First Shot (2002 film)

First Shot is a 2002 American made-for-television action thriller film. It is the third entry in the Alex McGregor movie series, the first two being First Daughter (1999) and First Target (2000). Mariel Hemingway reprises the role she originated in First Daughter, while Jenna Leigh Green takes over the role of Presidential daughter Jess Hayes (originated by Monica Keena).

First Shot
Film poster
Directed byArmand Mastroianni
Produced byJustis Greene
Written byCarey W. Hayes
Chad Hayes
StarringMariel Hemingway
Doug Savant
Gregory Harrison
Music byLouis Febre
CinematographyLes Erskine
Edited byRobert Florio
Production
company
Columbia TriStar Television
Lionsgate Television
Mandalay Entertainment
Sony Pictures Television International
TBS Superstation
Distributed byColumbia TriStar Home Video
TBS Superstation
Release date
August 11, 2002
Running time
92 mins
CountryCanada/United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$4,200,000 (Estimated)[1]

Plot

After an explosion at an army base that kills several soldiers, President Jonathan Hayes (Gregory Harrison) attends a memorial service and is shot while speaking. It is revealed that a militia rebel group has resurfaced with a vengeance to assassinate President Jonathan Hayes for the death of their brothers. Agent Alex McGregor (Mariel Hemingway), now the Director of the United States Secret Service, tries to prevent the attack on the President's life, but when the President is shot and agent McGregor's husband Grant Coleman (Doug Savant), is kidnapped, the stakes are raised, and Alex realizes she has become a target as well.

Cast

  • Mariel Hemingway as Special Agent Alex McGregor
  • Doug Savant as Grant Coleman
  • Gregory Harrison as President Jonathan Hayes
  • Jenna Leigh Green as Jessica "Jess" Hayes
  • Wanda Cannon as Kathryn Yarnell
  • Sebastian Spence as Special Agent Owen Taylor
  • Steve Makaj as FBI Special Agent Judd Walters
  • Andrew Johnston as Special Agent Brent McIntosh
  • Michelle Harrsion as Special Agent Courtney Robinson
  • Dean Wray as Adam Carter
  • Christian Bochner as Rick Knight

Reception

Steven Oxman from Variety magazine wrote about the film: "Director Armand Mastroianni and his team’s most significant achievement in “First Shot” is to make sure we don’t associate any of this with reality. In other words, nobody’s concerned about who’s running the country when the president is unconscious — here, they’re all more concerned with thawing the cold war between the president’s daughter (Jenna Leigh Green) and his girlfriend (Wanda Cannon). Believe it or not, there’s something kind of appealing about the film’s ability to bury its head that deep in the sand."[2]

<--! On Rotten Tomatoes only 1 negative review listed.[3] --> John Leonard of New York Magazine wrote: "The same old militia is back again, this time kidnapping Mariel's husband, and it also bombs the officer's club at an Army base, and quite a lot of clap is trapped."[4]

gollark: I could probably have it share code with a disassembler, too, although even the ISA-as-currently-implemented allows a bunch of obfuscatory tricks.
gollark: I'm considering implementing the assembler in JS or Python or Rust or something, but it *would* be nice to have this available from within potatOS.
gollark: Honestly that's entirely unnecessary and I would probably only need simple splitting into lines and label handling, but you know.
gollark: That's how you would do it in my thing, using a somewhat insane S-expression assembly-ish language.
gollark: Using hypothetical assembly syntax I haven't actually implemented:```# start of memory to add kittens to(add r1 r0 0x1000) # maybe there would be nice dedicated syntax for "set register" actually# end of kittenized region(add r2 r0 0x1600)(label loop (add r3 r0 40) (poke r3 r1 0) (add r3 r0 94) (poke r3 r1 1) # and so on (add r1 r1 8) (jlt r1 r2 loop))```

References

  1. "Budget". IMDB. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  2. Oxman, Steven. "Review: 'First Shot'". Variety Magazine. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  3. "FIRST SHOT (2002)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
  4. John Leonard (August 12, 2002). "In Brief - Nymag". New York Magazine. Retrieved 21 July 2019.

First Shot on IMDb


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