Enemy of the State
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  • Gabriel Byrne's character looks and dresses exactly like Travis Bickle, Robert De Niro's character in Taxi Driver (1976). He also drives Dean away in a taxi.

  • Boxing is on TV in four separate scenes.

  • The satellites repeatedly send "CQ" in Morse code every time they're seen. "CQ" is ham radio shorthand for "Anybody out there want to chat?" ("Seek you.")

  • Both Gabriel Byrne and 'Loren Dean (I)' played major roles in Wim Wenders' The End of Violence (1997), another film that deals with the social perils of techno-surveillance.

  • Several times the location of a person or vehicle being tracked is given in degrees and minutes of latitude and longitude. Near Washington, D.C., this designates an area of about 1.02 square miles. Not quite as precise as shown.

  • Tom Sizemore played in a scene in True Romance (1993) in which multiple heavily armed groups of men faced each other at gunpoint in a small room with a shoot-out massacre as result. A similar scene appeared in Saving Private Ryan (1998), also featuring Sizemore. This movie contains another such scene, again featuring Sizemore.

  • Gene Hackman's character's name (Brill) is very similar to his character in The Split (1968).

  • The portable video game system that Dean's son uses, and in which "the disc" won't work, is an NEC Turbo Express.

  • The storm drain car chase scene was shot in a large air duct tunnel below the four main bores of the Fort McHenry Road Tunnel in Baltimore, MD. Fort McHenry permits Interstate 95 to pass under Baltimore's harbor. The air duct is only accessible from the Tunnel's Admin Building by stairs and a small elevator, so the cars in the scene were chopped into several sections, taken three levels below, reassembled and painted. Once filming was complete they were disassembled once again and removed from the duct. The water was hosed in from a nearby sprinkler main.

  • Seth Green is uncredited.

  • The sound made by the bug sweepers used in the film is the same as the sound made by the sonar equipment in Crimson Tide (1995), also directed by Tony Scott. Gene Hackman, Jason Robards, and Lillo Brancato were in both films.

  • Writing credits in the film's early promotional material read "Written by David Marconi and Aaron Sorkin and Henry Bean & Tony Gilroy".

  • Gene Hackman turned down the film several times, but was ultimately convinced to sign on after a phone call by director Tony Scott. Will Smith later signed on at a relative post-Independence Day (1996) bargain price because he wanted to work with Hackman.

  • The film's technical advisor, Larry Cox, is a former National Security Agency official.

  • Director Tony Scott initially turned down producer Jerry Bruckheimer's offer to direct the film.

  • The mark left on the mailbox to signal Brill is exactly how ex-CIA official and traitor Aldrich Ames signaled the Soviets when he made a drop.

  • Thomas Reynolds' birth date is given as 9-11-40. On 11 September 1940, Bell Labs researcher George Stibitz demonstrated the first remote operation (i.e., over a phone line) of a computer machine.

  • When Brill accesses the National Security Administration's executive files to identify Reynolds, the very first photograph that flashes from the personnel files has the name "Buster, Ball" below it.

  • Tom Cruise was originally signed on to star in this film, but had to turn it down because he was still filming Eyes Wide Shut (1999).

  • The building that serves as Brill's workplace is actually originally a Dr. Pepper plant.

  • The Ruby lingerie store is actually the doctored store front of Lambda Rising, a well-known gay bookstore on Connecticut Avenue in Washington, DC.

  • The latitude/longitude given during the chase are actually the location of the real CIA headquarters in Langley, Viginia.

  • Mel Gibson was also considered for the role of Robert Clayton Dean.

  • The picture of a younger Gene Hackman shown in a white shirt and tie, supposedly from his NSA file, is actually taken from The Conversation (1974). In that film Hackman also plays a surveillance expert who, like his character Brill in this movie, has his workplace in an industrial warehouse.

  • Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer began developing the story for the film in 1991.

  • Average Shot Length = ~2.4 seconds. Median Shot Length = ~2.2 seconds.

  • Hans Zimmer was the original composer for the film, but was eventually replaced by Trevor Rabin and Harry Gregson-Williams.

  • The computer used by Daniel Leon Zavitz at his apartment to make a copy of the assassination's video on a removable media is a SUN Microsystems Ultra10 workstation.

  • Sylvester Stallone was considered for a role.

  • When Dean sees the article in the paper indicating that he's being investigated by the FBI, he says "They have NO Sullivan protection for this." He's referring to the Supreme Court case New York Times v. Sullivan, which set the standard for defamation cases brought against media companies.

  • Will Smith improvised Dean's line about buying the lingerie for himself to try cross dressing on the weekends. Smith has said it was difficult to restrain his comedic instincts during a dramatic role.


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