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ActionThriller

True Lies

- When he said I do, he never said what he did.

A fearless, globe-trotting, terrorist-battling secret agent has his life turned upside down when he discovers his wife might be having an affair with a used car salesman while terrorists smuggle nuclear war heads into the United States.

Release Date : 1994-07-15

Language :EnglishFrenchArabicGerman

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Lightstorm Entertainment20th Century Fox

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Arnold Schwarzenegger

Character Name : Harry Tasker

Original Name : Arnold Schwarzenegger

Gender : Male

Jamie Lee Curtis

Character Name : Helen Tasker

Original Name : Jamie Lee Curtis

Gender : Female

Tom Arnold

Character Name : Albert Gibson

Original Name : Tom Arnold

Gender : Male

Bill Paxton

Character Name : Simon

Original Name : Bill Paxton

Gender : Male

Tia Carrere

Character Name : Juno Skinner

Original Name : Tia Carrere

Gender : Female

Art Malik

Character Name : Salim Abu Aziz

Original Name : Art Malik

Gender : Male

Eliza Dushku

Character Name : Dana Tasker

Original Name : Eliza Dushku

Gender : Female

Grant Heslov

Character Name : Faisil

Original Name : Grant Heslov

Gender : Male

Charlton Heston

Character Name : Spencer Trilby

Original Name : Charlton Heston

Gender : Male

Marshall Manesh

Character Name : Jamal Khaled

Original Name : Marshall Manesh

Gender : Male

James Allen

Character Name : Colonel

Original Name : James Allen

Gender : Male

Dieter Rauter

Character Name : Boathouse Guard

Original Name : Dieter Rauter

Gender : Male

Jane Morris

Character Name : Janice

Original Name : Jane Morris

Gender : Female

Katsy Chappell

Character Name : Allison

Original Name : Katsy Chappell

Gender : Female

Crystina Wyler

Character Name : Charlene

Original Name : Crystina Wyler

Gender : Female

Ofer Samra

Character Name : Yusif

Original Name : Ofer Samra

Gender : Male

Paul Barselou

Character Name : Old Guy in Bathroom

Original Name : Paul Barselou

Gender : Male

Charles A. Tamburro

Character Name : Helicopter Pilot

Original Name : Charles A. Tamburro

Gender : Male

Jean-Claude Parachini

Character Name : Jean-Claude

Original Name : Jean-Claude Parachini

Gender : Male

Uzi Gal

Character Name : Lead Terrorist

Original Name : Uzi Gal

Gender : Male

Majed Ibrahim

Character Name : High Rise Terrorist

Original Name : Majed Ibrahim

Gender : Male

Armen Ksajikian

Character Name : Juno's Chauffeur

Original Name : Armen Ksajikian

Gender : Male

Mike Akrawi

Character Name : Jihad Cameraman

Original Name : Mike Akrawi

Gender : Male

Mike Cameron

Character Name : Citation Pilot

Original Name : Mike Cameron

Gender : Male

Charles Cragin

Character Name : Samir

Original Name : Charles Cragin

Gender : Male

Louai Mardini

Character Name : Bread Van Terrorist #1

Original Name : Louai Mardini

Gender : Male

Gino Salvano

Character Name : Bread Van Terrorist #2

Original Name : Gino Salvano

Gender : Male

Scott Dotson

Character Name : Harrier Pilot

Original Name : Scott Dotson

Gender : Male

Tom Isbell

Character Name : Reporter at High Rise

Original Name : Tom Isbell

Gender : Male

John Bruno

Character Name : Custodian

Original Name : John Bruno

Gender : Male

Sergio Kato

Character Name : Bread Van Terrorist #3 (uncredited)

Original Name : Sergio Kato

Gender : Male

Sayed Badreya

Character Name : Arab Terrorist (uncredited)

Original Name : Sayed Badreya

Gender : Male

Ray Buffer

Character Name : Police Captain (uncredited)

Original Name : Ray Buffer

Gender : Male

Max Daniels

Character Name : Bathroom Terrorist (uncredited)

Original Name : Max Daniels

Gender : Male

Joan Quinn Eastman

Character Name : Ballroom Guest (uncredited)

Original Name : Joan Quinn Eastman

Gender : Male

Richard Givens

Character Name : Nigerian General (uncredited)

Original Name : Richard Givens

Gender : Male

Loren Janes

Character Name : Man in Elevator (uncredited)

Original Name : Loren Janes

Gender : Male

Lane Leavitt

Character Name : Bellhop (uncredited)

Original Name : Lane Leavitt

Gender : Male

Jody Millard

Character Name : Hotel Clerk (uncredited)

Original Name : Jody Millard

Gender : Male

Erik Parillo

Character Name : French Chef (uncredited)

Original Name : Erik Parillo

Gender : Male

Manny Perry

Character Name : Bass Player (uncredited)

Original Name : Manny Perry

Gender : Male

Charlie Picerni

Character Name : Man in Hotel Lobby (uncredited)

Original Name : Charlie Picerni

Gender : Male

Dale Resteghini

Character Name : Snow Assassin (uncredited)

Original Name : Dale Resteghini

Gender : Male

William Shipman

Character Name : Office Worker (uncredited)

Original Name : William Shipman

Gender : Male

Matt Sigloch

Character Name : SWAT Team Leader (uncredited)

Original Name : Matt Sigloch

Gender : Male

Ryken Zane

Character Name : Snowboarder (uncredited)

Original Name : Ryken Zane

Gender : Male

Al Conti

Character Name : UN Ambassador (uncredited)

Original Name : Al Conti

Gender : Male

Janet Dey

Character Name : Banquet Guest (uncredited)

Original Name : Janet Dey

Gender : Female

Reviews

G

Gimly

@Ruuz

2021-06-23

I seem to like **True Lies** a significant amount less than most people do. And it's not because it isn't my type of movie either, Schwarzeneggar as a secret agent in an explosive 90s action movie is absolutely my jam. But I don't love _True Lies_, maybe I saw it too late in life (I was 25 the first time I saw the whole movie) and either I aged out of it or the movie aged out of society, but whatever the case, I just can't really understand why it's so beloved. I would never take it away from anyone, and there's absolutely stuff I like, but I can't really recommend it based on personal taste. _Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Cameron and Schwarzenegger team up again for a riot of an action movie. True Lies sees Arnold Schwarzenegger play Harry Tasker, to his wife Helen (Jaimie Lee Curtis) and daughter Dana (Eliza Dushku) he's a safe husband and father working as a computer salesman. Away from the family home he's a top spy for one of America's highest secret services. When Harry is prompted to believe that Helen is having an affair, it signals the start of a sequence of events that will out Harry and lead them both to a confrontation with a deadly terrorist. To hell with misogyny and stereotypical Arab terrorist (Art Malik so OTT he's off the chain man), Cameron's True Lies really isn't concerned for political correctness. His aim, aided by his on form cast, is to chase, caress and explode stuff whilst having a laugh at every turn. True Lies, if anyone was in doubt prior to its release, shows Cameron to be supremely gifted at action set pieces. No expense spared of course, but you still gotta utilise those Harrier Jets, helicopters and horse carrying elevators to great effect. And so it proves. Throw in a tremendously funny script that gives Tom Arnold & Bill Paxton comedy gold roles to revel in; and what you get is a Worldwide box office profit of nearly $264 million. It knows it's nonsense, but it's the good kind of nonsense that Hollywood has to offer. Ever re-watchable, True Lies is undeniably great fun. 7.5/10

G

gricket

@gricket

2021-06-23

The zenith of Arnold's career... "True Lies" not only represents the singular moment in the actor's pre-governor acting career where he played more than a one dimensional action hero. In an homage to the secret agent genre, the film opens with an action / glamour set-piece that is more James Bond than a 21st century 007 film. From there the story breaks into what would a few years later become the mold for numerous of Jackie Chan's "goofy secret agent" movies, although Chan would replace the cutting-edge CGI special effects set-pieces with a variety of more economical but just-as-exciting acrobatic, complex choreography hand-to-hand fights. There is one mano-a-mano beat down scene where Arnold takes down his enemy by flushing his head in a urinal, complete with his attempt at a trade-mark one-liner: "Cool Off". (It's a set piece worth comparing to the more recent scene in "Mission Impossible: Fallout".) Along with that, it shifts smoothly back and forth from a rather straightforward super-spy/terrorist story line and exploring the practical troubles of living of the life of a secret agent while having a wife and kids. This film also represents the movie that put Jamie Lee Curtis back on the map after a stint in a slew of flops following her role in "A Fish Called Wanda". "True Lies" put her acting range on display and put to rest any lingering question of whether she was anything more than a scream queen. One of the most hilarious moments she pulls off flawlessly is falling flat on her face while attempting to pole dance, and then getting getting back up and acting like it didn't happen. Without her screen presence, the film would be just another entry in the list of Arnold action films scotched with a twist of comedy. One could go so far as to conclude that the difference in the enduring appeal of "True Lies" vs. the mis-matched partner straight-man, funny-man film "Red Heat" is the degree to which Jamie Lee Curtis caries the fish-out-of-water funny-woman role in contrast to Jim Belushi's semi-funny, street-wise American cop. But, unlike the cold war, the regimented soviet style vs. the fast-and-lost American way, the contrast in "True Lies" derives from the ahead-of-it's time idea of adaptable, underrated woman and her somewhat over-inflated male counterpart. When the secret agents attempt to arrest Curtis's character, she fights back fiercely, with a well placed nut-shot that made women and men alike erupt with cheers and laughter in theaters, something not so likely contemporary Hollywood's constant browbeating with girl power - male buffoonery film after film.