|
Jagged Edge |  | Director: Richard Marquand Actors: Glenn Close, Maria Mayenzet, Jeff Bridges, Peter Coyote, Dave Austin Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Category: Movie
This item is no longer available
Rating: 31 reviews Sales Rank: 34931
Genre: Drama Rating: R (Restricted) Media: Video On Demand Running Time: 110 Minutes
ASIN: B001EUJHPO
Theatrical Release Date: October 3, 1985 Release Date: April 1, 2009
| |
| Synopsis:
San Francisco heiress Page Forrester is brutally murdered in her remote beach house. Her husband Jack is devastated by the crime but soon finds himself accused of her murder. He hires lawyer Teddy Barnes to defend him, despite the fact she hasn't handled a criminal case for many years. There's a certain chemistry between them and Teddy soon finds herself defending the man she loves. |
| Similar Items:
| |
| Customer Reviews: Jagged Edge August 25, 2010 MAGG 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Received video in good time and was in excellent condition. I would highly recommend this seller.
Sincerely,
Margaret Madden
engaging, but neither memorable nor a candidate for re-watch January 28, 2010 Robert J. Crawford (Balmette Talloires, France) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This film has a lot going for it. The cast is absolutely superb, with Bridges as a mysterious and charming defendant who seduces his lawyer, Close. The lawyer has many issues she is struggling with: a divorcee single mother, career choices that haunt her with guilt, and a case that saps her flagging energy. Thus, it is supposed to be a thriller with realistic people, and it succeeds at it. Unfortunately, it leaves an unsatisfying feeling at the end, which is a deus ex machina non-surprise. Nonetheless, it is pretty good, just not great.
I would recommend renting this rather than guying it.
a mystery of lies January 16, 2010 R. Bagula (Lakeside, Ca United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This plot has been recycled at least twice with sex roles reversed at least once.
The rich spouse is killed by the husband / wife and the defense lawyer is seduced by the killer
so that the laywer gets the killer off only to find that because
the facts come out the lawyer ( sometimes detective) is next on the death list.
This version is fair to well done and the acting is very good.
Since the plot is recycled from a movie that did it better
not ten years ago, the result is nothing to write home about.
Suspenseful yet Unbelievable! June 24, 2009 Anony Mous (Los Angeles) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This courtroom drama was very well acted by Glend Close and Jeff Bridges,and well directed by Richard Marquand. Though very well plotted by Eszterhas, the ending was completely unbelievable.
SPOILER: The suspect, who was actually the murderer, wrote letters on a typewriter that had a defective t key--the t was slightly higher than all the other letters and stood out clearly. He kept the typewriter in his house. A police search would have uncovered the typewriter, and the typewriter would have been linked to the murderer's letters. Dumb. No murderer with Bridge's intelligence would have written those letters on his own machine--he would have known that it could have been linked to him. Instead, he would have used one from the public library or from a display model in a store that sells typewriters. Then no one would have been able to trace the letters to him.
Nonetheless, up until the above blunder, the story is very suspenseful and absorbing and is worth watching. It is much better than "Eye for an Eye" which has a similar theme and makes a similar unbelievable ending mistake.
If I wanted to see a competent thriller with a professional and polished cast, then why did I choose a Joe Eszterhas flick? June 24, 2009 C. CRADDOCK (Bakersfield) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Joe Eszterhas had throat cancer so he got religion. He had to learn to speak like a robot through a reconstructed larnyx. It almost seems as if he has repented of his evil ways -- and good for him -- but he hasn't written a hit movie since. A case could be made that his best movies are pure evil, so trashy and manipulative that you can't believe the audacity of the man. Showgirls and Basic Instinct come to mind. So bad they're good? Could be.
Sliver and Jade, however, are so bad they are just bad. As for An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn, it may have been his revenge on Hollywood. At any rate, if you are going to leave Hollywood, it is better to go out in a blaze of glory. Haven't seen An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn, but I am nevertheless intrigued because Alan Smithee is the name that studios use when the director refuses to even let them use his name -- when a project is THAT bad. Given the Eszterhas track record, who better to bring that story to the silver screen?
Joe E. claims he will make a comeback, that he can write a hit movie without having to compromise his religious principles. Maybe he can do something for Mel Gibson?
In his heyday, he operated on the principle that Hollywood is driven by greed, and that they would pay a lot of money for a good script, no matter how trashy and hackneyed, and no matter what a jerk the writer was; IF they thought it would make them a lot of MONEY. Here is a man who demanded AND received millions of dollars for ideas he scribbled on napkins over lunch. Sometimes the gamble paid off, and sometimes it went down in flames.
Jagged Edge is actually a pretty good film, with great performances by Glenn Close, Jeff Bridges, Peter Coyote, and Robert Loggia, as Sam Ransom, the hard boiled private dick with a potty mouth that just won't quit.
Glenn Close plays former Assistant District Attroney Teddy Barnes. She has worked with Krasny (Peter Coyote), the D.A. before. She used to work for the prosecution, but now she plays defense. She knows that Krasny doesn't play fair, and she feels guilty that they have convicted innocents in their zeal for Mean Justice.
Glenn comes close to perhaps her best performance (the one she did in Fatal Attraction), and Jeff bridges the gap between a cold blooded killer, and a charming guy falsely accused of a crime he didn't commit. You are never sure which it is, and I wouldn't spoil it for ya.
Peter Coyote as the D.A., an over zealous prosecutor who will stop at nothing to get a conviction, really rang true for me. The ends justify the means, but then you end up with Mean Justice* (*good title for a book, hint, hint, hint).
What you have in Jagged Ed ge is a competent thriller with a very professional cast. They all put in very polished performances -- which is why the movie is such a big disappointment. If I wanted to see a competent thriller with a professional and polished cast, then why did I choose a Joe Eszterhas flick?
The Big Lebowski - 10th Anniversary Edition (1998) .... Jeff Bridges was Jeffrey Lebowski - The Dude
Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn (1997) (written by Joe Eszterhas)
Jade (1995) (written by Joe Eszterhas)
Showgirls (1995) (written by Joe Eszterhas)
Sliver (Unrated Edition) (1993) (screenplay by Joe Eszterhas)
Basic Instinct (1992) (written by Joe Eszterhas)
Bitter Moon (1992) .... Peter Coyote was Oscar
Dangerous Liaisons (1988) .... Glenn Close was Marquise Isabelle de Merteuil
Fatal Attraction (1987) .... Glenn Close was Alex Forrest
Flashdance (1983) (screenplay by Joe Eszterhas)
Teddy Barnes: Did your mother ever wash your mouth out with soap and water?
Sam Ransom: Yeah, but it didn't do any ****ing good.
|
|
|
CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME. Thalasar Ventures | |