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To Die For

 
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To Die For

  • Director: Gus Van Sant
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Black Comedy, Media Satire
  • Themes: Teachers and Students, Femmes Fatales, Dangerous Attraction
  • Main Cast: Nicole Kidman, Matt Dillon, Joaquin Phoenix, Casey Affleck, Illeana Douglas, Alison Folland
  • Release Year: 1995
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 106 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

The price of fame is murder -- or at least it is in the mind of one woman in New Hampshire. Suzanne Stone (Nicole Kidman) has spent most of her life wanting to be famous; she's attractive, speaks well, and imagines herself to be intelligent ("imagines" is the key word here), so she has set her sights on becoming a TV anchorwoman. However, opportunities for female broadcasters are hard to come by in Little Hope, New Hampshire, and she's convinced that her husband, the once handsome but now flabby restaurant manager Larry Maretto (Matt Dillon), is just getting in her way. Suzanne gets herself a spot hosting a weather report on a local public access station, and is preparing a documentary called "Teens Speak Out," which puts her in touch with a trio of high school students -- Jimmy (Joaquin Phoenix), Russell (Casey Affleck), and Lydia (Alison Folland) -- who are even more desperate for attention than she is. When Suzanne hatches a plot to get Larry out of her life once and for all, she uses Jimmy, who has developed a serious crush on her, to do her dirty work, but Larry's sister Janice (Illeana Douglas), who has long believed there was something fishy about Suzanne, eventually begins to realize what happened to her brother. Nicole Kidman won a Golden Globe award for her work in this film, which represented something of a comeback for director Gus Van Sant after the commercial and critical disaster of Even Cowgirls Get the Blues. Screenwriter Buck Henry plays a small role as a high school teacher. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Tart, entertaining, and just off-center enough to please longtime fans of director Gus Van Sant, To Die For is that rarest of creatures: a subtle satire that actually works. Quasi-documentary footage, out-of-sequence chronology, plenty of foreshadowing, and artful little flourishes keep the film from devolving into shrillness or camp, like the similarly themed Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom. Nicole Kidman deserves every bit of credibility she earned with her note-perfect performance as a power-hungry manipulator dripping with middlebrow condescension behind a careful WASP facade. Telescoping media-savvy truisms into disturbing manifestos, Kidman's Suzanne Stone voices the average American's TV aspirations, but takes them to their logical, yet monstrous, extreme. Underneath the surface, though, To Die For is as much about subtle class prejudice as it is about the media. To that end, a ridiculously rich supporting cast helps Van Sant milk Buck Henry's screenplay for every nuance and laugh. Joaquin Phoenix, Illeana Douglas, and Alison Folland are the standout players in a cast that also includes fine work from Matt Dillon, Holland Taylor, Dan Hedaya, and Wayne Knight. At this point it's not even worth pointing out that To Die For seems smarter and more prescient with every passing year; like Network before it, the film is full of tabloid outrages that already seem quaint compared to the current media landscape. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide

Cast

Conrad Coates - Weaselly Guy; Eve Crawford - Reporter; Kyra Harper - Mary Emmett; Dan Hedaya - Joe Maretto; Tim Hopper - Mike Warden; Wayne Knight - Ed Grant; Nicholas Pasco - Detective; Gerry Quigley - George; George Segal; Kurtwood Smith - Earl Stone; Holland Taylor - Carol Stone; Susan Traylor - Faye; Maria Tucci - Angela Maretto; Philip Williams - Babe Hines; David Cronenberg - Man at Lake; Buck Henry - Mr. H. Finlaysson (teacher); Simon Richards - Chester; Ian Heath - Student; Tom Quinn - Skating Promoter; Michael Rispoli - Ben DeLuca; Ron Gabriel - Sal

Credit

Howard Feuer - Casting, Beatrix Aruna Pasztor - Costume Designer, Gus Van Sant - Director, Curtiss Clayton - Editor, Joseph M. Caracciolo, Jr. - Executive Producer, Jonathan Taplin - Executive Producer, Danny Elfman - Composer (Music Score), Danny Elfman - Musical Direction/Supervision, Patricia Green - Makeup, Missy Stewart - Production Designer, Eric Alan Edwards - Cinematographer, Joseph M. Caracciolo, Jr. - Producer, Jonathan Taplin - Producer, Laura Ziskin - Producer, Carol Lavoie - Set Designer, Buck Henry - Screenwriter, Joyce Maynard - Book Author

Similar Movies

Murder in New Hampshire: The Pamela Smart Story; Seduced; The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom; Pink String and Sealing Wax; Weather Woman; Election; Weather Woman Returns; 15 Minutes; Storytelling; Novocaine; Sweet Revenge; The Big White; The Method; Mrs. Harris; Notes on a Scandal
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To Die For

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Gus Van Sant
Produced by Laura Ziskin
Written by Joyce Maynard
Buck Henry
Starring Nicole Kidman
Joaquin Phoenix
Alison Folland
Matt Dillon
Casey Affleck
Illeana Douglas
Dan Hedaya
Music by Danny Elfman
Cinematography Eric Alan Edwards
Editing by Curtiss Clayton
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) October 6, 1995
Running time 106 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $20 million
Gross revenue $21.3 million

To Die For is a 1995 dramedy written by Buck Henry, based on the novel of the same name by Joyce Maynard, which in turn was based on the Pamela Smart story. The film is directed by Gus Van Sant. It stars Nicole Kidman, Matt Dillon and Joaquin Phoenix. Major supporting roles feature Illeana Douglas, Wayne Knight, Casey Affleck, Dan Hedaya and Alison Folland. Kidman was nominated for a BAFTA and won a Golden Globe Award for her performance.

The film includes cameos by George Segal, David Cronenberg, author Maynard, and screenwriter Henry. It features original music by Danny Elfman.

Contents

Plot

Suzanne Stone (Nicole Kidman) is a young, beautiful, and ruthless woman who dreams of being a world famous news anchor despite her rather limited intellect and talent. To that end, she marries Larry Maretto (Matt Dillon), because she believes his Mafia connections will keep her financially comfortable, and starts attempting to climb the network news ladder, beginning as a weather girl at a local cable station.

When Larry, who truly loves Suzanne, starts asking her to take time off from her career to start a family, she immediately plots to get rid of him. To this end, she begins a high school project called "Teens Speak Out," and during a dancing project at her house while Larry is away, she seduces a student, Jimmy Emmett (Joaquin Phoenix), and strong-arms him and his friends into killing Larry. Jimmy is reluctant at first, but complies when Suzanne threatens to leave him if he doesn't. With his best friends, Russell Heines (Casey Affleck) and Lydia Mertz (Alison Folland), Jimmy ultimately commits the murder.

The police begin investigating when they stumble across a "Teens Speak Out" video of Suzanne at Jimmy's school in which Jimmy discreetly hints a relationship (albeit a deteriorating one, since Suzanne no longer needs Jimmy) with Suzanne. Jimmy, Russell and Lydia are arrested, but Lydia makes a deal with the police to converse with Suzanne with a tape recorder taped to her stomach, and Suzanne unwittingly reveals her hand in the murder. Despite this undeniable proof of Suzanne's guilt, however, she is acquitted in court, on the basis that the police had resorted to entrapment, and walks free. Jimmy and Russell are sentenced to life in prison and sixteen years, respectively, while Lydia goes free for her cooperation.

In the end, however, Suzanne gets her comeuppance when she fabricates a story about Larry becoming addicted to drugs, desiring to turn over a new leaf and subsequently getting killed by the drug suppliers, who wanted to keep him silent. Larry's father, Joe (Dan Hedaya), hears this on the television, and realises that Suzanne was behind his son's murder, and consequently uses his mafia connections to have her murdered. The hitman (director David Cronenberg in a cameo) lures Suzanne away from her home by pretending to be interested in publishing her life story, murders her quietly, then buries her under a frozen lake, her favorite spot, where she once skated. In a final irony, Lydia, whom Suzanne always dismissed as "trailer trash," gains national attention by telling her side of the story in a television interview, becoming a celebrity.

The final scene shows Larry's sister Janice (Illeana Douglas), practicing her figure skating on the frozen lake where Suzanne's corpse is hidden, thereby literally dancing on her grave, a symbol of biting justice considering Suzanne's habit of overshadowing Janice throughout the movie.

Cast

Production

To Die For is a mixture of styles, combining a traditional drama with darkly comic direct-to-camera monologues by Kidman's character, and mockumentary interviews, some tragic, with certain of the other characters in the film.

The film and the novel it is based on were both inspired by the facts that emerged during the trial of Pamela Smart, a school media services coordinator who was imprisoned for seducing a 16 year old student and convincing him to kill her husband. The trial was the first fully televised case in the United States. However, the film is considerably more satirical and arch than Maynard's comparatively straightforward treatment of the story.

The role of Suzanne Stone was originally offered to Meg Ryan, who turned down the part and the $5 million salary offered. Kidman, who was later cast in the role, was paid $2 million.[1]

Critical reception

The film was screened out of competition at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival.[2]

Katherine Ramsland of Crime Library describes the film as an example of a work displaying women with antisocial traits; Ramsland describes Suzanne as a "manipulator extraordinaire" who harms people through third parties.[3] In her review in the New York Times, Janet Maslin called the film "an irresistible black comedy and a wicked delight" and added, "[it] takes aim at tabloid ethics and hits a solid bull's-eye, with Ms. Kidman's teasingly beautiful Suzanne as the most alluring of media-mad monsters. The target is broad, but Gus Van Sant's film is too expertly sharp and funny for that to matter; instead, it shows off this director's slyness better than any of his work since Drugstore Cowboy . . . Both Mr. Van Sant and Ms. Kidman have reinvented themselves miraculously for this occasion, which brings out the best in all concerned."[4]

Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle said of Kidman, "[she] brings to the role layers of meaning, intention and impulse. Telling her story in close-up - as she does throughout the film - Kidman lets you see the calculation, the wheels turning, the transparent efforts to charm that succeed in charming all the same . . . her beauty and magnetism are electric. Undeniably she belongs on camera, which means it's equally undeniable that Suzanne belongs on camera. That in itself is an irony, a commentary or both."[5]

References

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