Mercury Rising

Someone knows too much.

6.3
19981h 51m

Renegade FBI agent Art Jeffries protects a nine-year-old autistic boy who has cracked the government's new "unbreakable" code.

Production

Logo for Universal Pictures
Logo for Imagine Entertainment

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Mercury Rising - Trailer

Mercury Rising - Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Mercury Rising Trailer [HQ]

Mercury Rising Trailer [HQ]

Cast

Photo of Bruce Willis

Bruce Willis

Art Jeffries

Photo of Alec Baldwin

Alec Baldwin

Nicholas Kudrow

Photo of Miko Hughes

Miko Hughes

Simon Lynch

Photo of Chi McBride

Chi McBride

Tommy B. Jordan

Photo of Robert Stanton

Robert Stanton

Dean Crandell

Photo of Bodhi Elfman

Bodhi Elfman

Leo Pedranski

Photo of Carrie Preston

Carrie Preston

Emily Lang

Photo of Lindsey Ginter

Lindsey Ginter

Peter Burrell

Photo of John Carroll Lynch

John Carroll Lynch

Martin Lynch

Photo of Kelley Hazen

Kelley Hazen

Jenny Lynch

Photo of John Doman

John Doman

Supervisor Hartley

Photo of Richard Riehle

Richard Riehle

Edgar Halstrom

Photo of Camryn Manheim

Camryn Manheim

Dr. London

Photo of Jack Conley

Jack Conley

Detective Nichols

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

I'd have to admit that at the start - however politically incorrect it is to say - I though that the mix of Bruce Willis as an independently minded FBI agent and Miko Hughes ("Simon") as a boy genius with very loud, and annoying, autism was going to be a difficult film to sit through. Luckily, the initial in-your-face character establishment settles down and the somewhat preposterous plot takes over quite quickly. The US Government runs a competition to see whether anyone can decipher it's supposedly unbreakable "Mercury" code and young Mr. Hughes is genuinely convincing as the young lad who can break it just by looking at the thing. When he calls in to claim his prize, all hell breaks loose and soon he and Willis are dodging the NSA and the FBI as they try to get to the bottom of this rather far-fetched, but entertaining conspiracy. This is of those films that reminds you why Willis became a star in the first place; he was never the greatest actor to take to the big screen, but he has bags of charisma and here he uses it to full effect. He and his charge bond well - given the youngster has precious little salient dialogue; and it is action-packed enough to pass the two hours in a satisfactory way. I am never sure why Alec Baldwin is cast at all - he is really a terribly wooden actor, though here he is given a run for his money by the equally stolid Chi McBride as Willis' FBI chum. It's nowhere near as bad as some people seem to think...

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