My Favourite Movies: Kiss the Girls
I’m fairly certain that I saw this 1997 film at the cinema
before I watched (and re-watched) it on DVD. It has that cinematic feel in my
mind every time I watch it – OK in a generally darkened room on a large widescreen
TV but the point stands. I can’t quite remember if I read the book before or
after though. I have a feeling it was after because I saw the second Alex Cross
film (Along Came a Spider) after reading the book – which probably explains why
that movie disappointed me.
But I digress and ramble, which is never a good combination.... Kiss the Girls is a detective
thriller set mostly in North Carolina where a number of exceptional women have
disappeared. When the niece of Alex Cross (played by the wonderful Morgan
Freeman) is added to their number he high-tails it to the area to offer his assistance
as one of the country’s top criminal psychologist’s. What he finds is a local
police department completely out of its depth and reluctant to ask for help it
doesn’t feel it needs. Things come to a head when young surgeon Dr Kate
McTiernan (played by the gorgeous and talented Ashley Judd) is kidnapped and
then manages to escape from the self-styled Casanova. Cross is convinced that
only the Doctor can help him find and release his niece and the other women
before the kidnapper (and sometimes killer) either leaves them to die or kills
them himself. The investigation itself goes slowly and is thrown into confusion
by revelations both close to home and across the continent in California. The
question that Alex must answer in time is are these just distractions or are
they vital to unravelling the case? Alex also needs to decide if he can save
his niece without destroying his career in the process.
The first thing that hit me when I watched this recently was
the cinematography which I thought was very good indeed – with sweeping panorama’s
of the woods where some of the girls had been found and the use of slow motion
to show emotional turmoil and exactly where the protagonists were focusing
their attentions. Freeman was, as I expected, superb as Cross. I know there’s a
new Alex Cross film out but Freeman isn’t in it and that, more than anything
else, is stopping me giving it a screening. Whenever I read an Alex Cross novel
I see Freeman no matter how the author describes him. For me Freeman is Cross. Understandably
I love Ashley Judd. I think I’ve only seen her in 3 movies (not counting the cameo
in Olympus Has Fallen) which are Heat, Kiss the Girls and Double Jeopardy. She
essentially plays the same character in all three. Maybe she’s been type-cast
or maybe that’s just how she acts or maybe that’s just her. Either way I can
barely take my eyes off her. The rest of the cast deserve a mention too. Cary
Elwes was suitably creepy as one of the local detectives and Brian Cox was
suitably abrasive as his boss. Lastly I’ll mention Jay O Sanders who played the
FBI lead who obviously had a history with and deep respect for Cross. They had
a good chemistry on screen and I wouldn’t be very surprised if they were
friends in real life.
3 comments:
I liked this film. I've seen it a few times. I really liked Double Jeopardy. I like movies where women aren't weak and they use their intelligence. Judd was in a short lived series, last year, I can't recall the name. She was again playing the same type of character and it was cancelled after a half dozen episodes.
v v said: I like movies where women aren't weak and they use their intelligence.
Ditto. Unfortunately they're rare beasts indeed. You would think (or am I simply being naive) that there would be more of that sort of thing about with the rise of the modern woman....
Never saw it, but it sounds like my kind of film. Added to the Netflix cue!
Post a Comment