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The Devil's Double

  • 2011
  • R
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
65K
YOUR RATING
Dominic Cooper in The Devil's Double (2011)
Forced to become the body double of Uday Hussein, Latif Ahmed (Cooper) bears witness to daily life under Saddam Hussein's reign, from lavish extravagances to sadistic acts of brutality.
Play trailer2:31
4 Videos
46 Photos
Political DramaPolitical ThrillerBiographyDramaThriller

A chilling vision of the house of Saddam. The world of Hussein comes to life through the eyes of the man who was given a choice; either be the double for Saddam's sadistic son, or die.A chilling vision of the house of Saddam. The world of Hussein comes to life through the eyes of the man who was given a choice; either be the double for Saddam's sadistic son, or die.A chilling vision of the house of Saddam. The world of Hussein comes to life through the eyes of the man who was given a choice; either be the double for Saddam's sadistic son, or die.

  • Director
    • Lee Tamahori
  • Writers
    • Michael Thomas
    • Latif Yahia
    • Emjay Rechsteiner
  • Stars
    • Dominic Cooper
    • Ludivine Sagnier
    • Raad Rawi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    65K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lee Tamahori
    • Writers
      • Michael Thomas
      • Latif Yahia
      • Emjay Rechsteiner
    • Stars
      • Dominic Cooper
      • Ludivine Sagnier
      • Raad Rawi
    • 159User reviews
    • 137Critic reviews
    • 52Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos4

    The Devil's Double
    Trailer 2:31
    The Devil's Double
    "Transformation"
    Clip 1:27
    "Transformation"
    "Transformation"
    Clip 1:27
    "Transformation"
    The Devil's Double: Transformation (Online Exclusive Clip)
    Clip 1:28
    The Devil's Double: Transformation (Online Exclusive Clip)
    The Devil's Double: Mirror
    Clip 1:02
    The Devil's Double: Mirror

    Photos46

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Dominic Cooper
    Dominic Cooper
    • Uday Hussein…
    Ludivine Sagnier
    Ludivine Sagnier
    • Sarrab
    Raad Rawi
    Raad Rawi
    • Munem
    Philip Quast
    Philip Quast
    • Saddam Hussein…
    Mimoun Oaïssa
    • Ali
    • (as Mimoun Oaissa)
    Khalid Laith
    Khalid Laith
    • Yassem Al-Helou
    Dar Salim
    Dar Salim
    • Azzam
    Nasser Memarzia
    Nasser Memarzia
    • Latif's Father
    Mem Ferda
    Mem Ferda
    • Kamel Hannah
    Pano Masti
    Pano Masti
    • Said
    Akin Gazi
    Akin Gazi
    • Saad
    Stewart Scudamore
    Stewart Scudamore
    • Father of School Girl
    Amrita Acharia
    Amrita Acharia
    • School Girl
    • (as Amrita Acaria)
    Elektra Anastasi
    Elektra Anastasi
    • School Girl 2
    Amber Rose Revah
    Amber Rose Revah
    • Bride
    Selva Rasalingam
    Selva Rasalingam
    • Rokan
    Samson Leguesse
    • Mercedes Driver
    Sarah-Lee Zammit
    • Amer
    • (as Sarah Lee Zammit)
    • Director
      • Lee Tamahori
    • Writers
      • Michael Thomas
      • Latif Yahia
      • Emjay Rechsteiner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews159

    7.064.7K
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    Featured reviews

    3chex13

    Mundane

    Why take an amazing true story and turn into a mundane fictional one?

    The reality of Latif's life was that he became so entrenched in Uday's character that he practically became him. He became violent and even after he escaped with his wife and kids (not with a hooker on a horse) he continued to behave like Uday.

    The acting was not great. The portrayal of Uday was over the top and not believable. Same with the constant backchat from Latif to Uday considering that an out of line comment is the reason Latif ended up getting shot in reality.

    The film could have been an intelligent psychological drama instead of a dumbed blockbuster. Shame.
    4GameAndWatch

    Attack of the clone

    I'm a big fan of Dominic Cooper, but he's not enough to save this truly bizarre and puerile film.

    The film starts off with Uday hiring a doppleganger of himself (Latif), to pass off as him publicly. Latif, hasn't really a choice, and is portrayed as having some morals, Uday is portrayed as a millionaire playboy, who is a murdering brute who gets off on violence, sodomy and rape. His only redeeming quality is his penchant for 80s British synth pop (?).

    The film becomes increasingly outlandish. If it were a true story, then this could have been quite fascinating. I learnt nothing, and by the end had tuned out. It reminded me of the last king of Scotland, which I didn't enjoy either.

    I thought it were unnecessary for Cooper to play both the leads. It felt unbelievable as both characters appeared unrealistically identical.

    I knew nothing of the back story of Uday, a quick glance at Wikipedia describes him as quite the devil. That much the film gets right. There's some artistic license used at the end of the movie.
    the_upcoming

    A must-watch for Cooper's performance alone, but expect to be troubled as well as thrilled throughout.

    The posters for director Lee Tamahori's The Devil's Double (18) declare it to be "Scarface of Arabia", referring both to Brian De Palma's 1983 gangster opus Scarface and the film's setting during Saddam Hussein's brutal rule in Iraq. The Devil's Double is based on the true story of Latif Yahia, an Iraqi soldier chosen by the regime to be the body-double of the dictator's infamous son Uday, with both roles played by Dominic Cooper.

    The perks of the job are acceptable: enough designer clothing and willing women to make the average Premiership footballer looking like a trappist monk. However, the downsides are considerable too: torture, being shot at – and the fact that the penalty for seeking alternative employment is the death of Latif's entire family.

    Dominic Cooper stars in Devil's Double with Ludivine Sagnier.

    Dominic Cooper stars in Devil's Double with Ludivine Sagnier.

    It is easy to see why The Devil's Double has been compared to a gangster film. All the whirring, terrifying madness of Uday's world is depicted with the brutal verve one finds in Scarface and other films of its ilk. Instigating nightclub orgies while American bombs are exploding and shooting at loyal companions in psychotic rages are all part of Uday's regular routine.

    The direction, intermingling footage of Operation Desert Storm with debauchery, captures the craziness of Uday and Latif's world with a lurid style.

    Again, like a great underworld film, Cooper's performance as the central villain is masterful, capturing Uday's menacing madness and chewing the scenery in between sucking breasts or shovelling cocaine up his nose. His performance as Latif is equally striking, but in a more nuanced way. We are never in doubt which one Cooper is portraying; his sickened desperate body language showing through even when Latif is Uday.

    Yet this film is not Scarface, and Uday is not Tony Montana. Tony Montana, like most anti-heroes found in films depicting criminals, had a form of morality. It may have been a twisted, cocaine-fuelled morality but it was one none the less. Uday has no morality; worse than that, he's evil even by the standards of his father, a man who thought nothing of gassing entire ethnic groups. This gives the film a heart of darkness. Uday is possibly one of the most horrifying characters ever to grace a cinema screen, proving it at regular harrowing intervals with crimes of a scarcely believable depravity.

    This leads me to the film's central flaw. Despite Cooper's performance, Latif's story never quite feels as compelling as it should be. The script at times makes a good man's forced descent into hell on Earth seem more like a mob underling's troubled conscience upon witnessing his boss go too far. One scene, which directly juxtaposes his actions in saving others from Uday's horrors, doesn't have anywhere near the emotional resonance it should. One gets a sense that in trying to show us a world in which a moral compass is more likely to be thrust into the genitals of an innocent than providing any sort of guidance, the film has lost some of its humanity along with its protagonists.

    Despite these flaws, though, The Devil's Double is still an excellent film. It is a brave attempt to portray a difficult and scarcely believable story. Even its failure to completely emote is understandable given the skill with which it presents its harrowing world. Due to this, and possibly the performance of the year from Dominic Cooper, its flaws are eminently forgivable.

    Verdict: ●●●● A must-watch for Cooper's performance alone, but expect to be troubled as well as thrilled throughout.

    Read more reviews on www.theupcoming.co.uk
    4eismoc

    The film's OK, But..

    Great deal of this movie is not true. Yet, this movie tells about 1/100th of the truth about the tyrant of Baghdad and his family in the 1990's. The other 99 parts are still under oblivion, thanks the the author and to the current chaotic regime of Baghdad. The movie is fine because even that 1% counts to understand what was really going on for the people in Iraq at that time.

    But there is a serious drawback when someone watches this movie knowing that at the time of movie release in 2011, the main character and the author, Latif Yahia, was (and still is) glorifying the tyrant and calling on people to re-establish his era in Iraq. He actually has a YouTube channel filled with his political opinions and his shameless strange sympathy to the tyrant!! So whatever the author's claims about his political views, or about his own opinions of not having political views; he was not opposing the tyrant, and still not; he was one of the tyrant's followers and still is.

    Now watching the movie knowing that the writer and main character stands there, it will make the audience uncomfortable and cautious to accept what's being told in this movie without questioning.

    Aside from that, directing was weak in general, and the story is not as the original Arabic book (I Was A Son For The President), but a revised version of the English edition which was a revised version of the Arabic edition!

    For example in the Arabic edition the main character was claimed to be a ranked army officer, in the movie he was just a soldier. In the original story it was claimed that the tyrant saw and examined his son's double for a few times, in the movie that wasn't happening. Now if this was a history book/movie then.. voila! There is a good definition for the person who says what he doesn't think and thinks what he doesn't say, and changes his saying/thoughts 3 times in a day...
    7netizn

    surprisingly good

    Saw this movie today at Berlinale and was pleasantly surprised that as I walked out of it thought to myself that it's been a really long time since I saw a decent movie like this. Before I looked Uday/Latif up on the internet I had doubts about how close the plot was to reality, turned out to be quite interesting showing that, well everything in the movie has (kind of) happened. Makes it disturbing to know on a different level.

    The depiction of Uday's psychotic character throughout the movie seems very real and does not spare or cheat the viewers any disturbing torture/abuse scenes. Some people might dislike this, some maybe even enjoy it.

    That being said I liked the overall acting, both main and lesser characters did a good job. And on a side note: i found the movie sets and props were quite awesome.

    btw: I can still remember the news of Uday's and Qusai's deaths back in 2003, but that meant little to me at that time. At least now i know.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      There is a reference to The Godfather in one of the first scenes where Latif is impersonating Uday. He acts as a double when entering and leaving an important meeting. When he leaves and is shot at by a young boy an orange cart is shown prominently with oranges falling. Oranges were present whenever death occurred or was about to in The Godfather and there was an orange cart featured when Don Corleone was shot at it.
    • Goofs
      In a lot of car scenes the driver is on the right side, but in Iraq the driver seat is on the left.
    • Quotes

      Munem: Please be clear about this, Latif. Uday has chosen you. You belong to him. You have about five minutes to think about this. Before a car pulls up outside your house in Al-Adhamiya and your family, everyone one of them - your father, your mother, your sisters and brothers; is thrown into Abu Ghraib. God willing, they will die quickly. I've said too much. You have about two minutes left.

    • Connections
      Featured in Breakfast: Episode dated 10 August 2011 (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      You Spin Me Round (Like A Record)
      Written by Pete Burns (as Peter Jozzepi Burns), Steve Coy(as Stephen Coy), Mike Percy (as Michael David Percy), Tim Lever (as Timothy John Lever)

      Performed by Dead or Alive

      Courtesy of Sony Music Entertainment UK Ltd

      Published by Burning Music Ltd (PRS), Westbury Music Ltd

      All rights on behalf of Burning Music Ltd

      Administered by Warner/Chappell Ltd

      All Rights Reserved

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 2, 2012 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Belgium
      • Netherlands
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bản Sao Của Quỷ
    • Filming locations
      • Villa Blanche, Hal Far, Malta
    • Production companies
      • Corsan
      • Staccato Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $19,100,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,361,512
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $96,414
      • Jul 31, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,728,213
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 49 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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