The Contender

Sometimes you can assassinate a leader without firing a shot.

6.7
20002h 6m

The vice president is dead, and as the president makes his choice for a replacement, a secret contest of wills is being waged by a formidable rival. When Senator Laine Hanson is nominated as the first woman in history to hold the office, hidden agendas explode into a battle for power.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Contender - Trailer

The Contender - Trailer

Cast

Photo of Joan Allen

Joan Allen

Laine Hanson

Photo of Gary Oldman

Gary Oldman

Shelly Runyon

Photo of Jeff Bridges

Jeff Bridges

President Jackson Evans

Photo of Christian Slater

Christian Slater

Reginald Webster

Photo of Sam Elliott

Sam Elliott

Kermit Newman

Photo of William Petersen

William Petersen

Jack Hathaway

Photo of Saul Rubinek

Saul Rubinek

Jerry Tolliver

Photo of Philip Baker Hall

Philip Baker Hall

Oscar Billings

Photo of Robin Thomas

Robin Thomas

William Hanson

Photo of Kathryn Morris

Kathryn Morris

Paige Willomina

Photo of Mike Binder

Mike Binder

Lewis Hollis

Photo of Kristen Shaw

Kristen Shaw

Fiona Hathaway

Photo of Doug Roberts

Doug Roberts

Congressman Harding

Photo of Mariel Hemingway

Mariel Hemingway

Cynthia Lee

Photo of Anthony Booth

Anthony Booth

Peter Crenshaw

Photo of Irene Ziegler

Irene Ziegler

Maggie Runyon

Photo of Justin Dray

Justin Dray

Stagehand

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

Joan Allen is an American senator who is nominated to replace a recently deceased Vice-President by Jeff Bridges ("President Evans"). Once her confirmation hearing begins, she finds her rather interesting private life under the scrutiny of hostile committee chairman Gary Oldman who is determined to expose every aspect of her life - past and present - to the public. Oscar-nominated Allen is good as the feisty, intelligent, senator but the rest of this is all rather lacklustre and frequently overly contrived, with plenty of dramatic events designed to enhance the plot rather then create any sense of plausibility. Against the backdrop of the Clinton impeachment trial, the film had a certain resonance and it certainly does not show the constitutional processes, nor the male-dominated American establishment's approach to women, in a good light, but the older it gets, the less that causal impact it has and is now little better than a run-of-the-mill political drama that struggles to distinguish itself.

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