referenced once.
  • In an episode of the American sitcom Scrubs, the Janitor is pointed out to be a policeman that was shot near the end of The Fugitive. Neil Flynn, the actor who plays the Janitor, actually did play that part.
  • In The Simpsons episode Lisa's Rival, the dam scene is spoofed with Milhouse (whom Bart had previously got on America's Most Wanted) stands at the edge of the dam explaining that '(he) is innocent!' with an FBI agent (closely resembling Gerard) replying "I don't care!". He then proceeds to jump off the dam, just like Kimble, only he yells, "Ow! My glasses!". In another episode, Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part Two), Homer manages to escape custody when his paddy wagon is overturned by Chief Wiggum's attempt to get his drive-thru order, shortly before the wagon is hit by Jasper's car, in much the same way as the train crashes into Kimble's prisoner transport bus (Homer similarly has both his hands and feet shackled). Also in the episode "Bart Gets Famous"", Bart writes on the chalkboard at the start "My homework was not stolen by a one-armed man"
  • In the movie The Mask, when Stanley Ipkiss (Jim Carrey) is being arrested in the park by Lt. Kellaway (Peter Riegert), he sarcastically tells the lieutenant "It wasn't me. It was the one-armed man."
  • In one episode of Johnny Bravo Johnny is accused of stealing the cookies of a policewoman, but he claims it was a "two-armed man".
  • In the Drawn Together episode "The Lemon-AIDS Walk," Wooldoor Sockbat attempts to flee after stealing from a candy store, winding up at the top of a decorative waterfall in the mall. After Wooldoor protests that he didn't do anything, a disinterested security guard responds, "I don't care."
  • Devlin-Macgregor, the fictitious pharmaceutical company that Kimble was going to blow the whistle on, has also been featured on trial in the television series Boston Legal.
  • In the film Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back there is an animal research facility named Provasic and a parody of the dam scene, involving Federal Wildlife Marshal Willenholly.

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