The Fourth Protocol
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
John Mackenzie
Michael Caine
Ned Beatty
Pierce Brosnan
Joanna Cassidy
Sally Kinghorn
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
The Fourth Protocol is a top secret agreement between the United States, Great Britain, and Russia to stop smuggling nuclear weapons. But some rogue spies are intent on defying the agreement and destroying NATO in the process. British agent John Preston begins to notice nuclear weapons components coming into the country and is suspicious, but he can't convince his superiors, who assume he is simply displaying Cold War anti-communist paranoia. So Preston starts collecting clues to solve the mystery of who is attempting to break the Fourth Protocol.
Director
John Mackenzie
Cast
Michael Caine
Ned Beatty
Pierce Brosnan
Joanna Cassidy
Sally Kinghorn
Michael Gough
Philip Jackson
Matt Frewer
Sam Douglas
Anton Rodgers
Ronald Pickup
Rosy Clayton
Roy Alon
Juanita Waterman
Clare Kelly
John Murtagh
Michael J Jackson
Phil Smeeton
Jiri Stanislav
David Conville
Peter Manning
Aaron Swartz
Johnny Allan
John Horsely
Gordon Honeycombe
Matthew Marsh
Jerry Harte
Alan North
Mick Ford
Ronnie Laughlin
Sean Chapman
Octavia Verdin
Rebecca Burrill
Kenneth Midwood
Ray Mcanally
Steve Halliwell
Caroline Blakiston
Julian Glover
George Phillips
Renos Liondaris
Ian Richardson
Joanna Dickens
Christopher Walker
William Parker
Joseph Brady
Michael Seezen
James Older
Peter Cartwright
Cyril Conway
Michael Bilton
Patsy Smart
Mark Rolston
Neville Phillips
George Zenios
Tariq Yunus
Julian Jacobson
Stephen Persaud
Nancy Crane
Betsy Brantley
Ronnie Golden
Sarah Bullen
Richard Ridings
Alexei Jawdokimov
Boris Isarov
Crew
Christopher Ackland
George Axelrod
Trevor Brooker
Richard Burridge
Timothy Burrill
Lois Burwell
Michael Caine
Allan Cameron
Patricia Carr
John Dodds
Frederick Forsyth
Frederick Forsyth
Frederick Forsyth
Ian Fuller
Christopher Hall
Graham V Hartstone
Bob Hathaway
Peter Howitt
Tim Hutchinson
Julian Jacobson
Priscilla John
Juhani Jotuni
Liz Kerry
Ake Lindman
Philip Meheux
Chris Munro
Tiny Nicholls
Peter Robb-king
Chris Rose
Wafic Said
Gail Samuelson
Lalo Schifrin
Francis Shaw
Jimmy Smith
Eddie Stacey
Lynn Stalmaster
Jeannie Stone
Graham Walker
Colin Wilson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
George Axelrod, 1922-2003
Born June 9, 1922, in New York City to the son of the silent film actress Betty Carpenter, he had an eventful childhood in New York where, despite little formal education, he became an avaricious reader who hung around Broadway theaters. During World War II he served in the Army Signal Corps, then returned to New York, where in the late 40's and early 50's he wrote for radio and television and published a critically praised novel, Beggar's Choice.
He scored big on Broadway in 1952 with The Seven Year Itch. The comedy, about a frustrated, middle-aged man who takes advantage of his family's absence over a sweltering New York summer to have an affair with a sexy neighbor, won a Tony Award for its star, Tom Ewell, and was considered daring for its time as it teased current sexual mores and conventions. The play was adapted into a movie in 1955 by Billy Wilder, as a vehicle for Marilyn Monroe, with Ewell reprising his role. Unfortunately, the censors and studio executives would not allow the hero to actually consummate the affair; instead, Ewell was seen merely daydreaming a few romantic scenes, a situation that left the playwright far from happy.
Nevertheless, the success of The Seven Year Itch, opened the door for Axelrod as a screenwriter. He did a fine adaptation of William Inge's play Bus Stop (1956) again starring Marilyn Monroe, and did a splendid job transferring Truman Capote's lovely Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961). Although his relationship with the director Blake Edwards was rancorous at best, it did earn Axelrod his only Academy Award nomination.
So frustrated with his work being so heavily revised by Hollywood, that Axelrod decided to move from New York to Los Angeles, where he could more closely monitor the treatment of his scripts. It was around this period that Axelrod developed some his best work since he began producing as well as writing: the incisive, scorchingly subversive cold war thriller The Manchurian Candidate (1962), based on Richard Condon's novel about an American POW (Laurence Harvey) who returns home and is brainwashed to kill a powerful politician; the urbane comedy Paris When it Sizzles (1964) that showed off its stars William Holden and Audrey Hepburn at their sophisticated best; his directorial debut with the remarkable (if somewhat undisciplined) satire Lord Love a Duck (1966) that skewers many sacred institutions of American culture (marriage, school, wealth, stardom) and has since become a cult favorite for midnight movie lovers; and finally (his only other directorial effort) a gentle comedy of wish fulfillment The Secret Life of an American Wife (1968) that gave Walter Matthau one of his most sympathetic roles.
By the '70s, Axelrod retired quietly in Los Angeles. He returned to write one fine screenplay, John Mackenzie's slick political thriller The Fourth Protocol (1987) starring Michael Caine. He is survived by his sons Peter, Steven, and Jonathan; a daughter Nina; seven grandchildren; and a sister, Connie Burdick.
by Michael T. Toole
George Axelrod, 1922-2003
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Summer August 28, 1987
Released in United States on Video February 1, 1989
Film is Lorimar's first self-distributed theatrical feature.
Began shooting April 21, 1986.
Released in United States Summer August 28, 1987
Released in United States on Video February 1, 1989