| Index | 6 reviews in total |
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Great Pictures of New York City, 29 July 2008
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Author:
whpratt1 from United States
Greatly enjoyed this low budget film starring Anne Carlisle, (Sally) and Brad Rifin, (Johnny) and a little boy who becomes the real star of the show. This picture opens up with two men going down an alley in New York City and one of them gets knifed to death along with his throat cut from left to right. This is a mob rub out, however, there is an eye witness and the killer sees him face to face. The killer tells his mob bosses about the witness to his crime and that he will search the streets around the area of the killing. Brad Rijin, (Johnny) plays a mobster who meets up with a young gal named Sally, (Anne Carlisle) and the two of them pretty soon start making love, however, Johnny is only using Sally in order to gain her confidence and at the same time kill the witness to his crime. Entertaining film with great scenes of the Brooklyn Bridge and the Twin Towers in the background, rather sad. Enjoy.
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Low budget, off-beat film noir., 5 September 2000
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Author:
miralgpa (miralgpa@aol.com) from Oakland, CA
This low-budget crime drama deserves a second look (unfortunately it is
currently unavailable in video). It is a good example of modern film noir,
with its gritty realism, excellent New York location photography, and moody
score.
The story involves, Johnny, a hitman (played by Brad Rijn), whose contract
hit on a gangland rival is witnessed by a three year old boy, playing in
his
backyard. Johnny's initial motivation to "eliminate" the one witness to
the
crime (under orders of his mob boss) becomes conflicted by his growing
romantic involvement with the boy's mother, Sally, (played by Anne
Carlisle). Occasional semicomic relief is provided by the incomparable Ann
Magnuson, in the role of a male-hating ultra-feminist and best friend of
Sally.
The story is by no means perfect and the ending somewhat disappointing.
But
its appeal lies in its offbeat look and quirky directing and acting. This
is a film with definite cult potential.
Neat urban noir thriller from the always reliable Larry Cohen, 23 September 2010
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Author:
Woodyanders (Woodyanders@aol.com) from The Last New Jersey Drive-In on the Left
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Hit-man Johnny (well played with brooding intensity by Brad Rijn) carves up a guy in an alley way. Two-year-old boy Matthew (a remarkably good portrayal by the adorable Matthew Stockley) witness the rub out. Johnny befriends Matthew's spunky and self-reliant single mom Sally (a fine and sympathetic performance by Anne Carlise of "Liquid Sky" fame) and plans on eventually killing Matthew. Cult writer/director Larry Cohen makes vivid and inspired use of the dingy New York City locations, firmly grounds the story in a totally plausible everyday reality populated by complex and credible true-to-life characters, and wrings plenty of white-knuckle suspense from the absorbing premise (a scene with Johnny and Matthew on a swing in an empty public park is truly harrowing). Rijn's Johnny makes for a fascinatingly conflicted main character: While his capacity for savage violence is genuinely frightening, Johnny's smooth charm, handsome looks, and anguished struggle with his own conscience ensure that he's nonetheless still a likable guy. The sound acting from a tip-top cast qualifies as a major asset: Rijn and Carlise do sterling work in the lead roles, with excellent support from John Woehrle as Sally's jerky ex-husband Fred, Stephen Lack as meddlesome detective Lieutenant Burns, Ann Magnuson as Sally's angry man-hating radical feminist friend Malda, and Zachary Hains as wise old Mafia capo Moletti. Paul Glickman's slick cinematography gives the picture a nice bright look. Dwight Dixon's moody'n'jazzy score also does the trick. An unjustly neglected and underrated sleeper.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
All it takes is one slip-up., 20 July 2007
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Author:
lost-in-limbo from the Mad Hatter's tea party.
After a Mafia hit man kills his target in a back alley, he looks up to
notice a toddler has seen what he has done. When the mother comes out
and notices the body, she goes about things as if her son didn't see
anything. Under pressure by the Mafia to do something about it, he
befriends the mother of the child to see how much the kid can put
together of what he saw. The pressure starts to build as the Mafia is
constantly on his back to rid the kid, while the boy's estrange father
is trying his best to get back into the child and mother's life and the
police are getting suspicious.
Style and mood features strongly in director/writer Larry Cohen's
understated low-budget noir-like thriller. It's an atmospheric
nail-biter in the old tradition of showing little in the way of
explosive currents, but rather developing on the tight and emotionally
realistic situation captured in the authentically haunting and forcible
New York locations. Cohen's serviceable direction clearly cooks up an
eerie presence from its shadowy urban backdrop that works favourably
with Dwight Dixon's lingering smoky jazz cues throughout the stirring
score and Paul Glickman's prominently moody cinematography complements
it all nicely. The editing is swiftly concise. Even with its cheap
origins, it has a solid professional ambiance that goes onto make it
one highly effective presentation. Cohen's cynically terse script
swoops right into the social commentary, as on today's menu is a
feminist stance, children caught between feuding parents and the
exploitation of their naïve innocence. There are few offbeat touches,
but for most part the premise is played straight, as it did lack the
sharp-laced wit we've come to expect. This dry touch only heightened
the taut nature, which leads to a potent conclusion. Sometimes holes
can show up and at times the pacing can succumb to stodgy handling, but
these moments are a minor fracture to the overall feel. Anne Carlisle's
soothing performance is that of elegance, but also burning conviction
as the mother. In a disquieting and subtle turn, Brad Rijn perfectly
portrays his laconic character with a lurking menace that might drop
his guard. Mathew Stockley as the child definitely passes the muster.
In short, but extremely quirky parts are Ann Magnuson (as a feminist
man hater) and Stephen Lack (stuck up police Lieutenant).
Re-watching this interesting and sorely overlooked Cohen entry, goes on
to prove what a versatile filmmaker he is.
6 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Dumb witness, 24 October 2004
Author:
dbdumonteil
A hit-man 's crime took place under a toddler's eyes.The boy cannot speak yet ,but as his mother unwisely says,he's very clever,very observant and when he starts speaking,he will have a lot to tell us about.So the murderer seduces the mother in order to get rid of the witness.The only interesting scenes are the ones which involve the man and the child.And even with them,the movie never really takes off.The writers drag things out with their photographs trick which exhausts any suspense.The adults are not very convincing,and Johnny's behavior does not make any sense.The mother is a bubblehead -how long it takes her to find out what lies beneath!-,and the actress does not even succeed in making us believe she loves her son dearly.
2 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Entertaining thriller; dumb characters. (spoilers), 3 January 2006
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Author:
Pepper Anne from Orlando, Florida
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Writer/Director Larry Cohen offers an interesting thriller with
'Perfect Strangers,' which would have been more logical had it not been
premised around such a stupid plot. That is, a young mafioso who's
stabbing of another man is witnessed by a two year-old from behind a
fence. At first, certain that the boy is too young to act as a
reasonable witness for the cops (and I doubt any court would let a kid
that young testify anyways...and doing so would give a defense attorney
good grounds for appeal), but later doubts the boy's ability to
identify him, and gets nervous. What is even dumber is, that his crime
associates, want to kill the kid because they're worried he may be a
viable key witness. In they end, they turned out to be dumber than the
guy who actually committed the crime.
To get close to the kid, I suppose as a way of testing what the kid
knows and can tell, he hooks up with the boy's mother who is also a
stupid character. Although it may be harsh to criticize her for getting
cozy so quickly with some guy she met on the street, she always ignores
many of the warning signs that this is the guy that stabbed the man
just behind their backyard fence. She is aware that a crime occurred,
and rushed her boy inside when she saw that he was standing in the
backyard by the fence staring at the dead man. Inconsistent in
attitude, this sense of emergency never seems to grip her much or make
her changes her ways throughout the rest of the film. And the only one
who might actually be able to get her to wake up and realize what is
going on (too late) is her estranged husband who is suspicious of the
new beau and warns her about him for the sake of her and the kid.
The story was at least entertaining enough, offering at least some
mystery where the plot is based along too many logical flaws--namely,
the stupidity of the main characters. But it might nonetheless be worth
checking out. Unfortunately, Cohen doesn't offer some of the
good-natured quick wit or brief, black comedy he does in his later
films. But what the heck, it's a low-budget production. Look for Ann
Manguson (of 'Making Mr. Right') in a brief role as the main woman's
feminist sidekick, Malda.
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