"Frederick Forsyth Presents" Death Has a Bad Reputation (TV Episode 1990) Poster

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7/10
Wished we had more Murray Smith
Jack_Yan2 October 1999
Death Has a Bad Reputation was one of a series of tele-movies penned by Murray Smith (The Paradise Club), before he decided to become a novelist. It is arguably the most enjoyable and well-paced of the Frederick Forsyth Presents series, if somewhat less hard-hitting than Pride and Extreme Prejudice and Casualty of War.

There is an interesting plot twist in a story which centres around some real-life incidents, groups and people. Terrorist Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, a.k.a. Carlos the Jackal (Tony Lo Bianco) sets off two people who, driven by guilt and revenge, attempt to destroy him.

After disappearing for four years as ordered by his KGB controllers, Carlos surfaces in Rome, spotted by journalist and Carlos authority Julia Latham (Elizabeth Hurley). The information leads other intelligence services, most notably the British, led by Sam McCready (Alan Howard), onto Carlos's tail.

Howard gives a trademark performance and pulls it off nicely, as a frustrated spy whose son has been seriously injured in the course of following his father's footsteps. Hurley's future-star quality can best be seen here (and not in Inspector Morse or Act of Will). German actor Gottfried John is, as expected, playing a KGB agent and Carlos's controller, but does so casually and naturally.

The tele-movie is helped by location filming in Rome, but most of all, by Smith's usual high standard of scripting and ability to incorporate realism. There are some small points about the timing (it is set in 1990, while the killing of agents in the pre-title sequence apes an incident that occurred in 1975) and more recent developments which occurred seven years after the film's release. However, in the world of fiction, these points are inconsequential.
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4/10
The One Thing I Remember
Theo Robertson11 March 2003
I quite like Frederick Forsythe thrillers , they`re usually well written and also informative so I made a point of watching this which was very disappointing . The one thing I remember about it was that the actress playing the go getting journalist heroine was extremely attractive but lacked a certain everything in the role . Gawd she really was embarrassing and I couldn`t believe that anyone - No matter how sexy - as untalented as this could have got an equity card . The name of this unpromising star ? Elizabeth Hurley . Yes , that one .

With hindsight there is another flaw with DEATH HAS A BAD REPUTATION and thats its portrayal of Carlos the jackal . Throughout the 1970s and 80s Carlos was hyped as public enemy number one in the Western and Arab worlds , part playboy , part courageous revolutionary , but this was almost entirely an invention of the press . The truth was Carlos was fairly incompetent and that many of the acts of terrorism attributed to him were in fact carried out by other terrorist organizations while his supposed assassinations of PLO chiefs were carried out by Israeli Mossad agents . Here we see him as being employed by the Soviet and East German security services as their most respected hitman when in reality he was a failed terrorist living in Sudan fighting alcoholism at the time

Trivia point : Ironically it was a Frederick Forsythe novel that gave Carlos his famous nickname . After an attempted murder of a prominent Jewish businessman in London in 1973 a British journalist was searching through Carlos`s flat and came upon a copy of Forsythe`s novel DAY OF THE JACKAL and referred to him as " Carlos The Jackal " in his article and a legend - Though a mythical one - was born
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