Wanted
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Wanted

Year:
Duration:
110 min
Genres:
Action | Crime | Fantasy | Thriller
IMDB rate:
6.7
Director:
Timur Bekmambetov
Awards:
Nominated for 2 Oscars. Another 3 wins & 13 nominations
Details
Country: USA
Release Date: 2008-06-27
Filming Locations: Sokolec, Czech Republic
Earnings
Budget: $75,000,000
Opening Weekend: $217,432 (USA) (20 September 2009)
Gross: $332,816 (USA) (27 September 2009)
Cast
Actor
Character
James McAvoy
Wesley
Morgan Freeman
Sloan
Terence Stamp
Pekwarsky
Thomas Kretschmann
Cross
Common
The Gunsmith
Kristen Hager
Cathy
Marc Warren
The Repairman
David O'Hara
Mr. X
Konstantin Khabenskiy
The Exterminator
Dato Bakhtadze
The Butcher
Chris Pratt
Barry
Lorna Scott
Janice
Sophiya Haque
Puja
Brian Caspe
The Pharmacist
Mark O'Neal
Co-Worker
Bridget McManus
Check-Out Girl
Bob Ari
Man in the Limo (uncredited)
Daniel Boughton
Mini-Mart Customer / Pedestrian (uncredited)
Brad Calcaterra
Assassin Max Petridge
Julia Copeland
Driver (uncredited)
Claudia DiBiccari
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Sharlene Grover
Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Michael Jeremiah
Weaver
John Joseph MacDonald
Westley's Decoy (uncredited)
Joseph Mazurk
Pedestrian Near Wesley's Apartment
Tyson Minnick
Man on Sidewalk (uncredited)
Larry Nazimek
Driver (uncredited)
Eliyas Qureshi
Weaver Assassin (uncredited)
Amit Shah
Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Scarlett Sperduto
Young Fox
Mike Whyte
Businessman (uncredited)
Bernadett Belinda York
Girl on Sidewalk (uncredited)
George Zerante
Driver (uncredited)
Joshua Zumhagen
Pedestrian (uncredited)
Did you know?
Trivia
At the beginning of the movie, Wesley walks outside his apartment and looks up to see Cross' home. To the left of the home is a telephone pole with a flyer that says "Your Father's" revealing that Cross is Wesley's real father.
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James McAvoy screen-tested for the lead role in early 2006 but was initially rejected, as the studio wanted a more "conventional" leading man. He was later recalled when the producers decided that his character was more "the runt of the litter". The studio ultimately changed its mind and wanted someone geeky. McAvoy got the part.
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At the end of the movie when Wesley backs the truck into the doors of the fraternity and the rats are crawling out, the letters on the ground spell out FATE.
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Goofs
When Wesley is deciphering the death order for Sloan, you can see a permanent marker code already written on the glass table.
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Wesley's first assignment, Robert Deane Darden, is described as a 48-year-old man who weighs 180 kg. (396 lbs.). It's strange that his height is given in imperial, and his weight in metric. Also, a 6'1" man weighing 180kg would be quite massive, either very muscular or very obese, whereas the man Wesley's shown to kill looks quite average. Considering other targets' weights are given in pounds, it's more likely this should have been recorded as 180 lbs - which would be quite reasonable.
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Wesley hits Barry with his keyboard and the words 'FUCK YOU' fly off. A keyboard only has one letter 'U', but the final letter 'U' is one of Barry's teeth.
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Quotes
Wesley: Six weeks ago I was ordinary and pathetic. Just like you. Who am I now? An account manager, an assassin, just another tool that was mind fucked into killing his father. I'm all of these, and I'm none of these. Who am I now? This is not me fulfilling my destiny. This is not me falling in my fathers footsteps. This is definitely not me saving the world.
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Sloan: Insanity is wasting your life as a nothing when you have the blood of a killer flowing in your veins. Insanity is being shit on, beat down, coasting through life in a miserable existence when you have a caged lion locked inside and a key to release it.
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Wesley: [while being chased by Cross] He's fucking persistent, you know?
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Faq
Q
How different is this from the comic book?
A
There are significant changes from the comic book.-Perhaps the most significant change is the underlying purpose of The Fraternity. In the comic, The Fraternity are a secret group of supervillains with an array of powers and they behave as supervillains would be expected to: committing crimes and killing people. In the movie The Fraternity is a secret guild of assassins who work to maintain order in the world by assassinating evil people. The film portrays them in a far more positive light than the book.-The book is far more vulgar than the movie and revels in pushing boundaries of taste in terms of violence and sexuality. In the book characters talk much more matter of factly about topics such as murder, rape, pedophilia, and bestiality.-The backstory of the film is entirely different from the book. In the comic a group of supervillains murdered all the superheroes and erased their existence from reality. In the film a group of medieval weavers-turned-assassins founds the Fraternity to maintain order.-Most of the characters were wholly invented for the film. While Fox and Wesley make the transition largely unchanged Wesley's father is almost completely different from how he was portrayed in the book, Mr X, Sloan, The Russian, and the Gunsmith (Common) are complete inventions. The Repairman (Marc Warren) is an expansion of an unnamed character who appears in a few panels in the book, and The Butcher (Dato Bakhtadze) is created from a scene in the book where Wesley himself is sent to work in a slaughterhouse to help desensitize him.-The plot is dramatically changed. While the introduction and Wesley's training are very similar the plot of the comic involves intrigue between different factions of super villains while the film deals with the efforts to apprehend one rogue assassin. In addition the film focuses far more on Wesley's quest to avenge his father. While the book version of Wesley is interested in knowing who killed his father it is not a driving aspect of his character.- Scenes of Wesley's training are greatly expanded in the film.-The film version of Wesley is considerably nicer and more sympathetic than the comic version.-The film includes far more moral conflict about the nature of what The Fraternity does than the comic book.
Q
Is "Wanted" based on a book?
A
Wanted is loosely based on a comic book miniseries of the same name by Scottish graphic novelist Mark Millar, with art by J.G. Jones, published in 2003 and 2004 by Top Cow as part of Millar's creator-owned line known as Millarworld. American screenwriting partners, Michael Brandt and Derek Haas, adapted the comics into the original screenplay, which was revised in part by screenwriters Chris Morgan and Dean Georgaris.
Q
What's the song in the end credits, and who sings it?
A
The song is called "The Little Things", and is sung by the film's composer, Danny Elfman.
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Photos from cast
Angelina Jolie
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