The Denver assassination
Movie | |
---|---|
German title | The Denver assassination |
Original title | Aftermath |
Country of production | Canada |
original language | English |
Publishing year | 2002 |
length | 83 minutes |
Rod | |
Director | Douglas Jackson |
script | Mark Homer |
production | Richard Goudreau , Richard O. Lowry |
music | Jerry Devilliers |
camera | Bert Tougas |
cut | Robert E. Newton |
occupation | |
|
The Denver Assassination attempt is a Canadian action thriller from director Douglas Jackson from 2002. The reference title is Bombing - The Hunt for the Assassin .
action
A public building in Denver is destroyed by an explosion. One of the victims is a friend of FBI agent Rachel Anderson. A suspect will soon be arrested, Evan Harper. Anderson watches over him, but despite security measures, Harper is killed on the day the verdict is pronounced by a bomb that is smuggled in and detonated remotely as part of a television reporter's equipment.
Anderson investigates and exposes a conspiracy that has fought the government for decades but ceased operations for several years. She and her colleague Timothy Sandburg thwart another bomb attack on a hotel; Sandburg is wounded in a shootout. The surviving assassins escape. Anderson is electronically leaked evidence against her manager Edwards. Edwards is convicted of falsifying evidence against Harper, who turns out to be innocent.
Reviews
"Action thriller with a very serious US criminal background."
"Exciting action thriller that is remotely based on the 1995 Oklahoma attack"
Remarks
The location was Montreal .
Web links
- The Denver assassination in the Internet Movie Database (English)
Single receipts
- ↑ The Denver Assassination. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 6, 2017 .
- ↑ The Denver Assassination. In: TVDirect. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007 ; Retrieved August 13, 2007 .