The Devils Double
Summoned from the front line back to Saddam Hussein's palace, Iraqi army's lieutenant, Latif Yahia (Dominic Cooper) is forced to join the royal family when he is appointed to become a copy of Saddam's son, Uday Hussein Prince, a impulsive and risk taker...
15 October 1981, London, England, UK
12 June 1924, Milton, Massachusetts, USA
August 22, 1934 in Trenton, New Jersey, USA
28 February 1991, Malta
16 October 1984, Malta
4 June 1986, Madrid, Spain
12 June 1979, London, England, UK
30 July 1957, Australia
18 August 1977, Baghdad, Iraq
11 March 1975, Morocco
3 July 1979, La Celle-Saint-Cloud, Yvelines, France
28 April 1937, al-Awja, Iraq
30 January 1941, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA
January 26, 2012
Never develops into anything beyond a concept.
November 23, 2011
...a sporadically intriguing yet disastrously undercooked thriller.
October 21, 2011
Some of the cruelty in the film is hard to stomach, but frighteningly believable.
February 28, 2013
The Devil's Double is a fantastic film that features a central performance so compelling, you'd be foolish to look away even for a second.
August 17, 2011
It is a ghastly, riveting, dazzling piece of work.
June 22, 2013
Cooper is great, in a great part. But for an actor, not for his audience.
August 11, 2011
The hero of "The Devil's Double" may get upstaged by the villain, but that's not exactly bad news for star Dominic Cooper, since he plays both parts.
September 07, 2011
I'm not sure what it all adds up to, but The Devil's Double puts its hooks in you and keeps them there.
January 14, 2013
Dominic Cooper is bloody brilliant.
September 01, 2011
Equally as offensive as the movie's smorgasbord of smut and violence is the lingering whiff of colonial-era orientalism, a Western predilection for regarding Eastern cultures as innately idle, lascivious, irrational, and thus ripe for intervention.
August 09, 2011
Even more tasteless than its main character's gold 'n' marble palace.
November 17, 2011
Despite numerous pluses - Lee Tamahori's vigorous direction, handsome cinematography, outstanding production design, an impressive dual performance by Dominic Cooper as Uday and Latif - the film is more wearying than entertaining.

