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== Reception ==
== Reception ==
The film was panned by critics.{{Citation needed}}<!-- must list more than one critic --> [[Roger Ebert]] mentioned the film in his book ''[[Your Movie Sucks]]'', terming it "a perfectly good idea for a comedy, but it just plain doesn't work." Ebert also mentions the problem with the plot being about retrieving an [[Enigma machine]] when "Anyone who has seen ''[[Enigma (2001 film)|Enigma]]'', ''[[U-571 (film)|U-571]]'', or the various TV documentaries...will be aware that by the time of the movie, the British already had possession of an Enigma machine... The movie has an answer to it, but it comes so late in the film that although it makes sense technically, the damage has already been done."<ref>{{cite book|last=Ebert|first=Roger|title=Your Movie Sucks|year=2007|publisher=Andrews McMeel Pub., LLC|location=Kansas City, MO|isbn=978-0-7407-6366-3|edition=1st|page=5}}</ref>
The film was panned by critics.{{Citation needed|date=December 2018}}<!-- must list more than one critic --> [[Roger Ebert]] mentioned the film in his book ''[[Your Movie Sucks]]'', terming it "a perfectly good idea for a comedy, but it just plain doesn't work." Ebert also mentions the problem with the plot being about retrieving an [[Enigma machine]] when "Anyone who has seen ''[[Enigma (2001 film)|Enigma]]'', ''[[U-571 (film)|U-571]]'', or the various TV documentaries...will be aware that by the time of the movie, the British already had possession of an Enigma machine... The movie has an answer to it, but it comes so late in the film that although it makes sense technically, the damage has already been done."<ref>{{cite book|last=Ebert|first=Roger|title=Your Movie Sucks|year=2007|publisher=Andrews McMeel Pub., LLC|location=Kansas City, MO|isbn=978-0-7407-6366-3|edition=1st|page=5}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 23:46, 20 December 2018

All the Queen's Men
Directed byStefan Ruzowitzky
Written byDavid Schneider
Produced byRainer Virnich
Phil Alden Robinson
Starring
CinematographyPeter Kappel
Wedigo von Schultzendorff
Edited byRudi Heinen
Nick Moore
Britta Nahler
Andrea Schumacher
Music byUwe Fahrenkrog-Petersen
Robert Folk
Michael Lloyd
Production
company
Streamline
Distributed byStrand Releasing
Release dates
October 14, 2001 (U.S. Mill Valley Film Festival)
October 25, 2002 (limited)
December 13, 2001 (Germany)
June 7, 2002 (Austria)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryGermany / Austria
LanguageEnglish
Budget$15 million[1]
Box office$23,662

All the Queen's Men is a 2001 English-language German-Austrian action comedy war film. It was directed by Stefan Ruzowitzky and stars Matt LeBlanc and Eddie Izzard. Made on a budget of $15 million, the film was widely panned by critics, and it earned only $23,662 in the United States, yielding an approximate −99.92% return.[1][2]

Plot

During World War II the British army is attempting to retrieve an Enigma machine from Germany. Having failed in previous attempts, they decide to send four men undercover to the factory that makes the devices in Berlin. Unfortunately the factory is populated entirely by women, and they only have men to send. American O'Rourke (LeBlanc), British transvestite Tony Parker (Izzard), genius Johnno (David Birkin), and the reluctant Archie (James Cosmo) are sent to infiltrate the factory dressed as women.

Dropped in the wrong area, the team must first try to find their bearings. Aided by Romy, a sympathiser to their cause, they find their way to the factory. They manage to retrieve the Enigma machine, against the expectations of the British army. Just before they leave Germany, they realize they were tricked—the British government already had the device, but wanted to make the Germans think they were still after it. They were specifically chosen as the team most likely to fail. Leaving Germany with an Enigma machine would, in fact, destroy the usefulness of the machine, as the Germans would know it was stolen and switch to a different code system. Archie volunteers to be captured with the machine to allow the mission to "fail". After he is captured, the team retrieves him and returns safely to England, leaving the Germans with the impression they have all the Enigma machines and the British are still desperate to obtain one.

Cast

Reception

The film was panned by critics.[citation needed] Roger Ebert mentioned the film in his book Your Movie Sucks, terming it "a perfectly good idea for a comedy, but it just plain doesn't work." Ebert also mentions the problem with the plot being about retrieving an Enigma machine when "Anyone who has seen Enigma, U-571, or the various TV documentaries...will be aware that by the time of the movie, the British already had possession of an Enigma machine... The movie has an answer to it, but it comes so late in the film that although it makes sense technically, the damage has already been done."[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b The Numbers - Movie Budgets
  2. ^ All the Queen's Men (2002) Box Office Mojo
  3. ^ Ebert, Roger (2007). Your Movie Sucks (1st ed.). Kansas City, MO: Andrews McMeel Pub., LLC. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-7407-6366-3.