Genre: | Crime drama |
Director: | Paul Greengrass |
Starring: | Rupert Graves Samuel West Douglas Hodge Kate Hardie Eddie Izzard Jim Carter Colin McCormack Sam Halpenny Joe Tucker Aran Bell |
Composer: | Seamus Beaghen Bruce Smith |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Executive Producer: | Simon Shaps |
Producer: | Jeff Pope |
Editor: | Clive Maltby |
Cinematography: | Alan Jones |
Runtime: | 105 minutes[1] |
Company: | London Weekend Television |
Channel: | ITV |
Open Fire is single British television crime drama film, made for ITV, which first broadcast on 12 November 1994.[2] The film was written and directed by Paul Greengrass, and concerns the police manhunt for David Martin, who escaped from custody following his arrest for shooting a police officer, leading up to the shooting in error of another man, Stephen Waldorf.[3] The film starred Rupert Graves as Martin, as well as Samuel West as Waldorf, Douglas Hodge as investigating officer DC Peter Finch, and Kate Hardie as Sue Stephens. Open Fire was filmed in Belsize Park and in around Hampstead, London.[4] The film has never been released commercially.
The film concerns the manhunt for David Martin, and the events surrounding this in which Stephen Waldorf, a 26-year-old film editor, was mistakenly identified as Martin and shot by police firearms officers. The story focuses on Finch, a young police officer who, at the beginning of the film, is awarded a medal for bravery in the course of duty after he arrested an armed criminal, and David Martin. Martin — a transvestite with a provocative and aggressive temperament — is released from prison having served his latest sentence. He has escaped twice during his time in custody, and is soon in trouble once again. During the course of a burglary at a private cinema, Martin shoots a police officer as he tries to escape. After he is later arrested, he promptly escapes and goes on the run. By 1983 he is Britain's most wanted man, and a massive police manhunt is under way to apprehend him.
As the hunt for Martin intensifies, police identify a suspect whom they believe might be the fugitive, but after he is shot by Finch, he turns out not to be Martin. The car driver fled the scene. Finch is subsequently suspended from duty. The case becomes a police scandal, with Finch accused of attempted murder. Martin is finally caught after being chased into an Underground station and along a railway tunnel, where police eventually corner and arrest him, without any shot fired.