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  1. John Tanner, Director of News of a US TV network, is convinced by a CIA agent that the friends he has invited to a weekend in the country are engaged in a conspiracy, called Omega, that threatens national security.

    • Chris Stocks, Robert Ludlum
    • 1972
  2. Jan 1, 1972 · The Osterman Weekend is an unusual story of a weekend spent by four friendly couples who possibly could be or not be an active member of a espionage set up. The author thickens the plot with soaring tension of suspicion & paranoia which strains the relationship of the core group of characters.

    • (9.3K)
    • 1972
    • Chris Stocks, Robert Ludlum
    • Paperback
  3. The Osterman Weekend is a 1983 American suspense thriller film directed by Sam Peckinpah, based on the 1972 novel of the same name by Robert Ludlum. The film stars Rutger Hauer , John Hurt , Burt Lancaster , Dennis Hopper , Meg Foster , Helen Shaver , Chris Sarandon and Craig T. Nelson .

    • Plot
    • Cast
    • Production
    • Release and Reception
    • Home Media
    • Alpha to Omega: Exposing The Osterman Weekend
    • Remake

    CIA director Maxwell Danforth (Burt Lancaster) watches a recording of agent Laurence Fassett (John Hurt) and his wife having sex. When Fassett goes to the shower, two KGB assassins enter the bedroom and kill his wife. The CIA had in fact sanctioned her killing. Fassett, unaware of his employer's involvement, is consumed by grief and rage. He hunts ...

    Rutger Hauer as John Tanner
    John Hurt as Lawrence Fassett
    Craig T. Nelson as Bernard Osterman
    Dennis Hopper as Richard Tremayne

    William Castle initially purchased the film rights and asked author Ludlum to write the script. Ludlum was reluctant. Despite his extensive film and theatre experience, he said "I didn't leave that crowd of ocelots to go back into it." As related in the documentary Alpha to Omega: Exposing The Osterman Weekend, producers Peter S. Davis and William ...

    The film was not a blockbuster, though it grossed $6 million domestically and did extremely well in Europe and on the new home-video market. Theatrical distribution was handled by 20th Century Fox.

    Thorn EMI picked up the initial video rights; a laserdisc edition was published by Image Entertainment. It is currently available on DVD and Blu-ray from Anchor Bay Entertainment, which has included the director's cut of the film on its DVD release, but it is sourced from the only known copy in existence, a low-quality, full-screen videotape.

    Alpha to Omega: Exposing The Osterman Weekend is a 2004 documentary about the making of The Osterman Weekend. It was included as a special feature on Anchor Bay Entertainment's 2004 DVD release of the film. Featuring interviews with many members of the cast and crew, it not only examines the process of bringing Ludlum's novel to the screen, but als...

    In February 2012, it was reported that talks were under way to film a new adaptation of Ludlum's book.

  4. It's based on a Robert Ludlum potboiler - Ian Masters and Alan Sharp are credited with the adaptation - but Peckinpah fuses the twisty-turny, cross-and-double cross story with his own paranoid feelings about loyalty and betrayal, and his ambivalence about technology and progress in such a way that the resulting movie is as much a reflection of ...

  5. Not as imposing a superstruct as The Scarlatti Inheritance, but the same powerhouse momentum in the story of three families who live, very well, in a New Jersey suburb and the Ostermans — their mutual friends — who come for a get-together weekend, and the mythical man from the C.I.A. who blows them all apart with his revelation of a Russian ...

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  7. The Osterman Weekend is a 1983 suspense thriller film directed by Sam Peckinpah, based on the novel of the same name by Robert Ludlum. The film stars Rutger Hauer, John Hurt, Burt Lancaster, Dennis Hopper, Meg Foster and Craig T. Nelson. It was Peckinpah's final film before his death in 1984.