XIII: The Conspiracy

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XIII: The Conspiracy
Based onXIII graphic novel series
by Jean Van Hamme and William Vance
Screenplay byDavid Wolkove
Philippe Lyon
Directed byDuane Clark
StarringVal Kilmer
Stephen Dorff
Country of originCanada
France
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducerKen Gord
CinematographyDavid Greene
EditorYann Hervé
Running time86 min x 2 = 172 min.
Production companiesProdigy Pictures
Cipango Films
Budget$20 million[1]
Original release
ReleaseOctober 6, 2008 (2008-10-06)

XIII: The Conspiracy is a 2008 Franco-Canadian television film in two parts, based on the eponymous graphic novel series by Belgian authors Jean Van Hamme and William Vance, about an amnesiac protagonist who seeks to discover his concealed past. The film served as a pilot for XIII: The Series, which aired on television in 2011.

The film was directed by

Five
in the United Kingdom in December 2009 (where it was shown as a single feature instead of in two parts).

Plot

When the first female

Roman numeral
for 13.

In the White House, a joint intelligence task force led by Colonel Amos (Greg Bryk) searches for the President's killer while XIII searches online for information about his tattoo. His location is detected by the NSA and a squad of elite special forces swarm the couple's home, killing them. XIII kills the soldiers and escapes to New York where he befriends Sam (Caterina Murino), a photo shop owner, who helps identify Kim (Jessalyn Gilsig), a woman in a photo he carries.

Rogue

secret societies of the Roman Empire
. Sam provides photos that Kim developed in the store which lead XIII upstate to Kellownee Valley.

Government intelligence identifies XIII as Steven Rowland and uses the media to further the manhunt. XIII is aided by Kim, her father, General Carrington (Stephen McHattie), and Jones, a CIA operative, who reveal he was a special ops agent who underwent facial reconstruction for an undercover mission to flush out a group of fascists plotting to overthrow the American government.

La Mangouste locates and captures XIII, killing Kim in the process. La Mangouste discovers XIII has had reconstructive surgery and that his military file is classified. XIII is attacked by another member of the conspiracy, "XIV", but escapes with the help of Jones. President Galbrain (John Bourgeois) authorizes Calvin Wax (Jonathan Higgins), the White House Chief of Staff, to take over the manhunt.

In an NSA

sarin gas attacks in Chicago. Carrington also reveals that Col. Jack McCall (Scott Wickware
) supervised XIII's paramilitary unit which orchestrated the foreign attacks and that the next major attack is expected to coincide with the upcoming election.

XIII and Jones travel to a decommissioned facility in northern Montana where XIII witnesses McCall in a teleconference with Wax and accosts him, but McCall commits suicide before revealing he location of the attack. Evidence points to a nuclear strike on election day at a Maryland polling station. Carrington confronts Amos and is arrested on suspicion of high treason.

XIII and Jones research Jasper Winthrow, CEO of Standard Electronics, which owns Stratus Dynamics, a military contractor impacted by the former president's plan to scale down America's presence in Iraq. This leads XIII and Jones to a factory in Petersburg, Virginia, where XIII locates and kills La Mangouste. XIII discovers the target is Bethesda, Maryland, and arrives in time to stop the delivery of the bomb.

Wally Sheridan, the assassinated president's brother, wins the national election. XIII confronts Wax, who claims that it is "only the beginning" before killing himself. Carrington is released from prison and Sheridan reveals in a press conference the details of the plot and those behind it.

While in Japan, XIII and Jones discover that Ross Tanner's family didn't exist, and that Wally Sheridan had his sister killed to get the Vice President into the office then orchestrated attacks to undermine confidence in the President to ensure Sheridan's victory and establish a dictatorship. XIII, realizing they have been duped, tells Jones, "We're going back."

The XX

Number Name Position
I Wally Sheridan President-elect
II Calvin Wax Chief of Staff
III Ellery Shipley US Secretary of Defense
IV Jasper Winthrow CEO of Standard Electronic
V ??? ???
VI ??? ???
VII ??? ???
VIII ??? ???
IX ??? ???
X ??? ???
XI Jack McCall Colonel
XII Mongoose Assassin
XIII Steve Rowland Ex-Special Assault and Destroying Sections operative
XIV Agent Kohn Prison Interrogator, Homeland Security
XV Unnamed Man Tunnel Bomber
XVI ??? ???
XVII Kim Rowland Steve Rowland's widow
XVIII ??? ???
XIX Unnamed Man Armored Car Driver, Department of Energy
XX Unnamed Woman U.S. Customs Official

Cast

Broadcasters

Country Broadcaster Date
France France
Canal +
October 6–13, 2008
United States United States NBC February 8–15, 2009
Australia Australia Nine Network November 1–8, 2009
United Kingdom United Kingdom
Five
December 27, 2009
Austria Austria ATV January 15, 2010
Spain Spain
Antena 3
April 1, 2010
Germany Germany
13th Street
April 16–18, 2010
South Africa South Africa SABC 3 August 29 – September 5, 2010
Canada Canada Showcase 2010
Bulgaria Bulgaria AXN (subtitles)
bTV (dubbed)
April 4–5, 2010
April 16–17, 2011
Netherlands Netherlands BNN
RTL 7
June 9–10, 2011
July 8, 2014
Belgium Belgium
VT4
December 22–29, 2011
Thailand Thailand
BBTV Channel 7
January 11–12, 2012
China China HBO Asia February 2012
India India HBO
Hungary Hungary
RTL Klub
February 2, 2012

Critical reception

At Metacritic, the miniseries has a weighted average score of 44 out of 100 based on 6 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[2] Its best reviews came from The Hollywood Reporter, who said "All in all, this isn't a half-bad political thriller."[3] On the other side, USA Today said "Poorly cast and performed (including an embarrassing turn by Val Kilmer), XIII is shot so murkily and staged so badly, you can hardly tell where people are, let alone where they're going."[4]

References

  1. ^ "U.S. finds French fare can translate". hollywoodreporter.com. October 17, 2008. Retrieved December 29, 2020.
  2. CBS Interactive
    . Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  3. ^ TV Review: XIII, The Hollywood Reporter, by Ray Richmond
  4. ^ 'XIII' isn't unlucky, it's just bad USA Today, By Robert Bianco

External links