Plot
Bruce Willis is an outcast FBI agent who is assigned to protect a 9 year old autistic boy who is the target for assassins after cracking a top secret government code.
Release Year: 1998
Rating: 5.9/10 (28,598 voted)
Director:
Harold Becker
Stars: Bruce Willis, Miko Hughes, Alec Baldwin
Storyline Bruce Willis is an outcast FBI agent who is assigned to protect a 9 year old autistic boy who is the target for assassins after cracking a top secret government code.
Writers: Ryne Douglas Pearson, Lawrence Konner
Cast: Bruce Willis
-
Art Jeffries
Alec Baldwin
-
Nick Kudrow
Miko Hughes
-
Simon Lynch
Chi McBride
-
Tommy B. Jordan
Kim Dickens
-
Stacey
Robert Stanton
-
Dean Crandell
Bodhi Elfman
-
Leo Pedranski
(as Bodhi Pine Elfman)
Carrie Preston
-
Emily Lang
Lindsey Ginter
-
Peter Burrell
(as L.L. Ginter)
Peter Stormare
-
Shayes
Kevin Conway
-
Lomax
John Carroll Lynch
-
Martin Lynch
Kelley Hazen
-
Jenny Lynch
John Doman
-
Supervisor Hartley
Richard Riehle
-
Edgar Halstrom
Taglines:
Someone knows too much.
Release Date: 3 April 1998
Filming Locations: Chicago, Illinois, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $60,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $10,104,715
(USA)
(5 April 1998)
(2386 Screens)
Gross: $91,600,000
(Worldwide)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
The wine that Art opens in Kudrow's basement is Chateau Petrus from Pomerol (identifiable by the red seal at the bottom left corner of the label), probably the most expensive Bordeaux red wine, and contrary to what Art said in the movie, even young Petrus costs much more than $75 per bottle.
Goofs:
Audio/visual unsynchronized:
When Emily walks into her boyfriend's apartment, her lips stop moving for a brief moment but she doesn't stop talking.
Quotes:
[first lines]
FBI Supervisor Hartley:
Let's go down.
User Review
What is really sad is the grain of truth in this story
Rating:
Mercury Rising is a very conventional "government bad guys" story about evil
agents out to kill an autistic boy who can break their top code. Of course,
the premise of the movie, that the government would rather kill someone who
can break their code rather than fixing the problems with the code, is
incredibly stupid. If one boy can break the code, isn't is reasonable that
some other boy in Russia or wherever can also break it? If it has a flaw
that allows the kid to find the pattern, doesn't it need to be fixed? Of
course, not. We just kill the kid and pretend nothing ever happened.
But, what is really sad is that there is a grain of truth in this story. It
is the policy of the US Government that TRYING to break codes is illegal.
If you are smart enough to figure out that the DVD encryption has a major
flaw, it's not the fault of the designers, it's your fault. Researchers who
have discovered flaws in codes, watermarks, etc, have been arrested. This
"head in the sand" policy has been around for a long time.
So, next time you see this movie, just think how easy it would be to combine
this attitude with someone a bit too gung ho.
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