Duplicity is a 2009 American romantic crime comedy film written and directed by Tony Gilroy, and starring Julia Roberts and Clive Owen. The plot follows two corporate spies with a romantic history who collaborate to carry out a complicated con.[2] The film was released on March 20, 2009.[3]

Duplicity
Theatrical release poster
Directed byTony Gilroy
Written byTony Gilroy
Produced byJennifer Fox
Laura Bickford
Starring
CinematographyRobert Elswit
Edited byJohn Gilroy
Music byJames Newton Howard
Production
company
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release dates
  • March 10, 2009 (2009-03-10) (London)
  • March 20, 2009 (2009-03-20) (United States)
Running time
125 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$60 million[1]
Box office$78.1 million[1]

Plot

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Ray Koval, an MI6 agent, meets Claire Stenwick, a CIA officer, at a party in Dubai. He is unaware of her identity and attempts to seduce her. Claire drugs him and steals classified documents from him.

Three years later in Rome, Ray and Claire meet for the first time since Dubai and spend several days together at a posh hotel. They imagine leaving their government jobs for work in an intensely competitive area in the private sector. They contemplate using their skills in intelligence to enrich themselves. After exploring possibilities over several months, including companies vying for the market in double-crust pizza, they settle on cosmetics and personal hygiene. How they will turn their positions to their advantage is unclear even to them, but they will be ready when the opportunity presents itself.

Claire ultimately accepts a job in counter-intelligence at Burkett & Randle. After more than a year, Ray takes a position in intelligence at Equikrom — a Burkett & Randle rival —where he will act as the handler, including Claire as a double agenta.

Ray, where his new employer will be spying on him to assess his loyalty, practices with Claire how they will pretend to be meeting in New York for the first time since Dubai, reprising much of the dialogue of their actual first re-encounter in Rome. Unaware that Claire's employers at Burkett & Randle overhear this rehearsal and that their cover is thus blown. Burkett & Randle's CEO Howard Tully decides to keep Claire in her job, even though she is a mole, so he can manipulate her in his rivalry with Equikrom.

Claire and Ray, working as mole and handler, reprise the Rome dialogue yet again and, as they had anticipated, Ray's employer is listening in and is persuaded that Ray is loyal.

Throughout the weeks that follow, Claire and Ray remain wary of one another. Both are experienced in double-dealing and despite their romantic connection and plans to escape with new identities once this operation is complete, neither is entirely free of the other's suspicion.

Tully makes a speech to his intelligence team, including Claire, that paints his company as the innovator defending itself from duplicity and theft. He underscores how the unannounced new product makes vigilance even more urgent. He and others in his organization plant information that they know Claire and the intelligence team at Equikrom will steal as they try to understand what that "major development" might be.

Claire provides a copy of the Tully speech to Equikrom CEO Dick Garsik, who plots to steal whatever Burkett & Randle has developed. His team, including Ray, devote themselves to stealing information from Burkett & Randle's offices — in the course of which Ray seduces one of their travel office employees, and he and several others visit a casino in the Bahamas.

Thanks to information from Ray, Claire appears a hero to her employers, catching Equikrom's spying activities after the fact or thwarting them in some measure in the Bahamas. Tully at Burkett & Randle pretends to be impressed, thanks Claire for successfully defending the company's new product, and reveals to her that the new product is a cure for baldness. She informs Garsik at Equikrom, who leaves for a shareholders meeting in Las Vegas fully expecting to obtain the chemical formula. Gardik will announce the new development to his shareholders before Burkett & Randle goes public with the information.

Using Claire as their principal source inside their rival's offices, excitement builds as the Equikrom team succeed in acquiring a copy of the formula. Garsik tells his shareholders that Equikrom is in the final stages of testing a product that cures baldness.

At the same time, Claire and Ray meet at the Zürich Airport, each with a copy of the formula that they plan to sell to a Swiss company for $35 million. However, the Swiss inform Ray and Claire that the formula is not what they think but just a harmless lotion. They in turn are disappointed but also impressed by how completely they were manipulated. They have only each other now, and a thank you bottle of champagne from Tully.

Narrative style

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The film does not present events chronologically, but moves back and forth in time to peel away layers and reveal unsuspected motivations. In one instance, the same dialog is recapitulated, but the words that are spoken in chronological sequence in Rome, a hotel room, and a bar, are presented in a different sequence: the bar, Rome, the hotel room. The audience only understands progressively when these lines represent an actual conversation and when they are being repeated, and also when they are overheard by an unsuspected audience and overheard by a suspected audience. In chronological sequence the events are still complex.

Cast

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Production

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Production on Duplicity began in New York City on March 9, 2008, and wrapped shooting on May 27 of that year. Filming locations included Paradise Island in the Bahamas for the casino shots, New York City including the West Village, Trafalgar Square in London and outside the Pantheon in Rome.

Release

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The film was released on March 19, 2009 in Australia and on March 20 in the US and the UK.[4] It had its world premiere on March 11, 2009 at London's Leicester Square.[5]

Reception

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The film received mixed to positive reviews from film critics. As of October 2021, the film holds a 65% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 192 reviews with an average rating of 6.40/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "Duplicity is well-crafted, smart, and often funny, but it's mostly more cerebral than visceral and features far too many plot twists."[6] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 69 out of 100 based on reviews from 34 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[7]

Film critic Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars and wrote, "Duplicity is entertaining, but the complexities of its plot keep it from being really involving: When nothing is as it seems, why care?", but admitted that "the fun is in watching Roberts and Owen fencing with dialogue, keeping straight faces, trying to read each other's minds".[8]

In his review for The New York Observer, Andrew Sarris wrote, "So what has gone wrong with Duplicity? I can only go with my gut feeling: that Mr. Gilroy has outsmarted himself by pulling too many switches in his narrative. He then fails to recover by coming up with a smash ending that pulls all the scattered pieces together".[9] Scott Foundas, in his review for the Village Voice, wrote, "Comedy seems to have liberated Gilroy, who directs Duplicity with the high gloss and fleet-footed hustle of a golden-age Hollywood craftsman. There's nary a dull stretch in its two-hour breadth".[10]

Entertainment Weekly gave the film a "B" rating; Lisa Schwarzbaum wrote, "Gilroy counts on a Thin Man-style undercurrent of sexual sparring to sustain our interest in two scheming corporate operatives despite the fact that nothing much else is going on".[11]

In his review for The New York Times, A. O. Scott praised Julia Roberts' performance: "Ms. Roberts has almost entirely left behind the coltish, America's-sweetheart mannerisms, except when she uses them strategically, to disarm or confuse. Curvier than she used to be and with a touch of weariness around her eyes and impatience in her voice, she is, at 41, unmistakably in her prime".[12]

Sukhdev Sandhu, in his review for The Daily Telegraph, wrote, "Duplicity is really all about Roberts and Owen. They're con artists, but they don't fool us. Their pairing here feels duplicitous. Gilroy, it seems, is better at thrilling audiences than he is at seducing them".[13] However, not all reviews were positive; Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the film two and a half stars out of four and said "Gilroy and his stars make it elegant fun to be fooled, but they sure as hell make you work for it."[14]

Filmmaker and author Peter Bogdanovich cited Duplicity as an example of a recent Hollywood film that has a pretentious style of filmmaking as compared with the organic artistic approach of Orson Welles to cinema, highlighting its non-chronological presentation of events as unnecessary and stating, "... and they wonder why the audience said 'What the fuck is going on?'"[15]

Accolades

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Awards
Award Category Recipient(s) Outcome
Golden Globe Awards Best Actress, Musical/Comedy Julia Roberts Nominated

Home media

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The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on August 25, 2009. Mill Creek Entertainment re-released the Blu-ray on September 17, 2019 and also included the DVD version in the Romance 4 Pack collection that will be released on September 15, 2020.

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Duplicity (2009)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved November 28, 2009.
  2. ^ Stevens, Dana (March 19, 2009). "Pretty Confusing". Slate. Retrieved February 19, 2009.
  3. ^ "allmovie ((( Duplicity > Overview )))". Archived from the original on 2006-04-26. Retrieved 2008-03-17.
  4. ^ "Release dates for Duplicity". IMDb. March 26, 2009. Retrieved March 26, 2009.
  5. ^ Phillips, Emily (March 11, 2009). "Julia & Clive - Duplicity World Premiere". Empireonline. Retrieved March 26, 2009.
  6. ^ "Duplicity (2009)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved October 2, 2021.
  7. ^ "Duplicity Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved October 2, 2021.
  8. ^ Ebert, Roger (March 18, 2009). "Duplicity". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved March 20, 2009.
  9. ^ Sarris, Andrew (March 17, 2009). "Duplicity Duped Me!". The New York Observer. Archived from the original on March 21, 2009. Retrieved March 18, 2009.
  10. ^ Foundas, Scott (March 17, 2009). "Tony Gilroy's (Heretofore Unseen) Expert Light Touch in Duplicity". Village Voice. Retrieved March 18, 2009.
  11. ^ Schwarzbaum, Lisa (March 18, 2009). "Duplicity". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on March 21, 2009. Retrieved March 19, 2009.
  12. ^ Scott, A. O. (March 20, 2009). "Effervescent Espionage With Two Irresistible Forces". The New York Times. Retrieved March 20, 2009.
  13. ^ Sandhu, Sukhdev (March 20, 2009). "Duplicity". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved March 20, 2009.
  14. ^ Travers, Peter (March 19, 2009). "Duplicity: Review". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on March 29, 2010.
  15. ^ Newfields (November 15, 2012). Peter Bogdanovich on Orson Welles. YouTube. Google, LLC. Event occurs at 31:03–32:11. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15.
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