Shattered (1991 film)
Shattered | |
---|---|
Directed by | Wolfgang Petersen |
Screenplay by | Wolfgang Petersen |
Based on | The Plastic Nightmare by Richard Neely |
Produced by | Wolfgang Petersen John Davis David Korda |
Starring | |
Cinematography | László Kovács |
Edited by | Glenn Farr Hannes Nikel |
Music by | Alan Silvestri |
Production companies | Davis Entertainment Capella Films |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
|
Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $22 million[1] |
Box office | $11.5 million (US)[2] |
Shattered is a 1991 American psychological thriller film written and directed by Wolfgang Petersen, based on the novel by Richard Neely. The film stars Tom Berenger, Greta Scacchi, Bob Hoskins, Joanne Whalley and Corbin Bernsen.[3]
Plot
[edit]While driving at night along the northern California coast, architect Dan Merrick and his wife Judith are involved in a car wreck. Dan suffers major injuries and brain trauma, resulting in psychogenic amnesia. After extensive plastic surgery, Dan returns home in Judith's care.
Dan relies on those close to him to help him restore his past, including his business partner Jeb Scott and Jeb's wife, Jenny. Dan has frequent flashbacks he believes to be events that led up to the car crash.
Dan finds discrepancies in the stories about his former self. He stumbles upon photographs of Judith sleeping with another man. Dan finds an expensive bill to a pet store and follows up with its proprietor, Gus Klein. Gus says the payment was for services provided as a private investigator to follow Judith, and it revealed she was cheating with Jack Stanton.
Judith arranges a meeting with Stanton and Dan follows her. Judith stops at an old shipwreck slated for removal by Dan's company. Assuming the wreck is a key in remembering his past, Dan has its removal postponed.
Jenny accuses Judith of planning the accident to eliminate Dan. As he works with Gus to keep tabs on his wife with a wiretap, Dan tails her to a hotel where she and Stanton are to meet, but Stanton leaves and a chase ensues through a wooded area. After gunshots are fired from Stanton's car, Dan and Gus crash while Stanton escapes.
That night at home, Dan arms himself and lies in wait. At gunpoint, an intruder is revealed as Judith disguised as Stanton. She explains that Stanton is actually dead, killed by Dan on the night of the accident. Judith had intended to stop the affair with Stanton. Judith says she and Dan covered up the murder by disposing of Stanton's body in the shipwreck. When Dan reveals he postponed the ship's removal, Judith becomes hysterical and suggests they should flee.
Dan receives a phone call from Jenny imploring him to see her, but when Dan arrives, he finds Jenny dead. He is confronted at gunpoint by Gus, who followed him, thinking Dan must have murdered Stanton. Pleading for his life, Dan convinces Gus to visit the shipwreck, where they find a chemical storage container. Dan dredges up a body of a man who looks exactly like himself. Dan realizes he is not Dan Merrick at all; he is actually Jack Stanton.
In a flashback, it is revealed that an abusive Dan confronted his wife Judith with evidence of her infidelity. She called for help and Jack raced to her home, arriving too late to prevent her from shooting her husband in the head. Jack wanted to go to the police, but Judith convinced him to cover up the murder and hide Dan's body. After doing so, Jack told Judith he wanted out of the relationship. This angered and distracted Judith, who crashed the car.
Judith had banked on the chemical dissolving Dan's body, but because it was actually formaldehyde, she had preserved it. Gus is shot by Judith and falls into the water. Judith forces Jack to leave with her. She drives erratically down the same stretch of road from the night of the accident, confessing to the murder of Jenny, saying she had figured everything out and had to be killed.
She hid the facts from Jack so he would have plausible deniability. After the crash, she told the plastic surgeons that the man she was with was her husband Dan. Distracted by a police helicopter, Judith loses control of the gun, and Jack grabs it, demanding she stop the car. Judith decides to kill them in a murder-suicide car crash. Jack, at the last second, rolls out, while she plummets to her death.
The police helicopter lands, and an injured Gus Klein emerges. Gus survived his plunge into the water after being shot thanks to his asthma inhaler. The two board the helicopter, with Gus referring to Jack as Dan, presumably securing Merrick's fortune for him. The helicopter lifts off, flying over the burning car at the bottom of the cliff before flying away towards San Francisco.
Cast
[edit]- Tom Berenger as Dan Merrick
- Greta Scacchi as Judith Merrick
- Bob Hoskins as Gus Klein
- Joanne Whalley (Joanne Whalley-Kilmer) as Jenny Scott
- Corbin Bernsen as Jeb Scott
- Scott Getlin as Jack Stanton
- Judi Maddison as Mary Wilson
- Bert Rosario as Rudy Costa
- Jedda Jones as Sadie
- Debi A. Monahan as Nancy Mercer
- Kellye Nakahara as Lydia
- Dierk Torsek as Dr. Benton
- Theodore Bikel as Dr. Berkus
Production
[edit]Filming took place during 1990 in Culver City, San Francisco and on the northern Oregon coast.[4][5]
Reception
[edit]Critical response
[edit]On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 33% based on reviews from 15 critics, with an average rating of 5.1/10.[6] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[7]
The film's twist ending has caused a division among the responses given by critics. Several critics find the revelation too ridiculous to accept, while others find it inventive and clever. Roger Ebert falls into the former category, stating that the film's resolution is "inconceivably implausible" and that the "screenplay is too clever by half." However, he goes on to say that this quality "is always sort of fun."[8] About.com falls into the latter category, calling the finale "a killer twist ending!"[6] and The Washington Post says, "It would be disastrous to even hint at the movie's denouement; a critic could get lynched for giving away an ending as shockingly unexpected as the one here. Let's just say that it blows the top of your head off."[9]
References
[edit]- ^ "German Firms Form Cinevox". Daily Variety. May 14, 1990. p. 6.
- ^ "Shattered". Box Office Mojo. IMDb.com, Inc. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
- ^ Silver, Alain; Ward, Elizabeth; eds. (1992). Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style (3rd ed.). Woodstock, New York: The Overlook Press. ISBN 0-87951-479-5
- ^ "ON LOCATION : Wolfgang Petersen's 'Shattered' Dream : The German director waited for a decade before getting his first American film produced. 'Now it's out of my system'". Los Angeles Times. 17 June 1990. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ "Filmed in Oregon 1908-2015" (PDF). Oregon Film Council. Oregon State Library. Retrieved December 27, 2015.
- ^ a b Staff. "Shattered (1991)". Rottentomatoes.com. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
- ^ "CinemaScore". cinemascore.com.
- ^ Roger Ebert (11 October 1991). "Shattered". Rogerebert.com. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
- ^ Hal Hinson (11 October 1991). "'Shattered' (R)". The Washington Post. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
External links
[edit]- 1991 films
- 1991 independent films
- 1990s mystery drama films
- 1990s mystery thriller films
- 1990s psychological thriller films
- Films about adultery in the United States
- American independent films
- American mystery drama films
- American mystery thriller films
- American psychological thriller films
- Davis Entertainment films
- Films about amnesia
- Films about road accidents and incidents
- Films based on mystery novels
- Films directed by Wolfgang Petersen
- Films scored by Alan Silvestri
- Films set in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Films shot in Oregon
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
- American neo-noir films
- 1991 drama films
- 1990s English-language films
- 1990s American films
- American serial killer films
- American police detective films
- Films about drugs
- English-language independent films