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Kenneth Branagh Emma Thompson Derek Jacobi

1991 US neo-noir romantic thriller film by Kenneth Branagh

Dead Again
Dead Again poster.JPG

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Kenneth Branagh
Written by Scott Frank
Produced by Lindsay Doran
Starring
  • Kenneth Branagh
  • Andy Garcia
  • Derek Jacobi
  • Hanna Schygulla
  • Emma Thompson
  • Robin Williams
  • Wayne Knight
Cinematography Matthew F. Leonetti
Edited past Peter Due east. Berger
Music by Patrick Doyle
Distributed past Paramount Pictures

Release date

  • Baronial 23, 1991 (1991-08-23) (United States)

Running time

108 minutes
State United States
Language English
Upkeep $15 million[ commendation needed ]
Box office $38 meg (United States)[ane]

Dead Again is a 1991 American neo-noir[two] romantic thriller film directed past Kenneth Branagh and written past Scott Frank. It stars Branagh and Emma Thompson, with Andy García, Derek Jacobi, Hanna Schygulla, Wayne Knight, and Robin Williams appearing in supporting roles.

Expressionless Again was a moderate box office success and received positive reviews from the bulk of critics. Jacobi was nominated for a BAFTA Laurels for Best Role player in a Supporting Role, and Patrick Doyle, who equanimous the film'southward music, was nominated for a Golden World for Best Original Score.

Plot [edit]

Newspapers detail the 1948 murder of Margaret Strauss, who was stabbed during a robbery; her anklet is missing. Her husband, composer Roman Strauss, is establish guilty of the crime and condemned to death. Before his execution, Roman is visited by reporter Gray Baker. Asked if he killed Margaret, Roman appears to whisper something in Baker's ear. Baker does not disclose Roman'south respond.

40-iii years later, individual detective Mike Church building investigates the identity of a woman who has appeared at the orphanage where he grew up. She has amnesia, cannot speak and has nightmares. Mike takes her in and asks his friend, Pete Dugan, to publish her movie and his contact info. Antiques dealer and hypnotist Franklyn Madson approaches Mike, suggesting hypnosis may help her recover her memory.

When the session is unsuccessful, Madson suggests they experiment with past life regression. Mike is skeptical, but the adult female details Margaret and Roman's lives in tertiary person, from courtship to their wedding ceremony. When the session ends, she can speak but still has amnesia. Madson shows them Life magazine manufactures covering the murder. Mike and the adult female behave a striking resemblance to Roman and Margaret. Mike visits old psychiatrist Cozy Carlisle, who insists they continue to come across Madson; delving into the problems between Margaret and Roman may resolve her amnesia.

Mike nicknames the woman "Grace", and falls in love with her. A man named Doug appears and claims she is his fiancée Katherine, only Mike discovers he is lying and chases him off. Hypnotized, Grace remembers that Roman suffered from writer'southward block and is broke. He believes that Margaret is flirting with Baker, whom she met on their wedding twenty-four hour period. Margaret cannot convince him she is faithful and catches Frankie, the son of their housekeeper Inga, looking through her jewelry box. She asks Roman to dismiss Inga only Roman refuses, maxim that Inga saved his life in Nazi Germany.

Grace sees Mike standing over Margaret with scissors, and is convinced he intends to impale her. Mike insists that he would never injure her, but when he accidentally calls her "Margaret", he agrees to let Madson regress him. During his regression, he realizes that he was Margaret and Grace was actually Roman, but is unable to tell Madson or Grace nearly this revelation.

Pete Dugan tells Mike that he has identified Grace as artist Amanda Sharp. Amanda/Grace, even so afraid of Mike, accompanies Dugan and Madson to her apartment; her artwork focuses on scissors. Madson gives her a gun to protect herself from Mike. Mike visits Greyness Baker in a nursing home and asks him nigh Roman's clandestine, but Baker insists that Roman said nada to him. Bakery is convinced that Roman did not kill his wife and suggests Mike discover Inga, who would know what happened.

Mike realizes that Madson is Frankie. He questions Inga, who explains that she declared her love to Roman but he rebuffed her. Frankie blamed Margaret for his mother's unhappiness and killed her with scissors, so stole her anklet. Roman later on was establish covered in his wife's blood and belongings the murder weapon.

After Roman's execution, Inga took Frankie to London where he learned virtually hypnotherapy and past-life regression. Afterwards returning to LA, Frankie was convinced that Margaret's spirit would seek revenge. Seeing Amanda'due south photo in the paper, he knew she had returned. He hired Doug, an role player, to separate Mike and Amanda and distract Amanda while he waited to kill her. Inga apologizes for her role in Margaret's death and gives Mike the anklet. After Mike leaves to find Amanda, Frankie/Madson smothers Inga with a pillow.

Mike tries to tell Amanda the truth. Terrified, she shoots him. Madson arrives and reveals that he is Frankie. Amanda tries to shoot him as well, merely the gun jams and he knocks her out. He puts the scissors he used to kill Margaret in Mike's hand and tries to make information technology look similar Amanda killed him and committed suicide. Mike revives and stabs Madson in the leg with the scissors. In the ensuing struggle, Mike grabs the gun from Madson. Dugan arrives, misconstrues the scene and tackles Mike. Equally Madson reaches for the dropped pistol, Amanda stabs him in the back with the pair of scissors. In a rage, Madson pulls the scissors out and charges at Mike, but Mike quickly positions Amanda's pair of scissors sculpture so that Madson impales himself.

A closing montage shows Mike and Amanda embracing, superimposed over Margaret and Roman in happier times.

Bandage [edit]

  • Kenneth Branagh as Mike Church/Roman Strauss
  • Emma Thompson as "Grace"/Amanda Sharp/Margaret Strauss
  • Andy García as Gray Baker
  • Derek Jacobi as Franklyn Madson
  • Wayne Knight as "Piccolo" Pete Dugan
  • Robin Williams as Dr. Cozy Carlisle
  • Hanna Schygulla as Inga
  • Campbell Scott as Doug
  • Jo Anderson as Sister Madeleine
  • Lois Hall as Sister Constance
  • Richard Easton as Male parent Timothy
  • Gregor Hesse as Frankie
  • Obba Babatundé as Sid
  • Vasek Simek as Otto Kline
  • Christine Ebersole as Lydia Larson
  • Raymond Cruz as supermarket clerk

Production [edit]

According to the director'due south commentary on the DVD, the movie was filmed entirely in color. Later test screenings, it was decided to use black and white for the "past" sequences to assistance articulate upwardly audience defoliation. The final frame, one time the mystery is solved, blooms from blackness and white to color.

Release [edit]

Dead Again was released on August 23, 1991 in the Usa and Oct 25, 1991 in the United Kingdom. Information technology was later on entered into the 42nd Berlin International Motion picture Festival in February 1992.[3]

Home media [edit]

The film was released on DVD on June 27, 2000 through Paramount Home Entertainment. The DVD Special Features include 2 audio commentaries and a theatrical trailer.[iv]

It was then released for the first time on Blu-ray on October v, 2021;[5] on the film's 30th anniversary.

Reception [edit]

Disquisitional response [edit]

Dead Once again was well received by virtually critics. On Rotten Tomatoes it has an approving rating of 81% based on reviews from 48 critics.[half-dozen] On Metacritic the moving picture has a weighted average score of 66 out of 100, based on reviews from nineteen critics.[seven] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a class "A-" on calibration of A to F.[viii]

Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert gave the moving picture a glowing 4 star review, cartoon comparisons to the works of Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock, stating, "Dead Once more is Kenneth Branagh again demonstrating that he has a natural flair for bold theatrical gesture. If Henry 5, the first moving-picture show he directed and starred in, caused people to compare him to Olivier, Dead Over again volition inspire comparisons to Welles and Hitchcock - and the Olivier of Hitchcock's Rebecca. I practise not advise Branagh is already equally not bad a manager equally Welles and Hitchcock, although he has a practiced offset in that direction. What I mean is that his spirit, his daring, is in the aforementioned league. He is not interested in making timid movies."[9] James Berardinelli as well gave the film a 4 star review, praising Branagh'south direction and all levels of the production, from the screenplay past Scott Frank to Patrick Doyle's score, stating, "...Branagh has combined all of these cinematic elements into an accomplishment that rivals Hitchcock's all-time piece of work and stands out every bit i of the most intriguing and memorable thrillers of the 1990s."[10]

Peter Travers of Rolling Stone viewed the film negatively, praising some elements of Branagh's management while criticizing the romance, maxim, "In his efforts to oversupply the screen with graphic symbol and incident, Branagh cheats on the one element that might take given resonance to the mystery: the love story. Branagh and Thompson (married in existent life) are sublime actors, only they never develop a convincing avidity as either couple. How could they when the director is so decorated playing tricks? Dead Again isn't a disaster, only a miscalculation from a prodigious talent who has forgotten that you squeeze the life out of romance when yous don't requite it infinite to exhale."[xi]

Vincent Canby of The New York Times gave the film a lukewarm review, calling information technology "a big, convoluted, entertainingly dizzy romantic mystery melodrama" and concluding, "Expressionless Again is eventually a lot simpler than it pretends to be. The explanation of the mystery is a rather commonplace letdown, merely probably nothing short of mass murder could successfully top the baroque buildup. In this way, likewise, the film is faithful to its antecedents, while still being a lot of fun."[12]

In 2016, Jason Bailey at Flavorwire, repeated Roger Ebert's initial directorial comparisons, writing that, "Dead Over again is one of the most Hitchcockian thrillers this side of De Palma, with easily traceable influences of Olivier-fronted Rebecca (in the creepy, needy housekeeper), Psycho (the mysterious former mother in the side by side room), Dial M for Murder (the scissors equally murder weapon), and Spellbound (the therapeutic elements, plus a quickie reference to Salvador Dalí, who advised on that motion picture's dream sequences)".[13]

Box role [edit]

Expressionless Once again grossed $3,479,395 during its opening weekend, playing on 450 screens. Information technology eventually grossed more than $38 million by the finish of its theatrical run.[1]

Accolades [edit]

Media [edit]

Dead Again was one of several influences on the 1999 conceptual album, Metropolis pt. 2: Scenes From a Retention, past the American progressive metal band Dream Theater.[14]

Information technology was too unofficially remade into a 1998 Malayalam flick Mayilpeelikkavu and in 2008 equally Sila Nerangalil.

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "Expressionless Again (1991)". Box Office Mojo . Retrieved August 25, 2019.
  2. ^ Silver, Alain; Ward, Elizabeth; eds. (1992). Motion-picture show Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style (3rd ed.). Woodstock, New York: The Overlook Printing. ISBN 0-87951-479-5
  3. ^ "Berlinale: 1992 Programme". berlinale.de . Retrieved May 24, 2011.
  4. ^ Dead Once more (1991). ASIN 6305882525.
  5. ^ Expressionless Again Blu-ray , retrieved October xiii, 2021
  6. ^ "Expressionless Once again". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  7. ^ "Dead Again". Metacritic.
  8. ^ "Cinemascore". Archived from the original on Dec xx, 2018. Retrieved Baronial 25, 2019.
  9. ^ Ebert, Roger (August 23, 1991). "Expressionless Again". Chicago Sunday-Times . Retrieved August 24, 2019.
  10. ^ Berardinelli, James. "Expressionless Over again". ReelViews . Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  11. ^ Travers, Peter (August 23, 1991). "Dead Again". Rolling Stone . Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  12. ^ Canby, Vincent (August 23, 1991). "Dead Once more". The New York Times . Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  13. ^ "Second Glance: Kenneth Branagh's Twisty, Featherbrained 'Dead Once again'". Flavorwire. August 22, 2016. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
  14. ^ "Mike Portnoy.com The Official Website". world wide web.mikeportnoy.com . Retrieved October xxx, 2018.

External links [edit]

  • Dead Once more at IMDb

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Again

Posted by: mcdonoughonink1956.blogspot.com

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