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  • The Day of the Jackal
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  • In 1973 an Anglo-French Film was made based upon a 1971 best seller about a fictional plot to assassinate French President Charles De Galle by English author Frederick Forsyth. Summary In 1962 an unsuccessful attempt is made to assassinate Charles De Galle by members of the OAS because of De Galle granting of Independence to the French quasi-colony of Algeria. The leaders of the OAS deceide to kill De Galle as a attempted Coup d'état for France itself. To accomplish this they hire an "Englishman" who agrees under the following conditions: his code name will be the "Jackal"; his price is $500,000 dollars and total secrecy even from his employers-although he does agree to contact an OAS spy within De Galle's cabinet.
  • Frederick Forsyth's most famous novel, by some margin. The year is 1963. Following France's defeat in the Algerian War of Independence, a group of far-right terrorists hire an assassin to kill French President Charles de Gaulle. The government, consisting of the entire French Cabinet, can't figure out who the assassin is, only that he has a code name: The Jackal. So they have to get the best detective there is: Deputy Commissioner Claude Lebel, who is given unlimited authority to capture or kill The Jackal, with only two requirements: no publicity, and do not fail.
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  • Frederick Forsyth's most famous novel, by some margin. The year is 1963. Following France's defeat in the Algerian War of Independence, a group of far-right terrorists hire an assassin to kill French President Charles de Gaulle. The government, consisting of the entire French Cabinet, can't figure out who the assassin is, only that he has a code name: The Jackal. So they have to get the best detective there is: Deputy Commissioner Claude Lebel, who is given unlimited authority to capture or kill The Jackal, with only two requirements: no publicity, and do not fail. The 1974 movie holds us for nearly three hours as we watch as the Jackal's plans proceed with inexorable precision, as the police struggle to stop the actions of a man of whom they do not know, have no name, have no picture, and aren't even sure if what he plans to do are a real threat or simply what a captured terrorist has given up during interrogation after being tortured to death. Plus Lebel doesn't even know that the terrorists have infiltrated the French Cabinet by hooking up one of its members with a Honey Trap mistress who extracts valuable information to pass on to the Jackal. After the members of the cabinet tire of Lebel using the authority they granted him to find the cabinet member who is leaking information, they essentially fire him, thinking they can find the Jackal easily enough. When that doesn't work, they reluctantly call Lebel back, in desperation, because the Jackal has eventually disappeared, and they need to find him before he carries out the assassination. Has been adapted twice - in the famous 1974 film The Day of the Jackal starring Edward Fox (of the Fox acting dynasty), while the second, just called The Jackal is a far looser 1997 adaptation.
  • In 1973 an Anglo-French Film was made based upon a 1971 best seller about a fictional plot to assassinate French President Charles De Galle by English author Frederick Forsyth. Summary In 1962 an unsuccessful attempt is made to assassinate Charles De Galle by members of the OAS because of De Galle granting of Independence to the French quasi-colony of Algeria. The leaders of the OAS deceide to kill De Galle as a attempted Coup d'état for France itself. To accomplish this they hire an "Englishman" who agrees under the following conditions: his code name will be the "Jackal"; his price is $500,000 dollars and total secrecy even from his employers-although he does agree to contact an OAS spy within De Galle's cabinet. The "Jackal" aquiress a British passport under a fake name "Paul Oliver Duggan" and travels to Genoa Italy where he also aquires a sniper rifle from a gunsmith and fake identity papers from a forger; he kills the forger who attempts to blackmail him for more money then what he agrees to pay. Meanwhile the French Security Services have Kidnapped an OAS member and tortured him into revealing information about the OAS Leaders-including the assassination plot. Realizing they must track down an unknown assassin with few clues, a French Detective of the Surete Claud Lebel is assigned to job of doing so. In the process of making discrete Inquiries to Scotland Yard, the British Secret services unearth a suspect Charles Calthrop {the first three letters of his first name and last name spell "Jackal" in the french language} and establish that the Duggan passport is under a fake name. Lebel is also compelled to report to the french Ministers of State on his investigation; unknowlingly one of the Ministers mistress is an OAS spy from which the "JAckal" learns that just as he is hunting De Galle, they are also hunting him! Determined to complete his "contract" the "Jackal" stops at a hotel where he seduces a French noblewoman and persuades her to give him shelter. On the way to meet her, he is in a road accident and wrecks his car, although he manages to retrive his rifle and take the other car to meet his paramour. Before he meet with her the police had talked to her about "Duggan" -when she mentions that fact to the "Jackel" he kills her and goes to Paris in her car. Meanwhile the French investigation of the car accident reveals that is a painted over ALda Romero Giulietta Spider such as "Duggan" had been known to be driving-and the missing car is at the woman's estate. Likewise the noblewoman is discovered to be dead and her car missing. The Public is informed that a murderer of the Countess is being hunted-with the "Jackel" latest secret identity. The "Jackal" hides in a public bathhouse where he allows a man to pick him up-he then kills the man who foolishly remarks that the "Jackel" resembles the Wanted man. Meanwhile Lebel is getting annoyed that three times he has come close to catching the "Jackal" but the man has always escaped. He therefore employs wiretapping on the French Ministers of States telephones and uncovers the OAS Spy. He also realizes that the "Jackal" has a schedule from three days from now-the "Jackal" will assassinate De Galle on August 25-Liberation Day-the one day of the Year De Galle will be in public. On Liberation day the "Jackal" under a disguise of a one legged French War Veteran goes to the hotel where he has staked his sniper's nest; knocks the hotel coincerge unconscious, and makes his preparations. Lebel making a last tour of the Public square, asks a Policeman if anyone out of the ordinary has passed by him. The man remarks that he has seen a one legged veteran go to a nearby hotel. Lebel realizes that this is the "Jackal" and memtions the police man to follow him. Just as they go up to the top room-the "Jackal" fires at De Galle-and missess because of the French habit of kissing a person face cheeks! The "Jackal" kills the policeman but is himself killed when Lebel uses the Mat 49 against him. In England the police are about to clear out Cathrop apartment when Cathrop appears alive. As the "Jackal" is buried in a public grave, the question is asked: "If the Jackal wasnt Cathrop, then who the hell was he?" Cast The Jackal....Edward Fox Trivia The actors playing the French Cabinet have painfully English accents! In the Book the Jackal buys his gun and forged papers in Brussels not Genoa Also in the book the jackal is not involved in a road accident; it is not explained in the movie how the Jackal manages to move the body of the accident victium to his own wrecked car without being badly bitten by a nasty tempered German shepherd dog! In the book the French Cabinet minister whose mistress is the OAS Spy resigns his post; in the movie he commits suicide. Likewise in the book the "Jackal" kills the Countess after she accidentlyly discovers that he is planning to kill De Galle. The book also hints that the "JAckal" is a very expensive mercenary/killer for hire-his last two "jobs" are the killing of the Dictator Trujillo {killed May 30, 1961-a goof is that the book claims Trujillo was killed by rebels after his armored car was stopped by the Jackal killing the driver-when in fact Trujillo was killed in his automobile{!} and also killing of two German scientists who are involved in a Egyptian/former SS project of arming weapons of mass destruction against Israel. {The later project-which did exist-was the basis for Forsyth book "The Odessa FIle"}. It is unknown what other "jobs" the Jackal has undertaken The "Jackal" was apparently associated with Belgium Mercenaries in Katanga Insurgency which started in 1960-as he apparently has no fingerprint record in England yet has experienced hand to hand combat training it is possible that he was former member of the French Foreign Legion-which would explain his involvement in African Wars. Apparently his mercenary pay was a source of income sufficient to keep a Apartment in a very expensive part of London itself. He also has connections in the Middle East-he plans to retire after finishing the De Galle "job" to Beirut Lebanon-the "Switzerland" of the Middle East-although years later Beirut became a battleground for years! A connunity error in the book is that when his "employers" try to warn the Jackal that the French Security services know of his existance by telephoning his London Apartment, there is no indication that either the French or English authorities try to trace this number to the Jackal real identity-although unless of course he has registered in a false name! In the book the Jackal gives the Forger his real but soon to be expired Driver's license and claims that he cant use it since it belongs to someone now dead and he is banned from driving in Britian-it could be that the Jackal has faked his own death prior to becoming a mercenary-thus being "officaly dead" he can't use the license since he runs the risk of being picked up by the police who discover that his license belongs to a "dead" man! A connunity error in the book is when the Jackal is being buried the burial record is falisfied to show he was a unknown foreign tourist killed in a car accident; since the "Jackal" is being publicly hunted for the Countess murder, it would have been more logical to have ended as "...the following day the body of unnamed man was buried...the burial record shows that it was that of an unknown burglary suspect who before being killed in a shootout with police in which an officer died was wanted for murder.." Years later this classic thriller was remade into a terrible remake which has the "Jackal" as an unnamed Irish mercenary hired by the Russian Mob to commit a killing in Washington D.C.! ♙