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Day of the Assassin

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Director
  
Brian Trenchard-Smith

Writer
  
Robert Avard Miller

Running time
  
1h 35m

Screenplay
  
Robert Avard Miller

Language
  
English

5/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Action, Drama

Duration
  

Music director
  
Silvetti

Country
  
USA Spain Mexico

Day of the Assassin movie poster

Release date
  
1979

Initial release
  
December 15, 1979 (Sweden)

Cast
  
Chuck Connors
(Fleming),
Susana Dosamantes
(The Princess),
Glenn Ford
(Christakis),
Henry Silva
,
Richard Roundtree
(Fessler)

Similar movies
  
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,
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,
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,
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,
The Man with the Golden Gun
,
Hitman: Agent 47

Day of the Assassin is a 1979 action film. A Spanish, Mexican and American co-production, it was filmed in Spain, directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith. It starred Chuck Connors, Susana Dosamantes, Glenn Ford, Richard Roundtree and Henry Silva.

Day of the Assassin DAY OF THE ASSASSIN Multicom Entertainment

Trenchard-Smith says making the movie was one of his craziest directing experiences:

Day of the Assassin wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters46261p46261

All directors, at some point in their career trajectory, find themselves hanging on to a runaway train; despite best efforts, things turn to custard on a daily basis. More often than not, The Movie from Hell is a co-production. Foreign locale, fast money, giant egos, high pressure schedule – all make a volatile witches’ brew, even before you factor in deep rooted national resentments. A co-production is a business model designed to diminish trust between nations. [On this film] Mexico, Spain, and the US were the partners, which meant that the Spaniards felt superior to their Mexican brothers, and the Americans felt superior to everybody. Each country gave undertakings to deliver certain elements of cast or crew. Disputes arose immediately. The American director bailed when his deposit failed to arrive. His agent, who was also mine, immediately slotted me in there, so within a day, the American producers, unbeknownst to me, offered their partners a replacement director: “the man who made the last Bruce Lee movie.” I had in fact made a documentary about the late Bruce Lee, “The World of Kung Fu.” The Mexicans thought they were getting Enter the Dragon director, Robert Clouse. Their disappointment was palpable when this misrepresentation became clear on the first day of prep in Mexico City. Must say, my sphincter tightened a little too. I had arrived in a war zone.

References

Day of the Assassin Wikipedia
Day of the Assassin IMDbDay of the Assassin themoviedb.org