movie show times and tickets
The Top Fifteen Trailers
Warner Bros. Pictures
details
Release Date: Nov 3, 1995
Running Time: 91 mins.
Country Of Origin: United States
synopsis
Yesterday Kate McQuean was a dedicated family attorney trying to do the best for her clients. Today she's a moving target--and the killers who are determined to eliminate her seem to be everywhere. Through two desperate days, Kate and Dade County homicide Detective Max Kirkpatrick--her only protector--engage in a battle of wits, wills and endurance against a gang of ex-KGB operatives whose plans for the perfect multi-million dollar bank heist were flawless--as long as Kate and her intended repossession of a certain boat were out of the picture. Maybe it's an unfair match--Kate and Max against a mob armed with the most sophisticated high-tech surveillance equipment and headed by a ruthless ex-KGB killer. But anything can happen in the sultry Miami heat--two people can get deeply involved in helping each other survive. And when the two people are Kate McQuean and Max Kirkpatrick--it might just turn out to be a fair game, after all...
cast + crew
Max
Kate
Kazak
Meyerson
Juan Toreno
Jodi
Rita
Louis
Patch
Rosa
screenplay
Novel as Source Material
Producer
Executive Producer
Associate Producer
Associate Producer
reviews
December 18, 2000
Fair Game, written and directed by men, allows model Cindy Crawford to make her screen debut as Miami lawyer Kate McQueen. An encouraging sign, except that Kate never sees the inside of a courtroom, since she spends most of the picture running from assassins and flirting with detective Max Kirkpatrick (William Baldwin). In interviews, Crawford has told of feuds with Fair Game producer Joel Silver (Die Hard, Lethal Weapon) about cheesy nudity and violence. Clearly she didn't win all her battles.
December 8, 2000
DANGEROUS MINDSSOMETHING TO TALK ABOUTFAIR GAMESPECIES715 8-24-95
Women don't get to be heroes in summer flicks. The unwritten law says it's guy time. Forget Pocahontas -- she's really PocaBarbie. The men of Apollo 13 and Batman Forever rule summer '95, unless you count Divine Marie Brown, the L.A. hooker who momentarily stole the show from Nine Months star Hugh Grant with a $60 curb-side blow job that provided more provocative food for thought than any of Grant's frantic onscreen mugging. It's
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