Malice

October 1st, 1993







Advertisments





Malice

No valid json found

Still of Nicole Kidman and Alec Baldwin in Malice

Plot
A tale about a happily married couple who would like to have children. Tracy teaches infants, Andy's a college professor. Things are never the same after she is taken to hospital and operated upon by Jed, a "know all" doctor.

Release Year: 1993

Rating: 6.3/10 (10,828 voted)

Director: Harold Becker

Stars: Alec Baldwin, Nicole Kidman, Bill Pullman

Storyline
A tail about a happily married couple who would like to have children. Tracy teaches infants, Andy's a college professor. Things are never the same after she is taken to hospital and operated upon by Jed, a "know all" doctor.

Writers: Aaron Sorkin, Jonas McCord

Cast:
Alec Baldwin - Dr. Jed Hill
Nicole Kidman - Tracy Kennsinger
Bill Pullman - Andy Safian
Bebe Neuwirth - Det. Dana Harris
George C. Scott - Dr. Martin Kessler
Anne Bancroft - Mrs. Kennsinger
Peter Gallagher - Atty. Dennis Riley
Josef Sommer - Atty. Lester Adams
Tobin Bell - Earl Leemus
William Duff-Griffin - Dr. George Sullivan
Debrah Farentino - Nurse Tanya
Gwyneth Paltrow - Paula Bell
David Bowe - Dr. Matthew Robertson
Diana Bellamy - Ms. Worthington
Michael Hatt - Neighbor Boy

Taglines: A thriller from the Director of "Sea of Love"

Release Date: 1 October 1993

Filming Locations: Amherst, Massachusetts, USA

Gross: $46,044,636 (USA)



Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

Trivia:
A sign for the fictional college was placed at the Smith College campus location the day before it was to be shot, but was stolen that night and never recovered.

Goofs:
Revealing mistakes: When Andy visits the house by the cliff, the back door is swinging wildly in the wind. However, the pouring rain comes down perfectly sraight.

Quotes:
Jed: Bad things happen to good people all the time, Andy, for no reason what-so-ever...



User Review

See it once for the suspense, and again for the acting.

Rating: 7/10

MALICE is one of those movies that you simply MUST see more than once to believe. The first time through, MALICE is a great psychological thriller, with twists and turns through a plot that contains rape, murder, life-and-death trauma, and a fight to the death...all within the first 45 minutes. The second time through, though, provides a look at all the things you might have missed the first time around...and a chance to savor an outstanding performance from perhaps the most underrated actor in Hollywood, Alec Baldwin.

Bill Pullman plays Andy Safien, an associate dean at a small New England college outside of Boston that's currently under siege by a serial rapist who claims his latest victim as the film opens. Nicole Kidman plays his wife Tracy, a volunteer in the pediatrics ward of St. Agnes Hospital. They're renovating a Victorian house and need $14,000 for the plumbing. Enter Alec Baldwin as Dr. Jed Hill, a former high school classmate of Andy's, who's brand new in town and needs a place to stay. Andy needs the money, Jed needs a room, so the two hook up and soon Jed is sleeping upstairs in the Safiens' home...usually not alone, and his sexual escapades are grating on Tracy's nerves. The rapes continue, Andy is fingered as a suspect, and in the midst of it all, Tracy collapses with a ruptured ovarian cyst. Jed operates to save her life (after a night of drinking and wild partying), but renders her unable to bear children...leading to a malpractice suit from Tracy and an incredible soliloquy on surgeons with a God complex from Jed during the deposition.

But once the first half of the film is over, things really start to roll. Without revealing the rest of the plot, suffice it to say that as Andy, Tracy, and Jed all try to start their lives over again, their fates become inextricably entangled.

The movie is worth seeing once as a thriller. But the second time around, Baldwin's mesmerizing performance is what stands out. Jed is charismatic, seductive, and as charming as a cobra as he weaves his spell over the Safiens. Baldwin's ability to jump from utterly charming to incredibly chilling in the blink of an eye is on full display here; it is truly the performance of a lifetime.

See it once for the suspense, and again for the acting.





Comments:

Comments are closed.


Advertisments










Searching...