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Basic Instinct - Director's Cut (Ultimate Edition) by Paul Verhoeven
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DVD Cover InformationActor: Denis Arndt, George Dzundza, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Michael Douglas, Sharon Stone Director: Paul Verhoeven Brand: Lions Gate Cinematographer: Jan de Bont Editor: Frank J. Urioste Producer: Alan Marshall Producer: Louis D'Esposito Producer: Mario Kassar Producer: William S. Beasley Writer: Joe Eszterhas DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0; English (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); French (Subtitled) Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen Picture Format: 2.35:1 Running Time: 127 minutes DVD Release Date: 2006-03-14 Audience Rating: Unrated Studio: Lions Gate
Movie Reviews of Basic Instinct - Director's Cut (Ultimate Edition)Movie Review: Are you a pro? No, I'm an amateur Summary: 5 StarsBasic Instinct is a basic geometric triangle, and while, as in basic math, the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the square of the two adjacent sides, all of the sides are important, and basically, with Michael Douglas, Sharon Stone, and Jeanne Triplehorn, you can't lose.
Jeanne Triplehorn is from Oklahoma. She has been described as having an incredibly open face and a devastating glare. Her father, Tom Triplehorn, played guitar for Gary & the Pacemakers on such hits as "This Diamond Ring Doesn't Shine For You Anymore." Working with Michael Douglas as the 2nd Lead in Basic Instinct led to Ms. Triplehorn's chance to portray Tom Cruise's wife in the box-office smash The Firm (1993). Her clever work in this film afforded her the opportunity to work opposite other "top guns" in the industry, including Kevin Costner in the futuristic epic flop Waterworld (1995), Gwyneth Paltrow in the experiment-gone-wrong Sliding Doors (1998) and Hugh Grant in the preposterous Mickey Blue Eyes (1999). Though Triplehorn couldn't rescue these Kamikaze missions from certain disaster, her performance in Basic Instinct as the bespectacled psychiatrist Dr. Beth Garner garnered my attention.
Michael Douglas and Sharon Stone are so well known that I scarcely need to go into their biographies. Michael was the son of well known, well liked actor Kirk Douglas. He didn't want any of his sons to ply the acting profession, so he never gave Michael so much as a 'foot in the door.' He first got the public's attention playing a cop opposite veteran actor Karl Malden in 'The Streets of San Francisco.' [shot on location in San Francisco, it is fun to watch re-runs for the superb location shots alone]. TV led to films, but it was Basic Instinct that catapulted Douglas to household name status. Other notable roles were Fatal Attraction and Wall Street.
Stone was also catapulted into the limelight from the success of Basic Instinct, but fell from grace with Sliver and a slew of slim pickings until finally getting respect and redemption in Casino with Robert De Niro, an Oscar nomination, thank you. Sharon has had some ups, with Basic Instinct, Casino, The Muse, The Quick and the Dead, The Mighty, and Bobby; but others, such as Sliver, Diabolique, Intersection, The Specialist, Catwoman, Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold, and the sequel-that-never-should-have-been, Basic Instinct 2, basically sunk like a... well, Stone.
I have a basic theory about Joe Eszterhas. His career was in a tailspin after Sliver, Showgirls, and Jade, so he went down in flames with An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn. Anyone familiar with the name Alan Smithee knows that it is the name a director attaches to a film that he wants nothing more to do with. This film not only capped a string of bad reviews for his writing, it added one for his acting, playing himself for goodness sake, he was such a bad actor he couldn't even effectively portray himself. Besides that, it was a kind of vendetta against Hollywood, and all he had suffered there. I think that Flashdance was brilliant, for a movie about a welder/stripper who wants to go to ballet school, and I would like to see Jagged Edge. Basic Instinct might be the pinnacle of his achievement. You know you are being manipulated with trashy, exploitive garbage, but like Wayne Knight (Newman from Seinfeld) and the other cops in the famous scene in the interrogation room, you don't care. After his apotheosis with Basic Instinct, he slid down the slippery slope with Sliver, Showgirls, Jade, and finally, to kill his career once and for all, An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn.
I find it interesting that Sharon Stone plays a sociopathic writer in Basic Instinct, and contend that Eszterhas was drawing from personal experience in that regard. At one point Catherine Tramell (Sharon Stone) reveals the finer points of her craft, where she asserts that writing teaches you how to lie. She utilizes that skill in beating a polygraph. I find this very telling, Mr. Eszterhas.
Though I remember Spetters, I doubt that many other people do. It was a charming foreign film about motorcycle racing, as I recall. Total Recall was totally an Arnold Swarzeneger vehicle supposedly based on the writing of Philip K. Dick, but it came up surprisingly dickless. Robocop, though I personally didn't see it, it was so popular that I remember it nevertheless. Basic Instinct seems to be the high water mark for Verhoeven as well, but his next outing with Eszterhas resulted in Showgirls--not a brilliant career move for either one.
Take these actors, this writer, and this director, mix them together in a pot boiler like Basic Instinct, and voila! I liked the way Catherine Tramell knew how to exploit Nick Curran's weaknesses: cigarettes, cocaine, booze, sex, violence--if she could awaken his craving for one, it would lead to the others. All the while, he thought he was solving the case, and that proved to be his biggest weakness of all. Thinking he could out think Tramell in this cat-and-mouse game, where he thinks he's the cat, but he is nothing but a mouse.
Though I admit that Basic Instinct was a great film, it remains a guilty pleasure, and though I was entertained, I resent being manipulated in such a trashy and exploitive way. So I will shed no tears for the fall of Eszterhas.
JOE ESZTERHAS
Basic Instinct 2 (2006) (characters)
Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn (1998) (written by)
Telling Lies in America (1997) (written by)
Jade (1995) (written by) (1995) (written by)
Showgirls (Fully Exposed Edition)
Sliver (Unrated Edition) (1993) (screenplay)
Basic Instinct (1992) (written by)
Music Box (1989) (written by)
Checking Out (1989) (written by)
Betrayed (1988) (written by)
Big Shots (1987) (written by)
Hearts of Fire (1987) (screenplay)
Jagged Edge (1985) (written by)
Flashdance (Special Collector's Edition w/ Bonus CD)screenplay) (1983)
F.I.S.T (1978) (screenplay) (story)
PAUL VERHOEVEN
Starship Troopers (1997)
Showgirls (1995)
Basic Instinct (1992)
Total Recall (1990)
RoboCop (1987)
Flesh+Blood (1985)
Vierde man, De (1983)
Spetters (Widescreen Edition) (1980)
SHARON STONE
When a Man Falls in the Forest (2007) .... Karen Fields
If I Had Known I Was a Genius (2007) .... Gloria Fremont
Bobby (2006) .... Miriam Ebbers
Basic Instinct 2 (2006) .... Catherine Tramell
Alpha Dog (2006) .... Olivia Mazursky
Broken Flowers (2005) .... Laura
Catwoman (2004) .... Laurel Hedare
The Muse (1999) .... Sarah Little
Gloria (1999) .... Gloria
Antz (1998) (voice) .... Princess Bala
The Mighty (1998) .... Gwen Dillon
Sphere (1998) .... Dr. Elizabeth 'Beth' Halperin
Last Dance (1996) .... Cindy Liggett
Diabolique (1996) .... Nicole Horner
Casino (1995) .... Ginger McKenna
The Quick and the Dead (1995) .... Ellen "The Lady"
The Specialist (1994) .... May Munro
Intersection (1994) .... Sally Eastman
Last Action Hero (1993) .... Catherine Tramell
Sliver (1993) .... Carly Norris
Basic Instinct (1992) .... Catherine Tramell
Diary of a Hitman (1991) .... Kiki
Where Sleeping Dogs Lie (1991) .... Serena Black
Year of the Gun (1991) .... Alison King
Scissors (1991) .... Angie Anderson
He Said, She Said (1991) .... Linda Metzger
Total Recall (1990) .... Lori
MICHAEL DOUGLAS
Traffic (2000) .... Robert Wakefield
Wonder Boys (2000) .... Prof. Grady Tripp
A Perfect Murder (1998) .... Steven Taylor
The Game (1997) .... Nicholas Van Orton
The Ghost and the Darkness (1996) .... Charles Remington
The American President (1995) .... President Andrew Shepherd
Disclosure (1994) .... Tom Sanders
Falling Down (1993) .... William 'D-Fens' Foster
Basic Instinct (1992) .... Det. Nick Curran
Shining Through (1992) .... Ed Leland
The War of the Roses (1989) .... Oliver Rose
Black Rain (1989/I) .... Nick
Wall Street (1987) .... Gordon Gekko
Fatal Attraction (Special Collector's Edition) (1987) .... Dan Gallagher
A Chorus Line (1985) .... Zach
The Jewel of the Nile (1985) .... Jack Colton
JEANNE TRIPLEHORN
Dial 9 for Love (2001) .... Nina
Relative Values (2000) .... Miranda Frayle/Freda Birch
Paranoid (2000/I) .... Rachel
Timecode (2000) .... Lauren Hathaway
Steal This Movie (2000) .... Johanna Lawrenson
Mickey Blue Eyes (1999) .... Gina Vitale
Very Bad Things (1998) .... Lois Berkow
Sliding Doors (1998) .... Lydia
Snitch (1998) .... Annie
Office Killer (1997) .... Norah Reed
'Til There Was You (1997) .... Gwen Moss
Waterworld (1995) .... Helen
Nick: What's your new book about?
Catherine: A detective. He falls for the wrong woman.
Nick: What happens to him?
Catherine: She kills him.
Summary of Basic Instinct - Director's Cut (Ultimate Edition)A police detective is in charge of the investigation of a brutal murder in which a beautiful and seductive woman could be involved. Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 05/22/2007 Starring: Michael Douglas George Dzunda Rating: R The take-no-prisoners sex thriller from 1992 now stands as a milestone in the career of screenwriter Joe Eszterhas, but in the hands of director Paul Verhoeven Basic Instinct is an undeniably stylish and provocative study of obsession. In the role that made her a star (and showed the audience a little more skin than she intended), Sharon Stone plays the cleverly manipulative novelist Catherine Tramell who snares San Francisco detective Nick Curran (Michael Douglas) with her insatiable sexual appetite during the investigation of her boyfriend's murder. Tramell is the prime suspect, but the plot twists and turns until Curran is trapped in a dangerous cycle of dead ends and unsolved murders, never sure if Tramell is committing the crimes or if it is some other, unknown suspect. With a plot that keeps viewers guessing, Basic Instinct is the work of a director who is clearly in his element. --Jeff Shannon
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