The Last Seduction
The Last Seduction | |
---|---|
Original theatrical poster | |
Directed by | John Dahl |
Produced by | Jonathan Shestack |
Written by | Steve Barancik |
Starring | |
Music by | Joseph Vitarelli |
Cinematography | Jeff Jur |
Edited by | Eric L. Beason |
Distributed by | October Films |
Release dates |
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Running time | 110 minutes |
Language | English |
Budget | $2.5 million |
Box office | $5,842,603 |
The Last Seduction is a 1994 neo-noir erotic thriller film directed by John Dahl, and features Linda Fiorentino, Peter Berg, and Bill Pullman.[1] The film was produced by ITC Entertainment and distributed by October Films. Fiorentino's performance generated talk of an Oscar nomination, but she was ineligible because the film was shown on HBO before it was released to theatres. October Films and ITC Entertainment sued the Academy, but were unable to make Fiorentino eligible for a nomination.[2]
The 1999 sequel The Last Seduction II featured none of the original cast and starred Joan Severance as the character Fiorentino originated.[3]
Plot
The film opens in New York City, where Bridget works as a telemarketing manager and her husband Clay is training to be a doctor. He is heavily in debt to a loan shark so he arranges to sell stolen pharmaceutical cocaine to two drug dealers. The transaction becomes tense when the buyers pull a gun, but rather to Clay's surprise, they eventually pay him $700,000. Clay is left shaken, and on his return home he slaps Bridget after she insults him. She then steals the cash from him and flees their apartment while he is in the shower.
On her way to Chicago she stops in Beston, a small town near Buffalo. There she meets Mike, a local man back from a whirlwind marriage in Buffalo that he refuses to talk about, who tries to pick her up. She proceeds to use him for mere sexual gratification during her stay in town. Adept at word games and mirror writing, and with an imminent return to her hometown in mind, Bridget changes her name to Wendy Kroy and gets a job at the insurance company where, coincidentally, Mike works. Their relationship is strained by her manipulative behavior and the fact he is falling for her. When Mike tells her how to find out if a man is cheating on his wife by reading his credit reports, Bridget invents a plan based on selling murders to cheated wives. She suggests they start with Lance Collier, a cheating, wife-beating husband residing in Florida. This proves to be the last straw for Mike and he leaves her alone in his place after an argument.
Clay's thumb is broken by the loan shark for not repaying his loan. Fearing for his health and in dire financial straits, he hires a private detective, Harlan, to retrieve the money from his wife. Harlan traces her phone area code, travels to Beston and accosts Bridget at gunpoint right after her argument with Mike. She manages to murder him on the drive back to her place, and tricks the police into closing the case without further investigation by using local racial prejudice to her advantage.
She then resumes her manipulation of Mike and pretends to travel to Florida to kill Lance Collier, but instead goes to Buffalo to meet Mike's ex-wife, Trish. She shows Mike the money she stole from Clay to convince him she has taken a cut from the life insurance payout from the new widow as payment for the supposed killing. She tells him she has done it so they can live together, then tries to persuade him that he must also commit a similar murder so they will be even, and to prove that he loves her. She tries to talk Mike into killing a tax lawyer in New York City cheating old ladies out of their homes. At first he rejects the idea, but agrees after receiving a letter from his ex saying she is moving to Beston. The letter was forged by Bridget to change his mind.
Mike goes to New York and breaks into the apartment of the attorney, who turns out to be Clay. After Clay is tied up by Mike, he manages to work out what is happening when Mike mentions Bridget's alias, and convinces him of the truth by showing him a photo of himself and Bridget together. They then hatch a plot to double-cross her, but she turns the tables by killing Clay herself. She tells a stunned Mike to rape her. When he refuses, she tells him she knows the truth about Trish, who is transgender. This causes Mike to have rough sex with her while acting out a rape fantasy. Unbeknownst to Mike, Bridget has dialed 9-1-1 and she coaxes him into confessing to Clay's murder as part of the role play. Mike is arrested for rape and murder while she escapes with the cash and calmly destroys the only evidence that could have been used in Mike's defense.
Cast
- Linda Fiorentino as Bridget Gregory
- Peter Berg as Mike Swale
- Bill Pullman as Clay Gregory
- Bill Nunn as Harlan
- J. T. Walsh as Frank Griffith
- Dean Norris as Shep
Production
Screenwriter Steve Barancik said the film was originally pitched as a "standard skin-e-max" low-budget movie to ITC Entertainment even though the filmmakers had "an under-the-radar intention to make a good movie without letting the executives know about it."[2] ITC Entertainment executives were upset with a shot scene in which Linda Fiorentino is dressed as a cheerleader and wears suspenders over her breasts. Barancik recalled, "Apparently, a guy from the company who was monitoring things and watching the dailies, saw the suspenders over Linda’s nipples, and shouted out, 'Are we making an art movie?!' He shut down production and called the principals of the movie on the carpet and they all had to pledge that they had no artistic pretensions, then he punished them by not paying them that half day of production and by forbidding that scene from being in the movie, which ruined the whole sexual role-playing theme." The scene was cut.[2]
Reception
The Last Seduction received positive reviews from critics and it currently holds a 94% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 49 reviews.
Awards
Year | Award/Category | Recipient | Result |
---|---|---|---|
BAFTA Awards | |||
1995 | BAFTA Film Award - Best Actress | Linda Fiorentino | Nominated |
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards | |||
1994 | CFCA Award - Best Actress | Linda Fiorentino | Nominated |
Cognac Festival du Film Policier | |||
1994 | Critics Award | John Dahl | Won |
Directors Guild of America | |||
1995 | DGA Award – Outstanding Achievement in Dramatic Specials | John Dahl | Nominated |
Edgar Allan Poe Awards | |||
1995 | Edgar - Best Motion Picture | Steve Barancik | Nominated |
Independent Spirit Awards | |||
1995 | Independent Spirit Award - Best Female Lead | Linda Fiorentino | Won |
London Film Critics Circle Awards | |||
1995 | ALFS Award – Actress of the Year | Linda Fiorentino | Won |
Mystfest | |||
1994 | Best Film | John Dahl | Nominated |
National Board of Review, USA | |||
1994 | NBR Award – Best TV Film | Won | |
New York Film Critics Circle Awards | |||
1994 | NYFCC Award - Best Actress | Linda Fiorentino | Won |
Society of Texas Film Critics Awards | |||
1994 | STFC Award - Best Actress | Linda Fiorentino | Won |
Bibliography
- Linda Ruth Williams (2005) The Erotic Thriller in Contemporary Cinema, Edinburgh University Press
References
- ↑ Maslin, Janet (1994-10-26). "THE LAST SEDUCTION; A Femme Fatale Who Lives Up To the Description". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-03-08.
- 1 2 3 Bloomenthal, Andrew (September 10, 2015). "Seduced by Steve Barancik: The Last Seduction". Creative Screenwriting. Retrieved September 10, 2015.
- ↑ "The Last Seduction II". Entertainment Weekly. December 4, 1998.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Last Seduction |
- The Last Seduction at the Internet Movie Database
- The Last Seduction at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Last Seduction at AllMovie
- The Last Seduction at Box Office Mojo
- The Last Seduction at Metacritic