Dangerous Game (1993 film)
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Dangerous Game | |
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Directed by | Abel Ferrara |
Produced by | Mary Kane |
Written by | Nicholas St. John |
Starring | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/> |
Music by | Joe Delia |
Cinematography | Ken Kelsch |
Edited by | Anthony Redman |
Production
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Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release dates
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Running time
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109 minutes[1] |
Country | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
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Language | English |
Budget | $10 million |
Box office | $23,671[2] |
Dangerous Game (also known as Snake Eyes) is a 1993 Italian-American drama film directed by Abel Ferrara, written by Nicholas St. John, and starring Madonna, Harvey Keitel, and James Russo.
Plot
Utilizing a film-within-a-film format, the overall plot involves New York City-based director Eddie Israel directing actors Sarah Jennings and Frank Burns in a Hollywood marital-crisis drama, Mother of Mirrors, which is about a formerly wealthy but unemployed husband who berates his newly religious wife about what he considers her hypocritical aversion to their sex-and-drug lifestyle. During the shooting of that film, Israel becomes more and more demanding of his actors, growing increasingly obsessive with finding the ugly truths beneath the story's surface. All the while, his own carelessness and bad behavior with his own family begins to erode him and to corrode his marriage to Madlyn.
Cast
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- Harvey Keitel as Eddie Israel
- Madonna as Sarah Jennings
- James Russo as Francis "Frank" Burns
- Nancy Ferrara as Madlyn Israel. The part was originally offered to Jane Campion.[3]
- Reilly Murphy as Tommy
- Victor Argo as Director of photography
- Leonard L. Thomas as Prop guy
- Randy Sabusawa as Producer
- Christina Fulton as Blonde
- Glenn Plummer as Frank's buddy
- Richard Belzer (cameo)
- Annie McEnroe (cameo)
- Sammy Jack Pressman (cameo)
- Werner Herzog (uncredited, archive footage) as himself
Release
Dangerous Game opened in US theaters on November 19, 1993.[4] In 2007, Ferrara recalled,
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It was just another one of our films that never came out. But on that one, the audience didn't really like the film. Madonna killed it. The first impression people get on a movie is the one that never gets out of their mind. So after Madonna got so trashed for doing Body of Evidence, she thought she was going to beat the critics to the punch and badmouth the film. And she actually got good reviews. She never got a good review from the Voice or The New York Times in her life, but she got good reviews for this movie, which she came out and trashed. I'll never forgive her for it.[5]
This was the first production[citation needed] by Madonna's Maverick Picture Company, a division of the newly formed entertainment company Maverick.
In Japan, the film was released under the name Body II as a sequel to Madonna's other 1993 film Body of Evidence which had previously been released as Body.[citation needed] Neither film is directly connected to each other in narrative nor storyline.
Critical reception
The film received mixed to negative reviews from critics. Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports that 29% of 14 reviews were positive, with an average rating of 4.1/10.[6]
Both The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times praised Dangerous Game, with Janet Maslin of the former complimenting both Keitel and Madonna for their acting, and admiring the film's "raw, corrosive" quality: "Shot in a grainy, urgent style with occasional lapses into video, it has a fury that goes well beyond the story at hand, and an energy level that transcends the story's self-indulgence. This tough, abrasive film maker is seldom without his deadly serious side. 'Dangerous Game' is angry and painful, and the pain feels real."[4] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times found it "compelling and explosive", saying, "[I]t's a film of no-holds-barred language, passion and rage, but it's a move away from genre, more a chamber drama than action movie in which violence is more psychic than physical." He called Keitel "the ideal Ferrara star, his control, volcanic emotions and endless capacity for expressiveness and revelation matching up with those very qualities in Ferrara himself." Madonna, he said, "reveals the vulnerability as well as the strength of both the actress and the character she is playing."[7]
In a mixed review, Peter Travers of Rolling Stone called Keitel "superb" and the film "a mesmerizing jigsaw", but found that "Madonna's take on an emotional crackup comes up snake eyes ... and Ferrara's Dangerous Game stops being worth the playing."[8] However, Owen Gleiberman, giving it a C- grade in Entertainment Weekly, called it "an ego-driven botch, one of those dawdlingly self-important, semi-improvised affairs about a director making a movie that turns out to be just like the one you're watching (or is it the other way around?)," but allowed that, "Madonna isn't embarrassing; she plays down the wax-goddess exhibitionism."[9]
References
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External links
- Use mdy dates from November 2015
- 1993 films
- English-language films
- Pages using div col with unknown parameters
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2012
- American films
- Italian films
- 1990s drama films
- American drama films
- American independent films
- Italian drama films
- Italian independent films
- Adultery in films
- Films about film directors and producers
- Films about filmmaking
- Films directed by Abel Ferrara
- Films set in Los Angeles, California
- Films shot in Los Angeles, California
- Films shot in New York City
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films