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Juonikuvaukset(1)

John Lithgow goes bananas in a crazed multiple role as a child psychologist haunted by his deranged twin in this film from Brian De Palma (who explored similar territory in his earlier feature SISTERS). Inspired by Hitchcock as well as Michael Powell's classic PEEPING TOM, this study in abnormality has child psychologist Dr. Carter Nix (Lithgow) beginning to go bonkers around his young daughter. Wife Jenny (Lolita Davidovich) is a little concerned but too guilty over her affair with another man (Steven Bauer) to do anything about it. It's not until local children start disappearing that Jenny begins to realize that her husband might be continuing the demented experiments performed on him as a child by his own father, an infamous psychiatrist who's been wanted by the police for years. As the number of missing children rises, it is up to Jenny to unravel just what is going on before her own daughter vanishes as well. (jakelijan virallinen teksti)

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Arvostelut (3)

gudaulin 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti Brian De Palma is a better director than a screenwriter, and thus his far-fetched screenplay about child abductions and experiments on them is kept afloat by excellent direction that tries to follow in the footsteps of the famous thrillers of A. Hitchcock. The film is intentionally shot in a way that makes it look about thirty years older at first glance. The film industry has produced plenty of crime thrillers and horror films about split personalities, and Raising Cain isn't among the best, but John Lithgow played his psychopath incredibly convincingly and won me over with all the nuances that this role offers. The film deserves three stars. Overall impression: 65%. If I were a psychiatrist, my rating would probably go down and there would be many professional reservations in my review. ()

JFL 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti In its official version, Raising Cain offers an imperfectly constructed yet superbly directed paraphrase of Psycho. Many of the ills that plague the version released to cinemas are remedied by the fan-made “director's cut”, which was based on the original screenplay and enthusiastically endorsed by the director himself. In both versions, however, it is not only John Lithgow’s delightfully deranged performance that stands out, but also the almost fetishistic directing. De Palma thoroughly enjoys staging spectacularly artificial but ingeniously layered scenes that come across as tableaux vivants in which kitschy surrealism is combined with exaggerated drama. ()

Mainos

J*A*S*M 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti I like weird films, but Raising Cain isn’t weird enough to be interesting, nor is it normal enough that it doesn’t feel weird. It made me suffer for most of the time, it was annoying, and if it wasn’t so well made (a walk through a building in one take), I would have no problem giving it two stars. ()

Kuvagalleria (27)