|   The idea for the movie ENEMY OF THE STATE began shortly after the Baltimore Sun Papers printed a six part Sunday Magazine article about the National Security Agency (NSA) a.k.a. No Such Agency. Walt Disney Productions/Touchstone Pictures saw the article and potential for a movie but felt that the NSA was one of those agencies that didn't attach to real people. They put their research division into action and eventually found my web site. Years ago I had sold Disney one of my countermeasure kits so when Executive Director Andy Davis called I assumed it was about the kit. We played phone tag for a while until we finally connected. Andy told me Disney wanted to incorporate my FBI story into the Baltimore Sun NSA story to make a movie. Sounded great. He invited me to California to meet with Jerry Bruckheimer. Bruckheimer sent the NSA articles and my FBI story to David Marconi a British screenplay writer. Screenplays form the shell of the movie and must be no longer than 120 pages. David realized he would have to divide me into two different and distinct characters. One, the technical wizard (played by Gene Hackman) and the other a victim of government abuse (played by Will Smith). Bruckheimer's writers and I took over from there and produced a script of over 2,500 triple spaced pages. Hundreds more pages were added as the movie progressed. To learn about my involvement in this project click on your "FIND" tool (F3) and type in "Kaiser". "Kaiser" appears 14 times in the following text. "Marty" occurs 6 times. 
 Touchstone Pictures "ENEMY OF THE STATE" 
Larger and costlier than the CIA, the National 
Security Agency at Fort Meade is fiercely secret 
about its work.  What does it have to listen to now 
that the Cold War is over?  Plenty.
Scott Shane and Tom Bowman The Baltimore Sun 
Six part series, December 3-15, 1995 
Privacy's been dead for 30 years because we can't 
risk it.  The only privacy left is the inside of your 
head.  You think we're the end of democracy?  I think 
we're democracy's last hope. 
Jon Voight as Thomas Brian Reynolds, NSA
ENEMY OF THE STATE
 
Touchstone Pictures presents A Don Simpson/Jerry 
Bruckheimer Production, a Tony Scott Film, "Enemy of 
the State," starring Will Smith and Gene Hackman and 
Jon Voight.  Directed by Tony Scott from a screenplay 
by David Marconi, the picture is produced by Jerry 
Bruckheimer and executive produced by Chad Oman, 
James W. Skotchdopole and Andrew Z. Davis.  Buena 
Vista Pictures Distribution distributes. 
	Rounding out the cast are actors Regina King, 
Loren Dean, Jake Busey, Barry Pepper, Gabriel Byrne, 
Tom Sizemore, Lisa Bonet, Jamie Kennedy, Ian Hart, 
Scott Caan and Jack Black.  Joining the creative team 
is director of photography Dan Mindel, editor Chris 
Lebenzon, composers Trevor Rabins and Harry Gregson-
Williams, stunt coordinator Chuck Picerni, Jr., 
technical advisor Martin Kaiser, special effects coordinator Mike Meinardus and 
costume designer Marlene Stewart. 
	Producer Jerry Bruckheimer and his late partner 
Don Simpson first began developing "Enemy of the 
State" in 1991.  "It took a long time to get a 
screenplay," says Bruckheimer. "We started with a 
simple one line idea about a man whose electronic 
identity is stolen and manipulated, and asked a young 
writer, David Marconi to come in and develop it with 
us.  It grew from there to encompass the more far 
reaching scope of institutionalized information 
gathering." 
	At the behest of Simpson and Bruckheimer, 
Marconi started doing extensive research.   "After a 
lot of investigation, I eventually was able to come 
up with a boogie man - the National Security Agency, 
which at the time nobody had ever heard of," explains 
Marconi.  "Their nickname was `No Such Agency.'  The 
more I dug, the less I could find of these guys, so I 
realized that we had the possible making for a great 
story with powerful adversaries.  If you take an idea 
like that and marry it to a `Three Days of the 
Condor' type of story, I thought it would turn into a 
good movie.  Everyone at Simpson/Bruckheimer was very 
supportive - they gave me a green light and, off I 
went to write [the first draft of] the movie." 
	"I've always been interested in the inevitable 
questions surrounding the invasion of privacy," notes 
Bruckheimer.  "With today's technology anything is 
possible and everything is probable.  I don't think 
the public is truly aware of what's at stake in terms 
of an individual's privacy.  But the other side of 
the controversy remains - we need to be able to 
protect our borders and our citizens.  The NSA has 
been incredibly active in preventing terrorist 
attacks and finding those responsible for the rash of 
senseless bombings that have erupted recently." 
	Bruckheimer sent director Tony Scott one of the 
first drafts of the script several years ago, and 
although Scott was interested in the subject matter, 
he initially turned Bruckheimer down.  But 
Bruckheimer would not take "no" for an answer.  Scott 
eventually accepted.  This is the duos fifth 
partnership on a motion picture. 
	"We've had enormous success together," says the 
producer of his association with Scott.  "Dating back 
to `Top Gun,' we've been able to create some 
wonderful movies together.  Tony has such a wonderful 
way of working with actors, pushing them beyond their 
capabilities to make them even better and bringing 
out abilities they never knew they possessed.  He's 
really honed his story-telling skills and understands 
the dynamics behind a screenplay; he's developed into 
a truly accomplished director, rather than simply a 
brilliant visual artist, which of course, he is.  I 
look forward to doing more pictures with him in the 
future." 
	The two soft-spoken Hollywood titans have been 
friends for years.  They have made more than movies 
together; they have created a style that has changed 
fads in music, fashion, make-up and even Navy 
recruiting!  Their four previous blockbusters include 
"Beverly Hills Cop II," "Top Gun," "Days of Thunder" 
and "Crimson Tide." 
	"The secret to Jerry's and my relationship is 
that he pulls one way and I pull the other," laughs 
Scott.  "And somehow we come to the answer somewhere 
in the middle.  He has the ability to step back from 
the movie making process and get a sense of the 
overall movie.  He's amazingly articulate.  We have 
enormous respect for one another." 
	Scott was on the lookout for a challenging 
project, but he wanted to do something with 
substance, something intriguing and of personal 
consequence.  "I was always fascinated with the idea 
of surveillance," says Scott, "especially 
surveillance from hundreds of miles up in the 
atmosphere.  And I was always a big fan of `Three 
Days of the Condor' and `The Conversation' and wanted 
to do a movie in that genre.  The real challenge was 
to take this genre and reeducate the public about 
what goes on in the world today." 
	Scott is quick to point out that the concept 
behind the NSA and other such government agencies, as 
well as the notion of comprehensive surveillance 
systems and invasion of privacy, is a global 
situation.  "It's what the entire world is succumbing 
to today.  It has nothing to do with the American 
system.  This could be anywhere in the world. 
	"It's never one thing that makes you do a film," 
further explains the director, "especially when it's 
two years out of your life and such a long haul.  
It's a combination of elements or always wanting to 
do a movie in the genre.  All of a sudden the 
enthusiasm gets fired up and you think, `This would 
be great with Gene and Will.'  So it's a combination 
of all those elements underneath an unbelievable cast 
that fit the roles.  That's what keeps me alive - 
building all these positive ideas with the script."
	Both producer and director agreed the film was a 
character driven piece set against the world of 
surveillance and espionage.  Their next step was to 
find the perfect actor for each role.  Bruckheimer credits 
Scott with shifting the casting into high gear. 
	"Tony started the ball rolling," says 
Bruckheimer.  "Once we got Tony, we went after Will 
and he committed right away.  Getting Gene was a 
chore, he turned us down two or three times, but then 
Tony got on the phone with him and convinced him we 
had to work together again after such a terrific 
experience on `Crimson Tide.'  We were very lucky."
	For Bruckheimer the casting process had never 
before been quite as auspicious an occasion.  "This 
is one of the best casts we've ever put together," he 
states emphatically.  "We were able to assemble an 
exceptional group of talent, selecting the best from 
the finest established actors of one generation to 
the younger, up and comers of Generation X who are 
just beginning to receive notoriety for their work."
	Bruckheimer has always been credited with an 
astute sense for hiring talent on the rise.  His 
films have helped to catapult many fresh faces into 
Hollywood stardom, from Tom Cruise in "Top Gun" to 
Will Smith in "Bad Boys." 
	Bruckheimer and Scott are particularly keen on 
touting the newer faces in the film: Loren Dean 
("Gattica"), Barry Pepper ("Saving Private Ryan"), 
Jake Busey ("Home Fries"), Scott Caan ("Varsity 
Blues"), Jason Lee ("Chasing Amy"), Jamie Kennedy 
("Scream") and newcomer Jack Black.
	"I'm especially proud of our female leads," 
Bruckheimer continues.  "This film marks Lisa Bonet's 
long awaited return to the screen and continues 
Regina King's ascent after her appealing performance 
in `Jerry Maguire' where she simply stole the show."
	True talent aficionados, Bruckheimer and Scott 
credit the cast with bringing their characters to 
life. 
	"Gene and Will are perfect for their roles, just 
in terms of their nature and temperament," notes 
Scott.  "Regardless of who they are in the movie, 
these guys are perfect role models for the characters 
in the script.
	"I looked at Will in `Six Degrees of Separation' 
when he was so young.  And I looked at the bits in 
`Bad Boys,' `Independence Day' and `Men in Black,' 
and the few times he had a serious moment, he handled 
them so well and his choices during those moments 
were so good, I knew he could handle something more 
serious," maintains Scott.  "I watched him grow, in 
terms of the drama, from the first week of shooting 
to the last.  He always wanted to take the scene and 
hang onto it, he always continued to pursue to get it 
right.  He never wanted to cop out; he always wanted 
to confront it.  And sometimes his eagerness to 
confront it made it more difficult for him - when he 
relaxed a bit more, he was simply great.  I know the 
audience is going to go away saying, `Wow, Will 
really can act!' in terms of drama." 
	According to Scott, Will's role model for the 
character of Robert Clayton Dean was his real life 
wife, Jada Pinkett's uncle who is a lawyer, funny yet 
very serious about his work, a tenacious achiever.  
Smith felt compelled to tackle this dramatic role, 
working tirelessly on his performance.  "My natural 
instincts are always comedic," says Smith.  "But 
necessity is the mother of invention and having that 
tool taken away, I was forced to create something new 
and different.  It's been a while since I did work 
that was emotionally demanding.  This was a little 
harder, a little darker." 
	It was not until 10 days into shooting that 
Smith realized he was the principal star carrying the 
picture, working only limited days here and there 
with his fellow actors.  "I was flipping through the 
script to get a sense of how many days I was going to 
be working," he says.  "And it started to dawn on me 
that the weight was on my shoulders more than ever 
before.  This film wasn't a buddy film.  It's the 
first time that I've been completely out front, where 
the story is about my character.  It's not just 
physically exhausting, the emotional aspect can be 
equally daunting - but I might just be getting 
older," he says, unable to suppress a big Will Smith 
smile.
	"I never once had a long look from him in a 
hundred days of shooting," says Scott of his actor.  
"The sweetness leaves everyone when they get tired, 
but Will was tireless in terms of wanting to get it 
better or doing a take again.  He's great; he's a 
pleasure."  Scott had such a terrific experience with 
the actor that he named his new Labrador retriever 
Will. 
	Like Scott, Bruckheimer is one of Smith's 
biggest fans.  "If we could put Will in every movie, 
we'd do it," he declares.  "Everybody can relate to 
Will; it's like he's everyone's next door neighbor, a 
friend, so they can see themselves in his position 
which is very important.  He's very sympathetic and 
has such a commanding presence.  But this role takes 
Will to a different level."
	A tech head himself, Smith was fascinated with 
the many pieces of technology used in the film.  "All 
the music on my album is MIDI work.  I'm always 
working with computers or working with my son on the 
computer, so I was pretty aware of technology.  But 
visiting the CIA was another thing.  It made me even 
more cognizant of the fact that the only privacy we 
truly have is what we keep in our minds.  Once we say 
something, there can be a microphone; once we go out, 
there can be a camera, every aspect of your life can 
be monitored and that's what happens to Robert 
Clayton Dean.  They destroy him.  They ruin his 
credit, they create doubt in his wife using 
photographs, they give false information to his 
employer and they plant misinformation in the media.
	"What's really amazing is that you have to 
imagine that anything you see in a movie is probably 
already 10 to 15 years behind what they actually 
have," he says.  "The things we saw in their archives 
- computers that could tell what you are
typing on a typewriter just from the sound, cameras 
in toothpicks, and all of this technology was old, 
things they don't use anymore! 
	Marconi was convinced anyone could manipulate 
modern technology (not to mention the press) to their 
advantage, enough to destroy a man's reputation and 
moreover, his life.  "For Dean, I utilized the story 
of an innocent man who is basically taken apart and 
destroyed by a large corporation," says Marconi.  
"You see these circumstances in politics daily.  
You're guilty until proven innocent.  Take a couple 
facts, mix them with a couple lies and leak it in the 
paper and boom, you've got a ruined reputation, a 
ruined career.  It was that outrage that compelled me 
to create this character. 
	"There are people who have their identity 
stolen," he adds.  "We all read articles and see 
stories on the news about this subject where people 
literally steal your identity and go around posing as 
you, getting credit cards and everything else and 
destroying your electronic identity.  So it's also 
the story about how we have two identities - you have 
yourself, your physical identity, and you also have 
your electronic identity, which is completely subject 
and open to manipulation.  There's also an electronic 
shadow that we leave wherever we go.  It's about the 
future and about where we're going with it.  I found 
it to be a very compelling story and wanted the film 
to serve as a wake up call.  Obviously we can't stop 
the future, but what we can do is make sure that 
someone watches the watchdogs." 
	Pairing Will Smith with Oscarr-winners Gene 
Hackman and Jon Voight proved to be a creative 
windfall for the filmmakers.  "Gene is always at the 
top of the list for me," says Bruckheimer.  "He's a 
wonderful actor.  Having him around gives rise to a 
more creative environment.  He's very reserved and 
would probably be embarrassed to hear such accolades, 
but he raises everybody else to his level.  He just 
has this effect on other actors, the crew, everyone, 
so it's great to have him around.   The effect is 
compounded when you add Jon Voight to the mix."
	Hackman was particularly attracted to the 
"Everyman" aspect of the script.  "Almost all of us 
has had some difficulty with governmental red tap and 
intrusion.  I think all of us has a bit of paranoia 
about other people getting into our lives.
	"What's fascinating is that certain situations 
depicted in this film can really happen," states 
Hackman.  "The government can go to great lengths to 
get information from someone if they want that 
information or feel it's necessary.  I think we all 
believe this could happen to some degree.  That's 
what's exciting about a film like this.
	"Brill is a bitter man," describes the actor of 
his character.  "He's certainly willing to do what he 
can to throw some sand into the gears of the 
government." 
 
	Thomas Brian Reynolds, the rogue NSA agent in 
charge of the operation is a complex character and 
not simply a clear-cut bad guy.  "We tried to make 
him more three-dimensional," says Bruckheimer who 
takes great care to ensure the characters in his 
films are well rounded fully developed portraits.  
"We modeled him on Robert McNamara and Oliver North.  
We gave all these videotapes of these guys to Jon to 
study - Jon is incredibly serious about the work and 
about building his performance with all the 
background he can get his hands on.  He's very 
methodical in his approach.  Invariably bad guys are 
two-dimensional, but Jon was a big proponent of 
expanding the character and he really hooked into 
McNamara, down to the hair cut and glasses."
	"Reynolds is more of a `State Department' type 
of guy," contends Voight.  "And in this particular 
situation, he's a person without guidance.  He 
doesn't have anyone he's responsible to, so he's able 
to do whatever he wants.  
	"Usually there are checks and balances in these 
organizations, but every once a while there's an air 
pocket and somebody gets into a position where 
they're not held responsible to anyone and they can 
do some pretty unsavory things," he says.  "That's 
the case with Reynolds.  He has an agenda and he 
follows through on it and becomes dangerous.  He can 
use any of the manpower and equipment at his disposal 
if he's clever, and he is."
	Bruckheimer and Scott also relied heavily on 
technical advisor Larry Cox, a former NSA official, 
in developing the Reynolds character.  "Larry told us 
there was someone he had in mind who was on loan to 
the NSA from another government agency," says 
Bruckheimer.  "This guy had been with the NSA for two 
years but ended up getting fired from the NSA because 
he was an opportunist."
	"For our purposes, this man was the back story," 
says Scott.  "He was on a loan out from, as I call 
it, the Ministry of Defense [State Department], and 
then he saw an opportunity to actually move up.  He's 
of an age where he should have been the head of one 
of these agencies and we backed that into the 
character.  We even had Reynolds' wife make reference 
to this point in the story."
	The filmmakers did not limit their information 
base to the NSA and took direction from ancillary 
government sources as well.  "We spoke often with Don 
Ferrarone," explains executive producer Chad Oman.  
"Don is a former `Special Agent in Charge' for the 
DEA as well as a U.S. Marshal.  He's managed offices 
in Thailand, Vietnam, Hong Kong and Burma.  He 
provided us with invaluable technical and creative 
input; he helped us create a new third act by 
applying his real life experiences from actual 
operations."
 
	Scott and Bruckheimer wanted to be careful not 
to paint the NSA as an evil, Big Brother 
organization.  As in all Bruckheimer films, 
verisimilitude is of the utmost importance, so they 
decided to create a rogue element within the 
organization.  When the production first approached 
the NSA for assistance with the project, they were 
denied access.  "For many years the government denied 
the existence of the NSA," explains Bruckheimer.  
"But I think there's a new openness now and they feel 
it's better to work with Hollywood.  Through a 
connection of David Marconi's we were able to meet 
the number two guy there a week before he retired 
even though they weren't directly involved with the 
movie."
	Bruckheimer, Scott, executive producers James W. 
Skotchdopole and Andrew Z. Davis, and production 
designer Benjamin Fernandez were invited to tour the 
facility by deputy director William Crowell (whose 
daughter, Laura Cayouette, appears in the film) but 
were not allowed to speak with any of the agency's 
employees.
	"It was a sanitized tour," recalls Davis.  "We 
were very protected and couldn't wander off the path.  
Individual offices were empty of personnel.  But when 
we went to the CIA, they weren't as secretive.  They 
actually have a public affairs department that deals 
with the media."
 
	Chase Brandon, director of the CIA's public 
affairs office arranged several tours of Langley for 
the film's principals, including an especially 
memorable visit for Will Smith and Chad Oman.  "It 
was incredible," recalls the executive producer.  "No 
one was supposed to know we were coming; Will didn't 
want any fuss.  But when they opened the doors, the 
halls were lined with secretaries and other personnel 
holding Will's picture, waiting for the chance to get 
an autograph.  We were accompanied by his fans on the 
entire four hour tour and by the time we left, Will's 
pants were torn, but he was none the worse for wear," 
he laughs.  "Will was such a good sport."
	Scott was notably surprised by the age of the 
people he was able to see at work in both agencies.  
"I was flabbergasted how young the kids were," he 
says.  "90 percent of the CIA looks like UCLA campus 
- all these kids in bell bottoms and T-shirts.  Other 
than heads of departments (senior agents who are 35, 
40,) they all literally could have been students.  
You could have interchanged them with kids in the 
commissary at UCLA.
	"Today kids are born and bred on laptop 
computers," the director notes.   "I wanted to change 
the audience's perception of what the agency world is 
about.  It's not about guys who are bald and 50 
carrying guns, as the media always portrays them, 
it's about young people who are on the cutting edge 
of technology.  Our kids: Loren Dean [Hicks], Barry 
Pepper [Pratt], Ian Hart [Bingham], Jack Black 
[Fiedler] - I swear you could drop them into the CIA 
or the NSA, and you couldn't pick them out." 
	Reynolds takes into his confidence a group of 
six operatives including two ex-marines he employs as 
muscle men to take care of the particularly dirty 
work.  "Jake Busey and Scott Caan were modeled on two 
kids who came in to my office to audition," says 
Scott.  "They were ex-marines who were thrown out of 
the corps for beating a master sergeant within an 
inch of his life and had spent 18 months in the brig 
together.  They wanted to be in the movie.  We had to 
pass on them, but I role modeled Krug and Jones on 
them." 
	Actress Regina King plays Robert Clayton Dean's 
wife, Carla.  At Smith's urging Scott and Bruckheimer 
considered King for the role.  Scott wanted someone 
who was a complete contrast to Smith's easy going 
nature.  "I think married couples always work better 
as a contrast," he says.  "I couldn't see Regina at 
first and then something clicked and I thought, `Got 
it!'  Will, of course, saw that she was a great 
actress.  I had to see the idea of who she was in 
terms of their relationship.  Once I determined that 
she wore the pants in the house, I knew Regina was 
it."
	"Carla is a strong woman who speaks her mind," 
says King.  "She's very straightforward.  She's also 
a lawyer, but she's an activist, she probably works 
for the ACLU.  She knows about the NSA and has a 
definite opinion on surveillance and privacy issues.  
She knows the power they have and she wants to make a 
move to prevent abuses of that power from happening, 
but she has no idea it's directly affecting her 
life."
	Like the Smith-King combination, Scott also had 
to pair Robert Clayton Dean with his associate and 
long time confidante, Rachel Banks.  Lisa Bonet's 
performance in "Angel Heart" several years ago had 
left a distinct impression on the director and he 
knew immediately he wanted her for the role.  
	"Again, you always look for pairings," says 
Scott.  "I also thought in terms of Regina versus 
Lisa.  There's such difference - they're at opposite 
ends of the spectrum in terms of who they are and 
guys either have affairs with someone who looks 
exactly like their wife or the total opposite.  I 
thought the total opposite was the way to go with 
Will." 
	It took the filmmakers quite a while to cast the 
role of Pintero, a mobster Robert Clayton Dean 
threatens to expose to the Feds in one of the film's 
opening scenes.  Tom Sizemore who had worked with 
Scott previously on "True Romance" won the part.  
	"It was a difficult role to cast," says 
Bruckheimer.  "It's difficult to get away from the 
stereotype and this character had to have a sense of 
humor, a sense of the absurd.  We struggled to get it 
just right."
	"Tom put on all this weight to play John Gotti," 
says Scott.  "He really looked like a gangster.  He 
was beginning to take it off when I saw him and I 
thought that we had to use him before he lost it all.  
You could see him as someone who was really 
dangerous, volatile, a little off.  I know he 
convinced the crew, you could see it on their faces 
when we were shooting." 
* * * 
	With little to no public records or information 
about the NSA, the filmmakers relied on James 
Bamford's book, The Puzzle Palace, published in 1983.  
They also depended heavily on information gathered by 
two writers from The Baltimore Sun newspaper who 
wrote a series of articles in 1995 about the highly 
secretive agency.  But because most of the current 
information about the NSA is classified, Marconi, 
Bruckheimer and Scott looked to their technical 
advisors to set the record straight.  All of the 
technology and scenarios depicted in the film are 
real, albeit a bit archaic compared to methods and 
equipment used today.  Again, it's classified.
	According to Scott Shane and Tom Bowman's six-
part series in The Baltimore Sun, the National 
Security Agency is "virtually invisible to the 
American public.  [It] runs the most ambitious spying 
operation, eclipsing the Central Intelligence Agency 
in budget and personnel.  It's operations cost nearly 
$1 million an hour, $8 billion a year.  Its Maryland 
work force of 20,000 makes the NSA the state's 
largest employer, and it oversees tens of thousands 
of eavesdroppers in listening posts from Alaska to 
Thailand." 
	They go on to report that "The National Security 
Agency's job is to protect U.S. government 
communications from eavesdroppers and to eavesdrop on 
foreign countries.  In spy jargon such eavesdropping 
is called signals intelligence, or SIGINT.  It 
includes the interception of voice or text messages 
sent by phone, fax, computer or other means, as well 
as such nonverbal transmissions as radar and 
electronic signals from missiles."
	In touring various agencies, executive producer 
James W. Skotchdopole was particularly impressed 
after learning about the federal government's ability 
to ferret out criminals via financial records.  
"FINCEN, which tracks all the financial activity 
around the world, can be used to trace people's bank 
accounts, their deposits and withdrawals -- they can 
pull up your account profile in moments and it's far 
more detailed than a TRW.  They told me about a 
particular case involving drug traffickers, but they 
had no incriminating evidence.  With FINCEN they were 
able to match deposits and withdrawals of the same 
amount from another suspect's account to create a 
financial link.  That connection focused the 
investigation, which led to a conviction.  This 
technological capability enabled one agent to crack a 
case in 45 minutes which several agents had been 
working on for 9 months.  That is truly amazing!" 
	"What as consumers we see available on the 
market, like voice recognition programs for our 
computers, the NSA was running about 20 years ago," 
says Marconi.  "In The Puzzle Palace, they talk about 
sweeping phone lines and looking for trigger words, 
and that book was written in the early `80s, that's 
almost 20 years ago!  So you can imagine, especially 
with computers, how far technology has progressed 
even beyond that. 
	"Some of the satellite technology that appears 
in the film was stuff that we had to extrapolate on 
and take to the next step and make imaginative leaps 
as to what our capabilities would be because 
obviously no information about what we actually have 
in operation can be published.  Anyone who works at 
the NRO [National Reconnaissance Organization] or the 
NSA is forbidden by federal law to talk about any of 
that stuff.  Even our advisors on the picture 
couldn't really talk about anything that is 
classified or what our current capabilities might be.  
They could only nod or shake their heads, but they 
couldn't really offer any definitive answers to 
pointed questions."  Hence, the insiders' 
colloquialism for the agency: Never Say Anything.
	According to Scott, surveillance advisor Martin 
Kaiser "is the James Bond of the 
last ten years.  He ranks in the top 10. Marty was caught by the FBI spying on the CIA - 
they got him to plant bugs.  He is the real 
thing.  What fascinated me when I met him was that 
he looked like a plumber.  And sitting in Marty's 
bungalow, it's just wall to wall with bits of 
technology.  From top to bottom, it's cluttered with 
gear-tools, gadgets, semi conductors, manuals-
everything and anything.  He's got the IRA on one 
line and he's calling the SAS on the other line.  He 
devises bomb detectors and other pieces of equipment 
for both, it's fascinating."
	Marty went through the 
script and made a million notes on how to make it 
more interesting in terms of the electronics.  There is no doubt about it, Marty's technical expertise and input was crutial to the success of this film.
He helped refine every draft, again and again, until he had a shooting script.  It's very dynamic, especially considering that it's written by someone 
who doesn't do surveillance for a living. 
	Kaiser, who has worked in intelligence and counter intelligence since the late 1960s was initially unsure of his involvement in the project.  
"When I first read the script I felt what Dean was going through in terms of the NSA shadowing his every move and looking into every aspect of his life was 
very similar to what I experienced during my battle with the FBI," says Kaiser who went through a heated and much publicized controversy with the agency.  "It 
was a little too close to home to suit me.  But then it dawned on me that the very thing I had been fighting for 20 years - the protection of the Bill of 
Rights - was what this movie was about.  I thought working on this film would be an excellent opportunity to get the point across." 
	A long time associate of the CIA, FBI and 
private industry, Kaiser fell into the intelligence 
business purely by accident.  "I was on my way to a 
little brewery in downtown Baltimore and got lost 
when I saw a sign that read `US Army Intelligence, 
Fort Holabird, Maryland,'" recalls Kaiser.  "I 
thought, `They must have something in there that's 
broken that I can fix.  Sure enough they had a box 
full of equipment they were using for intelligence 
purposes.  At that time there was no real 
surveillance equipment in existence.  I asked them if 
I could manufacture exactly what they needed and 
that's when the game started.  Word spread to other 
agencies and it just developed from there."
	The expert makes it clear that a legal wiretap 
requires a court order and that, according to his 
figures, in 1996, a total of approximately 1,000 wire 
taps were approved at the federal, state and local 
levels of government.  Consider that many 
of these devices are manufactured in bulk, 20,000 to 
50,000 units at a time, by Pacific Rim countries, for 
sale elsewhere in the world where possession and use 
of surveillance equipment is not as highly 
regulated.. 
	Kaiser also points out that with advanced 
intelligence gathering techniques also comes improved 
capabilities in the dissemination of misinformation.
	Will audiences think this is all too farfetched?  
Scott and Bruckheimer don't think so.  "Audiences 
today are very sophisticated," says Bruckheimer.  "We 
went to a great deal of trouble to make sure our 
facts were right and the audience will see that on 
the screen.  We're giving them an inside look into a 
world they've never seen before.  I don't make films 
to necessarily send a message, but I think this will 
make people think twice."
	"I want audiences to leave the theater and say, 
`Oh my God, they're up there, they're out there,'" 
says Scott.  "They can actually do what we've said 
they can do,
and more.  I want them to question `How real was that 
movie?'  I want that question in their minds.  Yeah.  
But it's still a piece of entertainment." 
 
	Principal photography commenced in Baltimore, 
Maryland.  Location shooting began on a ferry in 
Fells Point and continued in locations throughout the 
city and in Washington D.C.  In mid-January, the 
company moved to Los Angeles to complete production 
in April 1998.
	Unlike his approach to many of his films, Scott 
did not begin the project with a special look in 
mind.  "I wasn't familiar with the East Coast," he 
explains.  "I didn't really know D.C., I didn't know 
Baltimore and I never shot winter over there and we 
scouted in summer when it was very hot and humid, so 
I was a little bit lost.  I stumbled into it in a 
way.  We kept looking at movies like `Seven,' which 
was a great looking movie, the most interesting 
looking movie in the last few years.  But I wanted to 
go for harder, tougher, colder.  It was winter, but 
we were lucky and got beautiful weather."
	The filmmakers decided to use multi media in 
creating the look of the film and shot many of the 
scenes with digital cameras as well as with many of 
the same miniature cameras built for use by the 
surveillance community.  "We actually shot some of 
the scenes using button hole cameras," says 
Bruckheimer.  "We mounted it on the camera operator 
and he'd move around the room in place of one of the 
actors playing an NSA agent."
	They also relied heavily on television cameras, 
monitors and still photographs to tell their story.  
"We tried to get away from the digital world and give 
it a new look," says Scott.  "It's the total opposite 
of what they did in `Contact'; it's much cruder with 
glitches in the footage to make it look more 
interesting.  We used all the flashes and the kick 
and the speed changes.  We used monitors that weren't 
functioning 100 percent."
	The filmmakers also used still photographs, 
purchasing some of the satellite shots from a private 
company that monitors the earth 24 hours a day from 
the North Pole to the South.  They have the ability 
to pull up photos of any location in the world at any 
given hour.  At this point in time, only still photos 
are available within a 20-block radius, outside of 
that, moving images can also be purchased.  The NSA 
agents in the film, to initially analyze who Dean is 
and begin to track him, use this method of data 
recovery. 
	Although the NSA did not give the filmmakers 
access to its resources or property, the company was 
able to shoot an aerial establishing shot from public 
air space well above the grounds of Fort Meade.  For 
the interior of the NSA, production designer Benjamin 
Fernandez recreated a control room on a stage that 
was constructed using verbal information from several 
people who used to work at the agency.
	"It was really taking a little bit of 
information from Marty and Larry," says 
Scott.  "They're a pretty closed shop in terms of 
what information they feel is confidential, even in 
terms of the look of a room.  We also used the 
Baltimore Sun articles.  That was really our best 
form of information in terms of how the place looked 
to these guys.  What we recreated came off a 
description from 2 or 3 people who all corroborated 
the description.
	"It felt like the stock market when everyone 
described it," he continues.  "With the guy standing 
in the center.  That used to be Larry Cox's job for 
11 years and he's what they call a collection 
manager.  He's the guy who sat in the center and 
pulled in the information from all the different bays 
around him.  There's a whole
building dedicated to this and each floor has the 
number of employees we had in that scene."
	Although "Enemy of the State" is more a thriller 
than an action film, the company filmed an involved 
chase sequence through Consolidated Coal's coal yards 
on the east side of Baltimore.  Bruckheimer and Scott 
knew they had to create an action sequence that was 
believable but exciting.
	"There were no real action sequences in the 
original script," says Scott.  "So the ideas came 
when we started scouting.  Jerry never worries about 
the action stuff with me because he knows somehow 
I'll get it down.  The scene's a really great mix in 
terms of the rest of the movie.  We staged it so that 
it becomes this chase where Gene and Will can get 
away from the NSA guys only because a train comes 
through and cuts them off, but not before they're 
almost run down.
	"I saw this coal yard, I saw this railroad track 
going around it and I said, `Ah, there's an idea,'" 
says Scott.  "So you build it in that way.  It was 
just an interesting idea that came from an 
interesting location." 
	The story takes place over several days during 
the Christmas/New Year holiday.  No matter the scene 
or the location, the art department trimmed the venue 
with ornaments of the season.  The company was forced 
to close down streets not only to shoot, but simply 
to decorate.
	In contrast to the homey decorations, Scott says 
he tried "to utilize a harder, edgier light," even 
harder than he used on "Crimson Tide."  "I went much 
more contrasty and used less back light and more side 
light," the director notes.  "But I felt that was the 
nature of the piece and the look for the story."
	Two particularly daunting locations in which the 
company shot included a downtown access tunnel and 
the original Dr. Pepper plant which had long ago been 
abandoned. 
	"I loved the tunnel sequence," Scott says.  
"Jerry kept saying `There's no way that's going to 
work!'  He couldn't get past how we were going to get 
cars down there.  And in the end, you always can."
	The transportation, grip and art departments 
teamed up to execute the task of cutting into pieces 
several cars, lowering them down a manhole and 
rebuilding them twenty feet underground in a 
subterranean access tunnel (which houses an enormous 
exhaust system) just beneath the Ft. McHenry Tunnel, 
a major thoroughfare in the heart of the city.
	"These were vehicles that had to function," says 
Bruckheimer.  "We had to complete part of a weighty 
chase scene and I just couldn't imagine how we were 
going to do it.  No one but Tony would have come up 
with this," he laughs.  "It's just another element to 
entertain.  It's great when people look at the screen 
and wonder `How'd they do that?'  It's just a little 
worrisome when the producer is asking that question 
too."
	"We had to justify story-wise to the general 
public how the heck you can get cars down an A.C. 
unit, which is how Will gets down there," notes 
Scott.  "But I always like transporting the public, 
even in a very realistic movie, into odd places."
	Scott credits his surveillance advisors with 
coming up with Smith's attire (robe and boxer shorts) 
for this wild chase sequence.  "You can plant a bug on a 
person - a favorite place is in the cuff of a pant so 
that you can run the antenna up the seam of the pant 
leg.  The antenna helps for maximum efficiency in 
terms of the signal.  This little bug which is as 
thin as a dime, they tape into the pant leg - you 
could even plant it in the seam of a pair of jockey 
shorts.  In the end it's meant to be a little far 
fetched as an isolated incident, but when you see it 
in the overall context of the movie, Dean's paranoia 
starts to make sense." 
	To demolish or not to demolish, that was the 
question.  It was a big question for the filmmakers 
whether or not to destroy a cultural icon.  The 
original Dr. Pepper plant, a small, concrete building 
in an industrial area of town with warehouses and 
truck stops surrounding it, just off a major freeway 
was used as Brill's lair.  A hideaway he built 
himself covered with copper mesh to keep out any 
snooping eyes or ears; Brill calls his undetectable 
home The Jar. 
	"The thought of blowing up a building is always 
fun," says Bruckheimer.  "Who wouldn't want to try?  
But we were wary about setting a particular mood and 
not subverting our own efforts.  We strove to create 
a frightening situation in a plausible world and we 
didn't want to lessen the impact with a sequence that 
might be over the top."
	"I was a little bit worried about slam, bang and 
gun shots," agrees Scott.  "We were pushing for the 
drama to arise out of conversation and then again, 
when the process begins, it fills up like a canvas 
with paint and starts to take shape.  I felt that the 
nature of Brill was such that he was outrageous or 
crazy enough not to want to leave anything behind, he 
was that obsessive.  So blowing up the building 
seemed to fit into who Gene's character was.  We 
don't make a big thing of it; we don't do `Lethal 
Weapon' where the building drops forever.  But it 
does punctuate his personality."
	Assisted by renowned demolition experts, the 
Loizeaux family and their company, Control Demolition 
Inc., the Dr. Pepper building came down in a flourish 
with 13 cameras capturing every conceivable angle.
	Washington, D.C. locations used included sites 
at Dupont Circle, Georgetown and the Adams Morgan 
district, as well as the steps of the Treasury 
Building.
	The company moved to Los Angeles to continue 
filming in early January, utilizing locations 
downtown as well as such treasured landmarks as 
Chasen's and Canter's restaurants, the Pasadena Red 
Cross and several stages at Sony Studios. 
ABOUT THE CAST 
	WILL SMITH portrays young, hotshot lawyer Robert 
Clayton Dean who unwittingly becomes embroiled in a 
cover-up of the murder of a congressman by government 
agents.
	Smith has starred in two of the ten all-time 
top-grossing films worldwide; last summer's "Men in 
Black," for which he also recorded the Grammy-winning 
title song, and 1996's "Independence Day."  Prior to 
"Independence Day," Smith starred in Jerry 
Bruckheimer's "Bad Boys," one of the largest grossing 
films of 1995.  His box-office power was recognized 
by NATO/ShoWest when he was recognized as the Male 
Star of Tomorrow in 1995 and, just two years later, 
with their International Box Office Achievement 
Award.
	His feature film work also includes his 
critically acclaimed performance in the Oscarr-
nominated "Six Degrees of Separation," as well as 
"Made in America" and "Where the Day Takes You."  He 
is currently in production as the title character in 
the motion picture adaptation of the `60s television 
series "Wild Wild West."
	Smith began his career in the music industry.  
He made his first record as a high school senior, and 
in lieu of college, embarked on a rap career with 
friend Jeff Townes.  DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh 
Prince recorded several platinum and multi-platinum 
albums and won two Grammys and three American Music 
Awards.  Smith recently released his first solo 
album, Big Willie Style, his best selling album to 
date. 
	Smith made his transition into television as the 
star of "The Fresh Prince of Bel Air," a sitcom 
created for Smith by Quincy Jones.  The hit NBC 
series wrapped its sixth and final season in 1996.
	Smith and partner James Lassiter recently formed 
Overbrook Entertainment, a production company with a 
first look motion picture and television deal at 
Universal Pictures.  Overbrook also has a record 
label whose product will be distributed by 
Interscope. 
	Academy Awardr winner GENE HACKMAN is Brill, an 
ex-NSA agent who's seen it all and done it all in the 
game of espionage.  Armed with that knowledge, he's 
gone underground to live.  He is Dean's only hope of 
survival.
	Hackman, with dozens of acclaimed performances 
in hit films, has earned a reputation as one of the 
most versatile and sought-after actors of his 
generation.  He last worked for producer Jerry 
Bruckheimer and director Tony Scott on the critically 
acclaimed film, "Crimson Tide," co-starring Denzel 
Washington.  
	He has won two Academy Awardsr, the first for 
Best Actor for his role as Popeye Doyle in "The 
French Connection" and the second for Best Supporting 
Actor for his portrayal of a vicious sheriff in Clint 
Eastwood's "Unforgiven."  He also garnered 
nominations for his performances in "Mississippi 
Burning" (Best Actor) and "I Never Sang For My 
Father" and "Bonnie and Clyde" (Best Supporting 
Actor).  His list of awards also includes British 
Oscars, two Golden Globes, and the Cannes Film 
Festival Best Actor Trophy, two National Association 
of Theatre Owner Awards, and a comprehensive 
collection of awards from leading critics groups.  He 
has received retrospective tributes from such 
entities as the British Film Institute, the San 
Francisco Film Festival and the American Film 
Institute.
	His latest projects include "Absolute Power," 
"Extreme Measures," "The Chamber" and "Get Shorty."  
Also among his films are "The Quick and the Dead," 
"The Firm," "Class Action," "Geronimo," "Wyatt Earp," 
"Under Fire," "Hoosiers," "Another Woman," "The 
Package," "Postcards From the Edge," "Uncommon 
Valor," "The Narrow Margin," "No Way Out," "BAT 21," 
"Twice in a Lifetime," "Reds," "All Night Long," 
"Downhill Racer," "Under Fire," "The Poseidon 
Adventure," "Young Frankenstein," "The Conversation" 
and "Scarecrow."  He also starred as Lex Luthor in 
the first of the "Superman" films as well as in the 
second and fourth installments.
	Hackman was born in Riverside, California and 
brought up in Danville, Illinois where his father was 
a newspaper printer.  He joined the Marines at 16 and 
became a radio operator.  After his discharge from 
the service, Hackman moved from radio to television 
and worked at various small town television stations.  
He eventually returned to the west coast and enrolled 
at the Pasadena Playhouse.  There, Hackman made his 
stage debut with Zazu Pitts in "The Curious Miss 
Caraway."
	After a period of summer stock, he moved to New 
York.  He studied with George Morrison and began 
getting small parts on television and in stage 
productions.  He won the Clarence Derwent Award for 
his performance in Irwin Shaw's "Children at Their 
Games" and won his first starring role on Broadway 
opposite Sandy Dennis in the hit comedy "Any 
Wednesday."  Other stage successes followed and at 
one point, Hackman even had his own production 
company, Chelly Ltd.
	He made his screen debut in the 1964 film 
"Lilith" with Warren Beatty and followed this first 
picture with "Hawaii," "The Gypsy Moths," "Downhill 
Racer" and "Marooned."
	When he's not working, Hackman paints, flies his 
plane and races automobiles.  He is also an avid film 
collector. 
	Academy Awardr winner JON VOIGHT is Thomas Brian 
Reynolds, a National Security Agency official who 
sees his role as the ultimate guardian of the United 
States of America.  When the stakes are high, he 
believes he must bend the rules to protect her 
secrets, and sometimes that includes murder.
	Voight was born and raised in Yonkers, New York.  
He began his acting career there, at Archbishop 
Stephanic High School, and in Washington, D.C. at 
Catholic University where he received a B.F.A. in 
scenic design and art.  From there he moved to New 
York City and studied acting at the Neighborhood 
Playhouse under the tutelage of legendary teacher 
Sandy Meisner.  In 1961, at 22, Voight made his debut 
in "O, Oysters," an off-Broadway musical revue.  
Later that same year, he made his Broadway debut 
replacing Brian Davies as Rolf Grubber in the long-
running Rodgers & Hammerstein musical, "The Sound of 
Music."
	In 1965 he appeared opposite Robert Duvall in 
the acclaimed revival of Arthur Miller's powerful 
drama, "A View from the Bridge" which ran for 780 
performances at the Sheridan Square Playhouse.  The 
following year Voight starred on Broadway opposite 
Irene Papas and Tyne Daly in "That Summer?That 
Fall."  His performance earned him a Theatre World 
Award as one of the season's promising personalities.  
Voight then traveled to San Diego where he spent the 
summer at the Old Globe Theatre portraying Romeo and 
Ariel in "The Tempest."
	In California, he turned his attention to film.  
He landed parts in episodes of such popular 
television series as "Cimarron Strip," "Gunsmoke" and 
a featured role in "Hour of the Gun" as well as the 
lead in producers Edward Pressman and Paul Williams' 
film "Out of It."  The turning point in his career 
came when he earned his first Academy Awardr 
nomination, the New York and Los Angeles Film Critics 
Awards as well as the British Academy Award for his 
performance in John Schlesinger's "Midnight Cowboy." 
	There followed a succession of memorable films 
including "Catch-22," "The Revolutionary," 
"Deliverance," "The All American Boy," "Conrack," 
"The Odessa File" and "End of the Game."  During this 
period, Voight continued to work on stage.  He 
starred in "A Streetcar Named Desire" at the Ahmanson 
Theatre in Los Angeles and at the Studio Arena in 
Buffalo, New York.  He also portrayed Hamlet in 
several separate productions. 
	Originally cast as Jane Fonda's soldier husband 
in "Coming Home," Voight persuaded Fonda and director 
Hal Ashby to allow him to portray the embittered 
paraplegic Luke Martin instead.  His performance 
earned him the Academy Awardr for Best Actor, a 
Golden Globe Award, the Cannes International Film 
Festival Awardr and both the New York and Los Angeles 
Film Critics Awards.  Next he starred in "The Champ" 
with Faye Dunaway and 8-year-old Ricky Schroder, 
"Lookin' to Get Out," which he produced and co-wrote, 
and "Table For Five" which he also produced.  His 
work in "Runaway Train" (which brought him his third 
Academy Awardr nomination as well as a London Film 
Critics Award nomination) was followed by "Desert in 
Bloom."
	On television he starred in the movies 
"Chernobyl: The Final Warning" and "The Last of His 
Tribe" (for which he earned a CableACE Award) and the 
miniseries "Return to Lonesome Dove."  Among his 
recent television work is the Showtime drama "Convict 
Cowboy" and "The Tin Soldier" in which he made his 
directorial debut.  "The Tin Soldier" won several 
awards including Best Children's Film at the Berlin 
Film Festival.
	Recently he has starred in Frances Ford 
Coppola's "The Rainmaker," "U-Turn" from Oliver 
Stone, "Most Wanted" written by and co-starring 
Keenan Ivory Wayans, "Anaconda," "Rosewood" directed 
by John Singleton, Michael Mann's "Heat" and 
"Mission: Impossible" starring Tom Cruise.  He will 
next be seen in
"Varsity Blues," John Boorman's "The General" and the 
movie-of-the-week "Noah's Arc," for NBC. 
	REGINA KING is Robert Clayton Dean's loving, 
intelligent, and often opinionated lawyer-wife, 
Carla.  
	A versatile actress whose wide range of 
characters combines warmth and uncompromising 
strength, King always leaves audiences with a 
powerful impression.  Currently she is starring 
opposite Angela Bassett and Whoopi Goldberg in "How 
Stella Got Her Groove Back," adapted from the best-
selling novel by Terry McMillan.  Due out in December 
is Walt Disney Pictures' live-action remake of the 
1940 RKO classic, "Mighty Joe Young," in which King 
stars as a veterinarian opposite Charlize Theron and 
Bill Paxton.
	King received rave reviews as Marcee Tidwell in 
Cameron Crowe's Academy Awardr nominated film, "Jerry 
Maguire."  She gained notice from critics and 
audiences alike as the fiercely protective wife of a 
charismatic football player Cuba Gooding, Jr. 
fighting for respect and a new contract from his 
team.
	Her other feature films include John Singleton's 
"Boyz N the Hood," "Higher Learning" and "Poetic 
Justice," as well as the Martin Lawrence comedy "A 
Thin Line Between Love and Hate."
	King initially made a name for herself on 
television as Marla Gibbs' perennially petulant 
daughter in the popular comedy, "227."  She spent 
three years on the series before making her film 
debut in "Boyz N the Hood."  Other television credits 
include guest appearances on "New York Undercover," 
"Living Single" and "Northern Exposure." 
	LOREN DEAN is NSA director Reynolds' right hand 
man, Agent Hicks.
	He will soon be seen in the title role of 
"Mumford" for director Lawrence Kasdan, opposite Mary 
McDonnell, Ted Danson and Jason Lee and in the black 
comedy "Dust and Stardust" with Jamie Kennedy.
	Dean made his feature film debut in Martha 
Coolidge's "Plain Clothes" and went on to break many 
hearts in Cameron Crowe's "Say Anything."  Among his 
feature films are "Gattica" opposite Ethan Hawke and 
Uma Thurman, "End of Violence" with Andie MacDowell, 
Bill Pullman and Gabriel Byrne, John Singleton's 
"Rosewood" starring Ving Rhames, Ron Howard's "Apollo 
13," "Mrs. Winterbourne" for director Richard 
Benjamin, "How to Make An American Quilt" with Winona 
Ryder, Ridley Scott's "1492" and the title role in 
Robert Benton's "Billy Bathgate" opposite Bruce 
Willis.
	On stage, Dean made his New York debut at the 
age of 19 in the Circle Repertory's production of 
"Amulets Against the Dragon Forces," winning himself 
a Theatre World Award.  At the Manhattan Theatre 
Club, he originated roles in two of John Patrick 
Shanley's plays?"Beggars in the House of Plenty" and 
"Four Dogs and a Bone," both directed by the 
playwright.
	Besides acting, Dean is an accomplished pianist 
who has written and performed music since the age of 
8. 
	JAKE BUSEY is Krug, an ex-marine who's spent 
time in a federal penitentiary and has no real 
allegiance except to the highest bidder.  He's the 
perfect thug for Reynolds' dirty work.
	Busey was only five years old when he appeared 
in his first film, "Straight Time" opposite his 
father Gary Busey, however, it wasn't until his teens 
that he decided to make acting his career.
	Recently he co-starred in Paul Verhoeven's 
"Starship Troopers," "Home Fries," opposite Drew 
Barrymore, "Contact" with Jodie Foster and "SWF" 
directed by Jeffrey Levy.  He had a cameo appearance 
in "Twister" starring Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton and 
received critical acclaim for his performance as the 
Grim Reaper in "The Frighteners" and for his role in 
the remake of the 1950s "Motorcycle Gang" for 
director John Milius and Showtime.  The movie 
received three CableACE Awards.
	Over the past few years, Busey has played 
diverse characters in a variety of films.  He was a 
driver in "I'll Do Anything," a college student in 
"The Stoned Age" and a drummer in the short film "The 
Footshooting Party." 
	He has also appeared on television in "Tales 
from the Crypt" and the ABC miniseries "Cruel Doubt" 
as well as "Shimmer" for American Playhouse. 
	BARRY PEPPER is Agent David Pratt trained by the 
FBI, on loan to Thomas Reynolds and the NSA due to 
his expertise in weapons and espionage.
	Pepper was most recently seen co-starring with 
Tom Hanks and Matt Damon in Steven Spielberg's epic 
film "Saving Private Ryan."  Pepper portrayed Private 
Jackson, the young, highly skilled sniper among the 
group of men sent on a mission to save a fellow 
soldier.  Currently Pepper is in production on the 
Castle Rock feature "The Green Mile."  Directed and 
written by Frank Darabont ("The Shawshank 
Redemption"), Pepper co-stars with Tom Hanks as Dean 
Stanton, one of a group of prison guards whose lives 
are changed when they befriend an inmate who might 
possess special powers.  His other film credits 
include "Firestorm" with Scott Glenn and William 
Forsyth, and the independent feature "Urban Safari" 
which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 1995.
	A native of Canada, Pepper grew up in a most 
unconventional style.  At the age of 5, his family 
launched a 50-foot sailboat they had built themselves 
to sail throughout the South Pacific.  The boat would 
become their home for the next five years.  Pepper 
was educated by his parents via correspondence 
courses and whenever possible, was enrolled in public 
schools in locations like Raratonga and New Zealand.  
With no television and nowhere to go when at sea for 
weeks at a time, he and his brothers depended on 
active imaginations and were always acting out 
different skits.  When the family returned to Canada, 
they built a farm on a small island off the west 
coast. 
	After two years in college studying marketing 
and graphic design, Pepper discovered his true 
passion by getting involved in a Vancouver Actors 
Studio.  He quickly began securing roles in such 
television movies as "Killer Among Friends" with 
Patty Duke and "Johnny's Girl" starring Treat 
Williams, as well as the miniseries "Titanic" with 
George C. Scott, Tim Curry and Peter Gallagher.  In 
Canada, he is best known for his work on the award-
winning series, "Madison." 
	Up and coming actor JASON LEE plays Daniel 
Zavitz, a nature photographer who's stumbled onto 
inflammatory information in the mysterious death of a 
U.S. congressman.  When he accidentally bumps into 
his old friend Robert Clayton Dean, he slips him the 
damning evidence and embroils Dean in a run for his 
life.
	Lee recently created a stir in the media with 
the independent film "Chasing Amy" written and 
directed by Kevin Smith who also helmed "Mallrats" in 
which Lee made his motion picture debut.  He will 
soon be seen in several other independent films 
including "American Cuisine" and "Drawing Flies." 
	Most recently Lee completed filming "Mumford," 
directed by Lawrence Kasdan, and Kevin Smith's latest 
film, "Dogma," opposite Ben Affleck, Matt Damon and 
Chris Rock. 
	GABRIEL BYRNE makes an appearance as a NSA agent 
who attempts to throw Robert Clayton Dean off track 
and get him to hand over the incriminating videotape.
	Byrne is not only a gifted and highly acclaimed 
actor but, an Academy Awardr-nominated producer, as 
well.  He executive produced the film "In the Name of 
the Father" that earned several Oscarr nominations, 
including Best Picture, and also produced and starred 
in "Into the West" opposite Ellen Barkin.
	Beginning his acting career with the Abbey 
Theater and later joining the Royal Court Theater in 
London, the Dublin born actor made his feature film 
debut in John Boorman's "Excalibur."  Other European 
films include the acclaimed "Defense of the Realm" 
and "Hannah K."  During this time he worked for 
several noteworthy European directors including 
Costa-Gavras, Ken Russell and Ken Loach.  In 1990 he 
made his American debut in the Coen brothers' 
"Miller's Crossing."
	In 1995, he starred as Dean Keaton in "The Usual 
Suspects" which was nominated for two Academy 
Awardsr.
	Early last year, Byrne starred in "Smilla's 
Sense of Snow" with Julia Ormond and on the small 
screen in the HBO film "Weapons of Mass Distraction," 
with Ben Kingsley.  He was then seen in Wim Wenders' 
"End of Violence" and "Polish Wedding" with Lena Olin 
and Claire Danes.  Most recently he played D'Artagnan 
in "The Man in the Iron Mask" opposite Leonardo 
DiCaprio, Jeremy Irons, John Malkovich and G‚rard 
Depardieu.  He just completed a starring role in 
MGM/UA's "Stigmata" starring opposite Patricia 
Arquette.
	Lately, Gabriel has been dividing his time 
between writing, producing and acting.  His first 
book, Pictures In My Head was published in Ireland 
last year where it became a critically acclaimed 
bestseller.  Pictures In My Head was also published 
in the U.S. late last year.
	Gabriel, who is a member of the Irish film 
board, is currently working through his production 
company, Plurabelle Films, where he is executive 
producing the film "Mad About Mambo" that takes place 
in Ireland.  Gabriel is in development on a number of 
other projects to produce through his production 
company and Phoenix Pictures where he has a first 
look deal. 
	LISA BONET returns to the screen as Rachel 
Banks, Robert Clayton Dean's colleague and 
confidante. 
	Bonet made her feature film debut in the 
challenging role of Epiphany Proudfoot in Alan 
Parker's controversial, "Angel Heart" opposite Robert 
De Niro and Mickey Rourke.  Best known for her role 
as Denise Huxtable on the long-running NBC comedies, 
"The Cosby Show" and its spin-off, "A Different 
World," she also starred with Michael Madsen in 
Propaganda's "Lights Out," and with Patrick Dempsey 
in the dark comedy "Bank Robber."  She also appeared 
in an ABC After School Special, "Don't Touch" and on 
the hit series "St. Elsewhere."
	Born in San Francisco, Bonet first began acting 
in commercials when she landed her role on "The Cosby 
Show" during high school.  Today, Bonet is the mother 
of a 9-year-old daughter and devotes much of her time 
to numerous charitable causes. 
	JACK BLACK (Fiedler) has appeared in a wide 
variety of motion pictures and television programs.  
Among his feature film credits are "The Jackal," 
"Mars Attacks!," "The Fan," "The Cable Guy," "Dead 
Man Walking," and "Bob Roberts."  Black recently 
completed roles in "The Cradle Will Rock" directed by 
Tim Robbins and "I Still Know What You Did Last 
Summer."
	Black is also the producer/star/writer of a new 
series on HBO featuring his band, "Tenacious D" and 
has appeared in the popular series "Mr. Show." 
 
	As Jamie, JAMIE KENNEDY is a computer whiz kid 
for the NSA.
	An actor with a uniquely offbeat view and 
sensibility, Kennedy gained attention after co-
starring in West Craven's hit, "Scream" for which he 
won a Blockbuster Award as Best Supporting Actor-
Horror.  In "Scream 2" he was reunited with Neve 
Campbell, Courteney Cox and David Arquette.
	Kennedy also appeared in William Shakespeare's 
"Romeo & Juliet," with Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire 
Danes and had a cameo in "As Good As It Gets" with 
Jack Nicholson and Helen Hunt for director James L. 
Brooks.  He captured the lead role in "Dust and 
Stardust," an independent comedy which premiered at 
the Los Angeles International Film Festival and also 
stars in several other independents set for release 
in the near future: "Stricken," directed by Paul 
Chilsen; "Sparkler," co-starring Freddie Prinze, Jr., 
Grace Zabriskie and Park Overall; and the surprise 
hit of the 1997 Sundance Film Festival, 
"Clockwatchers," co-starring Parker Posey and Lisa 
Kudrow.  Kennedy also completed a cameo appearance in 
the independent film, "Bongwater."
	Television audiences will remember his hilarious 
recurring role as Tad in the ABC series "Ellen."
	Currently he is co-starring in "Bowfingers' Big 
Thing" written by and starring Steve Martin.  The 
film, directed by Frank Oz, also stars Eddie Murphy.
 
 
	Touchstone Pictures' "Enemy of the State" marks 
SCOTT CAAN's entry into the world of major motion 
pictures.  As Jones, he plays a marine gone bad, but 
his expertise as part of an elite killing team makes 
him indispensable to NSA director Reynolds.
	He has appeared in numerous independent features 
including Richard Sears' "Bongwater," which premiered 
at the Los Angeles International Film Festival, and 
"Nowhere To Go" which debuted at the Santa Barbara 
Film Festival.  Among his other credits are Gregg 
Araki's "Nowhere," "Lunchtime Special" and "Aron 
Galespic Will Make You A Star." 
	Caan recently wrapped production on Paramount 
Pictures' "Varsity Blues." 
 
	JAMES LE GROS plays Jerry Miller, Robert Dean's 
best friend and an associate at his law firm.
	Since making his mark in Gus Van Sant's 
groundbreaking "Drugstore Cowboy," LeGros has built a 
consistently interesting and acclaimed career in 
film.  Dubbed "the king of the independents" by G.Q. 
Magazine, LeGros has cultivated a strong following 
with the media as well as with fans worldwide.  
Vincent Canby of The New York Times writes that 
LeGros "has gravity and reserve that are rare in such 
a young actor," and Kenneth Turan of The Los Angeles 
Times calls him "one of the best young actors."
	His credits include "The Low Life," "Boys," 
"Living in Oblivion," "Gun Crazy," "Floundering," 
"Destiny Turns on the Radio," "Safe," "Bad Girls," 
"Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle," "Where The Day 
Takes You," "Singles," "The Rapture," "Point Break," 
"Born on the Fourth of July," "Fatal Beauty," "Solar 
Babies," "Near Dark," "Phantasm II," and "*batteries 
not included."  On television he has costarred in the 
ShowTime movie, "Pronto."
	A veteran on the regional theatre circuit, 
LeGros has also appeared in numerous productions 
including "Slab Boys," "Becoming Memories," "Boy 
Meets Girl," "American Buffalo," "Curse of the 
Starving Class," "Table Settings," "The Cherry 
Orchard" and "Scapino."  He continues to alternate 
between stage and screen when his hectic film 
schedule allows.
	Born and raised in Minnesota, LeGros is married 
to actress Kristina Loggia.
 
	British actor IAN HART is NSA Agent Bingham.  
Hart is best known for his role as a young John 
Lennon in "Backbeat," for which he won the award as 
Most Promising Newcomer at the British Film Awards in 
1995.  He continued to work in British cinema, 
working on such films as "B Monkey," "The Butcher 
Boy," "Michael Collins," "Clockwork Mice," "Loved 
Up," "The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill and Came Down 
a Mountain," "The Hollow Reed," "All Our Fault" (for 
which he won a Best Supporting Actor Award at the 
Venice Film Festival), "Land and Freedom" (winner of 
the Felix European Film of the Year), "The Hours and 
Times," "No Surrender" and "Frogs for Snakes" 
directed by Amos Powell.  He recently starred in 
"Noose" for director Ted Demme.
	His acting career began as a student in 
Liverpool when he accompanied friends to an audition 
for a laugh.  But when the instructor responded with 
a challenge, he tried his hand on stage and was 
immediately cast in the play, "The Government 
Inspector."  Two years later he landed a role on 
British television in "One Summer."  His other 
television appearances include "The Exercise," "The 
Monocled Mutineer," "The Marksman," "A View of Harry 
Clarke" and "The Chain" for the BBC, and "The 
Brothers McGregor" and "The Traveling Man" for 
Granada TV.
	His work on stage includes "My Beautiful 
Launderette," "Woyzeck," "The Holiday," "Breezeblock 
Park," "Pinocchio Boys" and "Dog Day Afternoon." 
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS 
	British director TONY SCOTT has had a consistent 
string of successes in films and commercials, and 
shows no signs of slowing down.
	Born in Newcastle, Tyne and Wear, England, Scott 
attended the Sunderland Art School where he received 
a fine arts degree in painting.  While completing a 
yearlong postgraduate study at Leeds College, he 
developed an interest in cinematography and made "One 
of the Missing," a half-hour film financed by the 
British Film Institute and based on an Ambrose Bierce 
short story.  He then went on to earn his master of 
fine arts degree at the Royal College of Arts, 
completing another film for the British Film 
Institute, "Loving Memory," from an original script 
financed by Albert Finney.
	In 1973, Scott partnered with his brother Ridley 
("Alien," "Thelma & Louise") to form a London based 
commercial production company, RSA.  Scott began his 
career creating some of the world's most entertaining 
and memorable commercials, honing his directing 
skills while picking up every major award in the 
field including a number of Clio Awards, several 
Silver and Gold Lion Awards from the Cannes 
International Television/Cinema Commercials Festival, 
and London's prestigious Designers & Art Directors 
Awards along the way.  While shooting commercials, 
Scott also made three movies for television, two 
documentaries and a one-hour television special 
entitled "Author of Beltraffio" from the story by 
Henry James.
	In 1983, Scott started his feature film career 
with the modern vampire story "The Hunger," starring 
Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie and Susan Sarandon.  
Three years later he directed the Simpson Bruckheimer 
production, "Top Gun," starring Tom Cruise and Kelly 
McGillis which broke box office records worldwide.  
He then went on to direct five more movies (two for 
Simpson Bruckheimer) over the next six years: 
"Beverly Hills Cop II," "Revenge," "Days of Thunder," 
"The Last Boy Scout," and the critically acclaimed 
"True Romance."
	While shooting another celebrated collaboration 
with Simpson Bruckheimer, "Crimson Tide," starring 
Denzel Washington and Gene Hackman, the Scott 
brothers were in the midst of negotiating the sale of 
the legendary Shepperton Studios.  The purchase was 
finalized in February 1995, providing a big boost for 
the British film industry.  More than 600 feature 
films have been made at the West London studios.  
Recent productions include "Four Weddings and a 
Funeral," "Frankenstein" and "Judge Dredd." 
	Scott's last thriller, "The Fan," captured the 
essence of an obsessed fan, played by Robert De Niro, 
who stalks a baseball star portrayed by Wesley 
Snipes.  Ellen Barkin rounded out the cast as an 
eager sportscaster.
	Scott recently completed "The Hunger" trilogy 
for Showtime with his brother Ridley.  The trilogy is 
an adaptation of his earlier 1983 motion picture 
starring Catherine Denueve and Susan Sarandon into a 
series of supernatural, erotic shorts.  He is 
currently working on his upcoming film, "Oh Baby Sky" 
an action adventure set against the dramatic back 
drop of rock-climbing.  Based on real life 
characters, the film chronicles the lives of four 
"adrenaline junkies" who live life on the edge, 
literally. 
	What a film audience takes away from their two 
hours in a dark theater depends somewhat on who the 
audience is, but mostly on whom the filmmakers are.  
JERRY BRUCKHEIMER, one of the most successful 
producers of all time, is a filmmaker who loves 
telling a story with fully developed characters who 
go through a process to learn something.  His films 
take us, his audience, through those same processes, 
and we leave the theaters enriched by the 
unforgettable characters, excited by the great 
stories and intrigued by the new experiences.
	So we go back, and keep going back, to the films 
that begin with the lightning bolt - the Bruckheimer 
films that have grossed billions and have earned 
their producer the acclaim and respect of his 
industry and devotion of moviegoers throughout the 
world.
	Bruckheimer has always been a storyteller.  He 
started out with short ones - the 60-second tales he 
created as an award-winning commercial producer in 
his native Detroit.  One of those mini-films, a 
parody of "Bonnie and Clyde" he created for Pontiac, 
was noted for its brilliance in Time magazine.  It 
also brought the 23-year-old producer to the 
attention of world-renowned ad agency BBD&O, which 
lured him to New York.
	Four years on Madison Avenue gave him the 
experience and confidence to tackle Hollywood, and 
not yet 30, he was at the helm of memorable films 
like "Farewell, My Lovely" and "American Gigolo."
	Also among those early films was 1983's 
"Flashdance," a film that clich‚s aside, actually did 
change lives.  It changed Jennifer Beals' life by 
making her a box office star.  It changed its 
audiences' lives by killing off the jumping jack 
forever and turning us all into aerobic dancers.  And 
it changed Bruckheimer's life by becoming a sleeper 
hit (grossing $100 million in the U.S. alone) and 
pairing him with an old acquaintance, producer Don 
Simpson, who would be his partner for the next 14 
years.
	As one of the most prolific partnerships in 
recent motion picture history, Bruckheimer and 
Simpson produced films that were honored with 15 
Academy Awardr nominations; two Oscarsr for Best Song; 
four Grammy's; three Golden Globes; two People's 
Choice Awards for Best Picture; and MTV Awards for 
Best Picture of the Decade.
	Equally important to Bruckheimer as a creative 
force was the fact that the films were turning their 
stars into box office giants.  "Beverly Hills Cop" 
launched Eddie Murphy's film career and "Top Gun" 
made Tom Cruise an international superstar.
	Industry acclaim followed box office success.  
In both 1985 and 1988, Bruckheimer was named Producer 
of the Year by the National Association of Theater 
Owners (NATO).  And with Simpson he was named Motion 
Picture Showman of the Year in 1988 by the Publicists 
Guild of America.
	By 1995 the team was producing one hit after 
another.  In that year alone, Bruckheimer was 
responsible for "Bad Boys," the Will Smith/Martin 
Lawrence film that was Columbia Pictures' highest 
grossing movie of the year; Michelle Pfeiffer's 
acclaimed "Dangerous Minds" and "Crimson Tide," the 
Denzel Washington/Gene Hackman adventure that, with 
"Dangerous Minds," topped Hollywood Pictures' box 
office slate.
	In 1996 Bruckheimer produced "The Rock."  
Starring Sean Connery and Nicolas Cage, the film 
broke new ground and continued established 
Bruckheimer traditions of success.  With a box office 
gross of nearly $350 million worldwide, it set the 
video rental market record as the most-ordered film 
in history.  His casting of the film reestablished 
Connery as an action star and created that same image 
for the intellectual Cage.  THE ROCK, which was named 
Favorite Movie of the Year by NATO, more 
significantly was Bruckheimer's last movie with 
Simpson, who died tragically during production.
	Now on his own, Bruckheimer followed in 1997 
with "Con Air," a film that firmly placed Cage in the 
stratosphere of international action heroes, and 
grossed over $200 million.  It also earned the 
producer two more Oscarr nominations, a fifth Grammy 
and brought him once more to the attention of the 
international industry, which this year awarded him 
with the ShoWest International Box Office Achievement 
Award for his unmatched foreign box office grosses.
	And those grosses continued in 1998 with the 
July release of Touchstone Pictures' "Armageddon," 
the highest-grossing live action film ever to come 
from The Walt Disney Studios.  Starring Bruce Willis, 
Billy Bob Thornton, Ben Affleck, Liv Tyler and Steve 
Buscemi, the outer space adventure, directed by 
Michael Bay, proved to be the biggest movie this 
year, with combined revenues of nearly $500 million 
worldwide.  (The film's receipts for its first 
several days in theatres ranked the picture the third 
largest grossing opening for a July 4th holiday 
weekend ever.)  The film's soundtrack album hit 
multi-platinum status and spawned a #1 single, "Don't 
Want to Miss a Thing," for rock star Steven Tyler and 
Aerosmith.  The group's video, which included scenes 
from the film, debuted on MTV and immediately became 
the #1 video in America.
	With worldwide revenues of over $4 billion in 
box office, video and recording receipts, more than 
any other producer in history, he continues to find 
and develop the films that will take him into the new 
millennium.  
	Currently Jerry Bruckheimer Films is in 
preproduction on "Coyote Ugly," a romantic comedy for 
Touchstone Pictures about a young singer's discovery 
in a popular New York nightclub.  A talented young 
singer moves to Manhattan looking for her big break 
and there she finds true love and self-confidence 
when she gets a job in a country western bar in 
Greenwich Village.  The company is also planning to 
begin filming "Down and Under," a comedy adventure 
from "Con Air" scribe Scott Rosenberg for Castle Rock 
Entertainment.  Set in Australia, the film chronicles 
the misadventures of two guys from Brooklyn - a 
hairdresser and a wanna be Mafioso - recruited to 
deliver mob money to an Australian gangster.  When 
the duo accidentally loses the payment to a kangaroo, 
they embark on a madcap journey through the outback 
to recover the loot. 
	Upcoming are "Rogue Warrior," the story of a 
Navy seal; "Witness To the Truth," based on the true 
account of FBI agent Paul Lindsay; "The Veronica 
Guerrin Story," a biography of the heroic Irish 
journalist gunned down by Dublin crime lords; "The 
Tiger Project," based on the work in India of 
conservationist Belinda Wright; "Blackhawk Dawn" for 
Touchstone, the gripping recounting of the 1993 
Somalian Battle of Mogadishu; "Operation Moses," the 
real story of a New York stockbroker who risked 
everything on a covert operation to rescue Ethiopian 
Jews; and "ESAU," the tale of a mountaineer who 
discovers the legendary Yeti on an unexplored 
Himalayan peak.
	What these and the other projects on his slate 
have in common is what his concepts have always 
shared - great characters playing out great plots.  
When the films reach the screen, they will share with 
each other what his films have always given us - 
stories told with style and passion, cinematic 
adventures that engage and hold us until Jerry 
Bruckheimer himself says it's a wrap. 
	DAVID MARCONI (Screenwriter) recently completed 
work with Oliver Stone on the upcoming sequel to 
Paramount Pictures' "Mission: Impossible" and is 
currently writing the script for WWIII.com, for 
Twentieth Century Fox about a possible World War III, 
based on an article in Wired magazine by Washington 
correspondent David Carlin.  He aslo wrote the 
screenplay for "Red Badge," directed by Michael Mann 
for Warner Bros.  
	He wrote and directed "The Harvest," starring 
Miguel Ferrer, the story of a writer who believes he 
has uncovered an organ transplant scam while doing 
research on a novel.  The film made its debut at the 
Chicago and Seattle Film Festivals.  Another project 
form his days at the University of Southern 
California, his short subject film, "Fiesta," was 
narrated by John Hurt and has been screened at 
several film festivals as well as airing on HBO, 
Cinemax and Z Channel.
	Marconi has also worked for producer Jerry 
Bruckheimer on his television series "Soldier of 
Fortune" and on the series "The Wave."  He also has 
the following scripts in development with various 
filmmakers including "Mud, Sweat and Gears" with 
producer Robert Schaffel and "The Blonde Hurricane" 
for producer Ron Stone at Warner Bros., and "Sochi" 
with independent producer Arthur Sarcisian.  
	Marconi is the co-author with Flint Dille of 
three novels: Agent 13, The Midnight Avenger, Agent 
13 and the Serpentine Assassins and Agent 13 and the 
Acolytes of Darkness, all from Random House 
Publishing.
 
	CHAD OMAN (Executive Producer) is the president 
of production of Jerry Bruckheimer Films for which he 
oversees all aspects of film and television 
development and production.
	Prior to joining Simpson Bruckheimer in the 
spring of 1995, Oman was a founding employee of the 
Motion Picture Corporation of America.  After six 
years, he left the independent production company as 
senior vice president of production.
	His resume includes credits as executive 
producer on Jerry Bruckheimer Films' hit "Armageddon" 
starring Bruce Willis, "Con Air" starring Nicolas 
Cage and supervising producer on ABC's drama 
"Dangerous Minds" starring Annie Potts.  Oman also 
acted as the associate producer on "Dumb and Dumber," 
starring Jim Carrey, executive producer on Touchstone 
Pictures' "The War At Home," starring Emilio Estevez, 
Kathy Bates and Martin Sheen and co-producer on "The 
Desperate Trail" with Linda Fiorentino and Sam Elliot 
and on "The Sketch Artist" with Drew Barrymore and 
Sean Young.  Oman produced "Hands That See" with 
Courtney Cox and Jeff Fahey and "Love, Cheat and 
Steal" with John Lithgow and Eric Roberts.
	Currently he is putting the finishing touches on 
"Coyote Ugly," a romantic comedy for Touchstone 
Pictures about a young singer's discovery in a 
popular New York nightclub.  A talented young singer 
moves to Manhattan looking for her big break when she 
finds true love and self-confidence when she gets a 
job in a country western bar in Greenwich Village.  
He is also working on "Down and Under," a comedy 
adventure from "Con Air" scribe Scott Rosenberg for 
Castle Rock Entertainment.  Set in Australia, the 
film chronicles the misadventures of two guys from 
Brooklyn - a hairdresser and a wanna be Mafioso - 
recruited to deliver mob money to an Australian 
gangster.  When the duo accidentally loses the 
payment to
a kangaroo, they embark on a madcap journey through 
the outback to recover the loot.
	In addition to his work on JBF's many motion 
picture projects, Oman is also supervising production 
on several television projects including "Soldier of 
Fortune" starring Brad Johnson for Rysher 
Entertainment.
	Oman graduated from Southern Methodist 
University with a degree in finance.  He also 
attended the University of California at Los Angeles 
where he studied screenwriting and New York 
University where he participated in the undergraduate 
film production program.  He was born and raised in 
Wichita Falls, Texas. 
	JAMES W. SKOTCHDOPOLE (Executive producer) is a 
native New Yorker who started in the film business 
when he was a teenager.
	"Enemy of the State" is his third collaboration 
with producer Jerry Bruckheimer, having worked on 
"Days of Thunder" and "Crimson Tide," the latter for 
which he was the associate producer.  He has also 
enjoyed a long-standing and rewarding working 
relationship with director Tony Scott which started 
in 1988 with "Revenge" and continued to include "True 
Romance" on which he acted as co-producer and "The 
Fan" for which he was the executive producer.  
Skotchdopole, who has enjoyed a busy career as one of 
the top assistant directors in motion pictures as 
well as commercials, served as Scott's assistant 
director on "The Last Boyscout" and "Top Gun."
	Besides producing the independent feature film 
"Sand," Skotchdopole was also executive producer of 
"Mixed Nuts" and associate producer of "Sleepless In 
Seattle," both directed by Nora Ephron, and associate 
producer on Leonard Schrader's "Naked Tango."  In the 
last 18 years, Skotchdopole has worked on over 75 
film productions in various capacities. 
	Executive producer ANDREW Z. DAVIS most recently 
produced "Volcano," starring Tommy Lee Jones and Anne 
Heche, and executive produced  "Love Affair" with 
Warren Beatty and Annette Bening.  He also acted as 
the line producer on "Lost Angels," "Sid & Nancy" and 
"Tapeheads."  
	Davis was an executive at Hollywood Pictures for 
two and half years before signing an independent 
production deal with the studio under his own banner, 
Andrew Davis Productions.  He is a graduate of the 
University of Southern California School of Cinema 
and Television.  
	Davis was raised and developed his love for 
movies in Kansas City.  
	South African born DAN MINDEL (Director of 
Photography) was educated in Australia and Britain.  
he began his career as a cinematographer shooting 
commercials, working with some of the advertising 
world's most successful directors, including Tony 
Scott, Ridley Scott, Barry Kinsman, Hugh Johnson and 
Mike Seresin among others.  His ads for Tony Scott 
include memorable commercials for such clients as 
Coke, Pepsi, Miller Brewing and Marlboro.
	In recent years Mindel moved into independent 
features and shorts.  He acted as the director 
photography on "Recon" directed by Brett Eisner, 
"Champion" for Andy Snipes and "Sand" for producer 
James W. Skotchdopole and director Matt Palmieri.
	Mindel was responsible for the cinematography on 
the West Coast unit of "G.I. Jane," as well as for 
additional photography on Tony Scott's "The Fan."  
"Enemy of the State" marks his debut as the sole 
director of photography on a major motion picture.
 
	BENJAMIN FERNANDEZ (Production Designer) is a 
native of Spain.  After studying architecture in 
Madrid, he began his career as a draftsman on such 
epic films as "King of Kings," "El Cid," "The Fall of 
the Roman Empire," "Circus World" and David Lean's 
monumental "Lawrence of Arabia."
	He was promoted to assistant art director on 
Lean's classic "Dr. Zhivago" and continued in the 
position for the award-winning "Patton," "Nicholas 
and Alexandria," "Travels With My Aunt," "The Golden 
Voyage of Sinbad," "The Three Musketeers" and Ridley 
Scott's "Alien."
	As an art director, Fernandez expanded his 
talents, collaborating with producer Rafaella De 
Laurentiis on "Conan The Barbarian," "Dune" and "Tai 
Pan."  He also worked with Blake Edwards on "Revenge 
of the Pink Panther," with Steven Spielberg and 
George Lucas on "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" 
and with Ridley Scott on "1492: Conquest of 
Paradise."
	Fernandez first worked with Jerry Bruckheimer 
and Tony Scott on their hit film "Days of Thunder."  
He has acted as the production designer on Scott's 
films "Revenge" and "True Romance."  His other 
credits include "Nostromo," "Dragonheart," "Daylight" 
and "Kull: The Conqueror." 
	In addition to his film work, Fernandez has 
designed several houses, hotels and restaurants in 
Spain.
 
	CHRIS LEBENZON (Film Editor) previously co-
edited producer Jerry Bruckheimer's "Armageddon" 
directed by Michael Bay and "Con Air" for director 
Simon West; as well as Tim Burton's "Mars Attacks!" 
"Ed Wood" and "Batman Returns."  He was consulting 
editor on "Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before 
Christmas." 
	An Academy Awardr nominee for his work as editor 
on producer Jerry Bruckheimer's "Crimson Tide" and as 
co-editor on "Top Gun," Lebenzon's other credits 
include "Midnight Run," "Days of Thunder," "Revenge," 
"Beverly Hills Cop II," "Weeds," "Weird Science" and 
"Wolfen."
	Born in Redwood City and raised in Palo Alto, 
California, Lebenzon graduated from Stanford 
University before entering the motion picture 
industry. 
 
	MARLENE STEWART (Costume Designer) has designed 
costumes for "The X-Files," "The Saint," "The 
Phantom," "Space Jam," "To Wong Foo, Thanks For 
Everything, Julie Newmar," "True Lies," "Terminator 
2: Judgment Day," "The River Wild," "Falling Down," 
"A Dangerous Game," "I'll Do Anything," "Point of No 
Return," "JFK," "The Doors," "Pet Sematary II," 
"Truth or Dare," "Wild Orchid," "Siesta" and "Back to 
the Beach."  Her television credits include "Tales 
from the Crypt" and "2000 Malibu Road," among others. 
	Before turning to entertainment, Stewart 
designed contemporary women's clothing for her own 
label, Covers, which sold in stores in New York, 
London, Tokyo, Paris, Milan and Rome.  During this 
time, she met and began an association with 
singer/songwriter Madonna, collaborating with her to 
create a look that would inspire an entire 
generation.  She worked on eleven of her videos, 
including "Vogue," "Express Yourself," "Like A 
Prayer" and "Material Girl" and on several of her 
concert tours.  Stewart has also designed costumes 
for live shows by Cher, The Pointer Sisters, Paula 
Abdul, Boz Scaggs and Miami Sound Machine as well as 
videos for Smashing Pumpkins, Mick Jagger, Bette 
Midler, Janet Jackson, The Bangels, Rod Stewart, 
Debbie Harry and The Eurythmics.
	Born in Boston, Stewart graduated from the 
University of California at Berkeley with a degree in 
European history.  After living in Europe for several 
years, she returned to New York and attended the 
Fashion Institute of Technology where she studied 
pattern making, but soon transferred to the Los 
Angeles Fashion Institute before starting her own 
business.
 
	TREVOR RABINS (Music by) was born and raised in 
South Africa.  His multiple musical talents 
eventually led him to become a member of the 
internationally acclaimed progressive art/rock group 
Yes.  With that renowned band he served as guitarist, 
keyboardist, singer, songwriter, producer and 
recording engineer.  He also composed the group's #1 
hit single "Owner of a Lonely Heart" on their multi-
platinum album 90125.  With Yes, he also served in 
many creative and technical capacities to create the 
popular Big Generator and Talk albums.  
	As a film composer, Rabins scored Touchstone 
Pictures' "Armageddon" and "Con Air," for producer 
Jerry Bruckheimer.  His other film credits include 
"Frost" starring Michael Keaton.  Trevor also wrote 
an original score for Steven Seagal's "Glimmer Man" 
and "Homegrown," starring Billy Bob Thornton.
 
	HARRY GREGSON-WILLIAMS (Music by) enjoys an 
international career and recently created the score 
for the film "Antz," as well as "The Borrowers," "The 
Replacement Killers," "Deceiver" and "Smilla's Sense 
of Snow" and composed selected music cues for the 
blockbuster hit "Armageddon."  He has also 
collaborated with leading film composers, writing 
additional music for the upcoming animated feature 
"The Prince of Egypt," as well as "Broken Arrow," 
"The Fan," "Muppet Treasure Island," and Jerry 
Bruckheimer's production of "The Rock."
	Born in England to a musical family, Gregson-
Williams earned a scholarship from the music school 
of St. John's College in Cambridge at the age of 
seven.  By age 13, he had been a soloist on over a 
dozen records, and then earned a coveted spot at the 
Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London.  He 
started his film career as an orchestrator and 
arranger for composer Stanley Myers.  He went on to 
compose his first major scores for Nicolas Roeg's 
"Full Body Massage" and "Hotel
Paradise."  His other early credits include a series 
of shorts for the BBC, the independent "White Angel," 
and "The Whole Wide World," for director Dan Ireland. 
 
	MIKE MEINARDUS (Mechanical Effects Coordinator) 
last worked for Jerry Bruckheimer on the hit films 
"The Rock" and "Bad Boys," both directed by Michael 
Bay.  He acted as the overall special effects 
coordinator on "The Rock" and spearheaded the special 
pyrotechnic unit for "Bad Boys." 
	His credits as special effects coordinator 
include Jan Dabont's "Twister," "Just Cause," Tony 
Scott's "True Romance," "Lawnmower Man II," "Hero" 
and "Ricochet."  He has also worked on "The Quick and 
the Dead," "Speed," "Die Hard II," and "Total Recall" 
as the second unit coordinator.
	Meinardus honed his skills working as a special 
effects foreman on "Demoliton Man," "Ghost," "Lord of 
the Flies" and "Blind Date."
	Born and raised in Southern California, 
Meinardus was always fascinated by illusions, 
explosions, and the magic of filmmaking.  He became 
interested in special effects when he was a teenager 
and saw "Damnation Alley." 
	He apprenticed under such special effects 
masters as Al DiSarro, Tommy Fisher, and Joe 
Lombardi.  He landed his first job as a coordinator 
on the picture, "Ricochet."
 
	MARTIN KAISER (Surveillance Advisor) joined RCA 
Laboratories in Princeton, New Jersey in 1957 as a 
senior research technician.  There he worked for such 
renown scientists as Doctors Morton and Zworykin, co 
inventors of the television; Dr. Rudy, inventor of 
image conversion and intensifier tubes; Dr. Nergaard, 
inventor of the cavity magnetron that made radar a 
practicality; to name a few.  Through these 
associations, he became involved in basic research on 
cryogenic techniques, infrared systems, evaporated 
phosphors and semiconductor concepts and development.  
He also worked on the Nimbus and Tiros satellites.  
During this time he also wrote extensively for 
technical and amateur radio publications.
	In the early `60s his efforts concentrated on 
VLF (anything below 10Hz) communication and he became 
involved in ionospheric and seismic studies.  The Air 
Force funded his project in advanced research of 
ionospheric phenomena and he began to research for as 
radio free, or RF, an environment as possible.  He 
moved to Barbados to conduct the study.
	Upon his return, he resumed his studies at Rider 
College in Trenton, New Jersey and after receiving 
his bachelors degree in business administration, 
briefly served as Chief Engineer at Telerad 
Manufacturing, a division of the Lionel Corporation.  
His responsibilities included the design and 
manufacture of several missile-borne transponders and 
receiver systems such as the Atlas missile command 
receiver.
	He then accepted a position with an aircraft 
radio manufacturer in Cockeysville, Maryland where he 
worked for a short while before forming Martin L. 
Kaiser, Inc. in 1965.  His first customer was Armco 
Steel.  As an electronic "fix it" man, he could 
repair just about any type of electronic equipment.  
When he repaired the company's ultrasonic probe 
system used to find flaws in steel ingots, the 
maintenance foreman was so surprised and thrilled at 
how quickly and efficiently he completed the task, he 
called his associates around the city of Baltimore 
and within minutes, Kaiser had over 50 industrial 
customers.
	One day on his way to a downtown brewery, Kaiser 
saw a sign that would change his life forever: Fort 
Holabird - US Army Intelligence.  The then home of 
Army Intelligence, they had many pieces of equipment 
in disrepair.  Kaiser offered his services and the 
government accepted.  When he became aware of how 
much the government was paying for each piece of 
equipment, he again made them an offer of his 
services at a much reduced rate, which they also 
gladly accepted.
	Kaiser built over 100 products for the agency 
including a general-purpose amplifier, an RF 
detector, a telephone analyzer (or debugging device), 
plus many other types of transmitters.  He also began 
lecturing at the US Army Intelligence school, at 
various state and local law enforcement agencies and 
to foreign governments.  In the late 1960s when the 
Vietnam War escalated and racial strife exploded 
nationwide, he turned his efforts to bomb detection 
and disposal.  This resulted in another extensive 
product line and the lecture circuit.  Over time his 
name became recognized and well respected in the 
intelligence and law enforcement communities.
  	LARRY COX (Technical Advisor) is Vice President 
and Director of Special Programs at the ORINCON 
Corporation, a premier supplier of advanced 
technology products and services to government and 
commercial clients.  This is his first association 
with the filmmaking business, but he hopes not his 
last.
	Growing up on the East Coast, Cox played guitar 
and bass with various local rock bands.  He graduated 
from the University of Maryland with honors and was 
recruited by the National Security Agency into a 
research intern program.  After several years of 
classroom technical and on-the-job training, he 
performed a wide range of analytic, systems 
engineering and operations jobs overseas and in the 
U.S.  Cox was heavily engaged in assisting military 
operations planning and field support of combat and 
intelligence organizations.
	After 11 years of service, Cox left the NSA to 
join the General Electric Company.  During his eight 
year tenure, he moved up the ladder from systems 
engineer to chief scientist to program manager to 
business development manager for space and ground 
systems engineering programs.  Cox left a wonderful 
career at G.E. after hearing what he terms "the 
siren's call," to join the rough and tumble world of 
national politics as a professional staff member of 
the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence 
of the U.S. Congress.  There he held oversight and 
authorization responsibility for space, advanced 
technology, communications and remote sensing 
programs.  After serving under three committee 
chairmen and both political parties, Cox returned to 
private industry, first as a division vice president 
at the Sarnoff Labs, then moving to his current 
position at ORINCON.
	Cox serves on the board of directors of a 
professional association and consults for a major 
aerospace firm and government agency.  He is a 
backpacker, guitarist, pilot, avid motorcyclist and a 
competitive target shooter.
 
	HARRY HUMPHRIES (Technical Advisor) served in 
the United States Navy as a member of the elite SEAL 
teams for more than a dozen years.  As a
special weapons and demolitions expert, he 
specialized in counter terrorist programs.
	His first foray as a technical advisor was for 
Jerry Bruckheimer Films' "The Rock," where he oversaw 
all military aspects of the picture.  He continued 
his relationship with Bruckheimer, working for him 
again on "Con Air" and "Armageddon."  He even began 
working in front of the camera, making cameo 
appearances in each picture.  In "Armageddon" he is 
the wizened flight instructor who describes the 
rigors of training with his top-flight pilots to the 
roughnecks.
	Humphries also acted as technical advisor for 
Ridley Scott on "G.I. Jane," putting actress Demi 
Moore and her costars through a grueling training 
program he designed while serving as a Navy SEAL.
	Humphries joined the naval reserve while 
studying industrial engineering at Rutgers 
University.  He went active duty in the Navy in 1957 
during the Berlin Wall crisis and soon became 
involved in the underwater demolition teams.  He was 
the first replacement UDT to enter the newly 
established SEAL Team II.  As a SEAL, he was involved 
in covert military operations before, during and 
after the Vietnam conflict.
	In 1971 Humphries left the Navy to join the 
corporate world. He worked as an engineering and 
operations manager with his family's company, 
Theobald Industries, for several years before 
venturing out on his own.  He spent the next six 
years with Henkel KgaA as an international technical 
auditor, overseeing and supervising operations at the 
German chemical giant's many multi-national 
facilities.  In 1986 Humphries and several partners 
purchased Amcal Chemical, a chemical specialties 
custom manufacturing company, with which he had 
dealings via Henkel.  He acted as president of Amcal 
until 1990 when he turned over the reigns of the 
company to his wife, sons and partners.  
	Since that time, Humphries has returned to his 
military roots, developing an international security 
business with several of his SEAL compatriots.  
Utilizing SEAL technology and training, they provide 
their skills and experience in security to the 
private sector.  Humphries is currently president of 
Global Studies Group, Inc.  As security consultants, 
they design, develop and implement security related 
services, training programs and crisis management 
worldwide.
	Humphries has also spent time as an instructor, 
teaching special weapons and tactics programs at 
Eastern Michigan University and at several training 
facilities.
	Humphries originally met producer Jerry 
Bruckheimer when he and partner Don Simpson purchased 
Rogue Warrior, from Humphries' friend and SEAL 
colleague, Dick Marcinko.  Humphries was first asked 
to act as technical advisor to the writers hired to 
transform the best-selling book into a screenplay.  
His role has since expanded to other projects 
including Bruckheimer's television series, "Soldier 
of Fortune," and includes script development as well 
as training and coaching actors and stuntmen.
 
	A native of Los Angeles, PATRICK SANDSTON 
(Associate Producer/Post Production Supervisor) began 
his career as a production executive at Paramount 
Studios.  He soon moved to Walt Disney Studios in 
1986 as a post production coordinator in television.  
Sandston's numerous talents in post did not go 
unnoticed, and he was rapidly promoted to the 
position of post-production supervisor, eventually 
becoming vice president of post production and visual 
effects for Walt Disney Pictures.  In those ten years 
at the studio, Sandston oversaw virtually all aspects 
of post production on over 35 feature film, three 
EPCOT Center shorts and four Walt Disney World Tour 
films.  A partial list of credits includes "James and 
the Giant Peach," "Dumbo Drop," "Honey, I Shrunk the 
Kids," "Heartbreak Hotel," "Mr. Destiny," "Where the 
Heart Is," "Iron Will," "Miami Rhapsody" and 
"Beaches."  
	"Enemy of the State" marks the sixth Jerry 
Bruckheimer Production Sandston has teamed on as a 
post production supervisor and his second as an 
associate producer.  Other Bruckheimer credits 
include "Armageddon," "The Rock," "Crimson Tide" and 
"Dangerous Minds." 
My work as technical advisor on ENEMY OF THE STATE was a labor of love.   To watch the movie click here to go to amazon.com.   
It cost $3.99 to view.   I
built most of the electronic props such as bug detectors, tailing systems, covert devices and receivers.  
You can read more about the movie on my web site at
 ENEMY OF THE STATE. Here are some of my other projects.  
This Page contains several videos I have up loaded to YouTube. 
The first is about my friend Frank Terpil.   I have known Frank since the early seventies.   He purchased several of my products which eventually 
led me to Egypt after the Yom Kipur war to assist President Sadat's palace guard. The movie is titled 
FRANK TERPIL - CONFESSIONS OF A DANGEROUS MAN  1 hour 26 minutes 
Terpil's activities in Libia can be viewed in the MAD DOG series.    Some of the segments are lengthy but
well worth watching.
 
THE SPYING GAME is a production of the BBC.  24 minutes 
I made appearances on TV, radio shows and in newspapers to promote my autography.  This is a lecture I did at the
 THE BROOKLYN PUBLIC LIBRARY.  1 hour 
My lecture before the LAST HOPE (Hackers Of Planet Earth) reveals my feelings about the US
intelligence community 
and FBI.  52 minutes 
Recently I appeared on the Progressive Rado Network (PRN.FM) show the 
INTELLIGENCE HOUR with Kevin Shipp.  The segment is 55 minutes long. 
Here is Kevin Shipp's lecture on the
 SHADOW GOVERNMENT. A truly frieghtening
presentation. 1 hour 7 minutes
 
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7/2020