A rookie in the police force must engage in a cat-and-mouse game with a pistol-wielding psychopath who becomes obsessed with her.A rookie in the police force must engage in a cat-and-mouse game with a pistol-wielding psychopath who becomes obsessed with her.A rookie in the police force must engage in a cat-and-mouse game with a pistol-wielding psychopath who becomes obsessed with her.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
Elizabeth Peña
- Tracy Perez
- (as Elizabeth Pena)
Markus Flanagan
- Husband
- (as Markus Flannagan)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This film begins well enough, building to what looks like being a promising study of a psychopath pitted against a feisty, but vulnerable, policewoman. Drawing on fear as a driver of eroticism, the unlikely relationship between Curtis and Silver develops to the edge of what might have been a great film. But sadly, at the halfway point, the story becomes unbelievable as both characters undertake actions that render the plot risible.
Silver turns in an impressive performance as the deranged commodity trader and Curtis plays it adequately enough. But neither can do anything to save the plot line and the whole thing ends in a mess, with the hardware of weaponry taking over from the software of psychology that would have provided a far more intelligent film.
Silver turns in an impressive performance as the deranged commodity trader and Curtis plays it adequately enough. But neither can do anything to save the plot line and the whole thing ends in a mess, with the hardware of weaponry taking over from the software of psychology that would have provided a far more intelligent film.
This cast contributed everything they had to this work, the story line is awesome, and the execution is purely entertaining. So what went wrong? As slick as this stylish detective/thriller is, it lacks an ending which denotes the wit and keen intellect throughout. In other words, the ending was weak enough to throw off this whole work.
Jamie Lee Curtis, nor any of her cast mates represents the problem. The problem was in the writing, however, this is still quite compelling, and dramatizes an interesting story, which has the ability to pull you in and build some awesome suspense.
All in all, although it fails to deliver satisfactorily in the end, the process getting you there is quite entertaining.
It rates a 6.8/10 from...
the Fiend :.
Jamie Lee Curtis, nor any of her cast mates represents the problem. The problem was in the writing, however, this is still quite compelling, and dramatizes an interesting story, which has the ability to pull you in and build some awesome suspense.
All in all, although it fails to deliver satisfactorily in the end, the process getting you there is quite entertaining.
It rates a 6.8/10 from...
the Fiend :.
A psycho killer scribes Jamie Lee Curtis' name onto the brass shells of some cartridges, loads them into his big revolver, then blows away strangers in a park. Detectives find the empty shells, so investigate JLC. Never mind that revolvers don't eject shells as semi-auto pistols do. Never mind that detectives would have known that the shells had been planted deliberately. Never mind that people don't write their names on cartridges. Correcting this film's technical inaccuracies would destroy its whole plot. Could the reason behind such silliness be a profound misunderstanding of the phrase, "a bullet with your name on it?"
Ron silver acted so bad. the script is so bad. in the store scene, she does not call for back up when she sees what was happeneing. and later ron silver takes away the gun, okay thats a bit surprising because there had been no introduction to his character until then, and funny jamie does not bother to stay behind and do the policework, thats okay because she is apparently too shocked and takes leave. later the chief accuses her of shooting ron silver too many times and also going to the extent of accusing her of shooting an unarmed man. now how about the people in the store, surely someone did see him, how about the security camera, how about the people in the streets, well nobody seems to have seen this guy hold the gun. Very poor film by any standards. Later silver shoots jamie's friend while holding jamie's neck with his arms, and she later says she did not see his face... what a stupid story.
What do you do when a madman tries to make you look like the villain ? You find that person and make them end. Jamie lee curtis plays are hero cop in this film. She was a good choice for the role and i felt she did well. I also really enjoyed most of the other cast of the film. This film is intense at points and the directing worked well to showcase this. Overall a pretty good thirller.
Did you know
- TriviaClancy Brown shadowed NYPD homicide detectives for two weeks. Jamie Lee Curtis also took part in several weeks at the NYPD Academy, including its firearms training.
- GoofsMegan's suspension hinges on the fact that the robber's gun wasn't found and the main witness, the cashier, provides an unclear statement even though the gun is right in his face. But at least two other people - the old woman in line after him and another male customer - were up close during and after the confrontation.
- Quotes
Eugene Hunt: Death is the best kick of all. That's why they save it for last.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Testigo fatal
- Filming locations
- Le Boeuf a la Mode, 539 East 81st St, New York City, New York, USA(Hunt takes Turner to dinner)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $8,217,997
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,895,744
- Mar 18, 1990
- Gross worldwide
- $8,217,997
- Runtime
- 1h 42m(102 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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