8mm (film)
8mm | |
---|---|
Promotional poster | |
Directed by | Joel Schumacher |
Produced by |
Joel Schumacher Gavin Polone Judy Hofflund |
Written by | Andrew Kevin Walker |
Starring |
Nicolas Cage Joaquin Phoenix James Gandolfini Peter Stormare Anthony Heald |
Music by | Mychael Danna |
Cinematography | Robert Elswit |
Edited by | Mark Stevens |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 123 minutes[1] |
Country |
US Germany |
Language | English |
Budget | $40 million[2] |
Box office | $96.6 million[2] |
8mm is a 1999 American-German crime mystery thriller film directed by Joel Schumacher and written by Andrew Kevin Walker. The film stars Nicolas Cage as a private investigator who delves into the world of snuff films.
Plot
Private investigator Tom Welles (Nicolas Cage) is contacted by Daniel Longdale (Anthony Heald), attorney for wealthy widow Mrs. Christian (Myra Carter), whose husband has recently died. While clearing out her late husband's safe, she and Longdale found an 8mm film which appears to depict a real murder of a girl, but Mrs. Christian wants to know for certain.
After looking through missing persons files, Tom discovers that the girl is Mary Ann Mathews (Jenny Powell), and visits her mother, Janet Mathews (Amy Morton). While searching the house with her permission, he finds Mary Ann's diary, in which she says that she went to Hollywood to become a film star. He asks Mrs. Mathews whether she wants to know the truth, even if it is a horrible truth. She says that she wants to know what happened to her daughter, so after reading the diary and a note left for her mother inside of it, he leaves it for her and then leaves.
In Hollywood, with the help of an adult video store employee called Max California (Joaquin Phoenix), Tom penetrates the underworld of illegal pornography. Contact with a sleazy talent scout named Eddie Poole (James Gandolfini) leads them to director Dino Velvet (Peter Stormare), whose violent pornographic films star a masked man known as "Machine" (Chris Bauer). To gain more evidence, Tom pretends to be a client interested in commissioning a hardcore bondage film to be directed by Velvet and starring Machine. Velvet agrees and arranges a meeting in New York City.
At the meeting, attorney Longdale appears and explains that Christian had contracted him to procure a snuff film. Longdale says that he told Velvet that Tom might come looking for them. Realizing that the snuff film was authentic, the private eye knows he is at risk. Velvet and Machine produce a bound and beaten Max, whom they abducted to force Tom to bring them the only surviving copy of the illegal film. Once he delivers it, but before he turns it over, they kill Max and beat Tom and then burn the film. As they are about to kill Tom, he tells them that Christian had paid $1 million for the film and that the reason Christian wanted the film made was for the simple reason that he had enough money to make it possible. Unbeknownst to them previously Velvet, Poole, and Machine received much less and that Longdale kept the major portion. In an ensuing fight, Velvet and Longdale are both killed; Tom wounds Machine and escapes.
He calls Mrs. Christian to tell her his discoveries and recommends going to the police, to which she agrees. Arriving at her estate, Tom is told that Mrs. Christian committed suicide after hearing the news. She left envelopes for the Mathews family and Tom: it contains the rest of his payment and a note reading, "Try to forget us."
Tom decides to seek justice for the murdered girl by killing the remaining people involved. Tracking down Eddie, Tom takes him to the shooting location and tries to kill him. Eddie shows no remorse for his role in the murder and taunts Tom for being unable to go through with it. He calls Mrs. Mathews to tell her the truth about her daughter's fate and asks a devastated Janet for her permission to punish those responsible, to which she says yes. With that, he returns and pistol whips Eddie to death. After burning his body and the pornography from his car, Tom traces Machine and attacks him at his home. Tom unmasks him, revealing a bald, bespectacled man named George. He says, "What did you expect? A monster?" George goes on to tell Tom that he has no ulterior motive for his sadistic actions; he does them simply because he enjoys it. They struggle, and Tom kills him.
After returning to his family, Tom receives a letter from Mrs. Mathews, thanking him for killing the men responsible and suggesting he and she were the only ones to care about Mary Ann.
Cast
- Nicolas Cage as Tom Welles
- Joaquin Phoenix as Max California
- James Gandolfini as Eddie Poole
- Peter Stormare as Dino Velvet
- Anthony Heald as Daniel Longdale
- Myra Carter as Mrs. Christian
- Catherine Keener as Amy Welles
- Norman Reedus as Warren Anderson
- Amy Morton as Janet Mathews
- Torsten Voges as Stick
- Luis Saguar as Manny
- Chris Bauer as George Anthony Higgins / Machine
- Jenny Powell as Mary Ann Mathews
- Monsier Depeel as Rapist #2
Reception
8mm opened in 2,730 theaters in North America and made $14,252,888 in its opening weekend with an average of $6,013 per theater ranking number 1 at the box office. The film made $36,663,315 domestically and $59,955,384 internationally for a total of $96,618,699, more than double its $40 million production budget.[2]
The film received negative reviews from critics. It has a rating of 22% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 80 reviews with an average rating of 4.2 out of 10. The consensus was "Its sadistic violence is unappealing and is lacking in suspense and mystery."[3] The film also has a score of 19 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 20 reviews indicating "overwhelming dislike."[4]
Roger Ebert was one of the film's admirers and gave the film three stars out of four, stating on his website "I know some audience members will be appalled by this film, as many were by "Seven". It is a very hard R that would doubtless have been NC-17 if it had come from an indie instead of a big studio with clout. But it is a real film. Not a slick exploitation exercise with all the trappings of depravity but none of the consequences. Not a film where moral issues are forgotten in the excitement of an action climax. Yes, the hero is an ordinary man who finds himself able to handle violent situations, but that's not the movie's point. The last two words of the screenplay are "save me" and by the time they're said, we know what they mean."[5]
Soundtrack
The film score was conducted by Mychael Danna. It was released on CD by Chapter III in 1999, with a total of 20 tracks:
- "The Projector" (1:20)
- "The House" (2:05)
- "The Call" (1:44)
- "The Film" (1:10)
- "Cindy" (0:56)
- "Missing Persons" (4:46)
- "What Would You Choose" (3:11)
- "Hollywood" (2:51)
- "Unsee" (1:20)
- "Dance With the Devil" (5:36)
- "The Third Man" (1:14)
- "Loft" (1:56)
- "No Answer" (1:47)
- "I Know All About..." (1:41)
- "366 Hoyt Ave." (1:46)
- "Scene of the Crime" (5:52)
- "Machine" (3:30)
- "Rainstorm" (3:49)
- "Home" (1:32)
- "Dear Mr. Wells" (1:54)
While not on the soundtrack, "Come to Daddy" by Aphex Twin features prominently in the film.
Sequel
In 2005, a direct-to-video sequel entitled 8mm 2 was released by Sony Pictures. Directed by J. S. Cardone, and starring Johnathon Schaech and Lori Heuring, the film focuses on a powerful couple being blackmailed after their sexual encounter with an attractive woman is secretly recorded. The film, originally titled The Velvet Side of Hell, shares no connective elements with the previous film, and was re-branded as 8mm 2 for marketing reasons.
References
- ↑ "8MM (18)". Columbia Pictures. British Board of Film Classification. March 16, 1999. Retrieved April 13, 2014.
- 1 2 3 8mm at Box Office Mojo
- ↑ 8mm at Rotten Tomatoes
- ↑ 8mm at Metacritic
- ↑ Ebert, Roger (26 February 1999). "8mm Movie Review". Retrieved 2014-12-08.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: 8mm (film) |
- 8mm at the Internet Movie Database
- 8mm at Box Office Mojo
- 8mm at Rotten Tomatoes
- 8mm at Metacritic