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| Release date: 16
December 1988 (USA) |
| Directed by Stephen
Frears |
| Story: |
(Amazon.com Essentials) A
sumptuously mounted and photographed celebration of artful
wickedness, betrayal, and sexual intrigue among depraved 18th-century
French aristocrats, Dangerous Liaisons (based on Christopher
Hampton's Les Liaisons Dangereuses) is seductively decadent
fun. The villainous heroes are the Marquise De Merteuil (Glenn
Close) and the Vicomte De Valmont (John Malkovich), who have
cultivated their mutual cynicism into a highly developed and
exquisitely mannered form of (in-)human expression. Former
lovers, they now fancy themselves rather like demigods whose
mutual desires have evolved beyond the crudeness of sex or
emotion. They ritualistically act out their twisted affections
by engaging in elaborate conspiracies to destroy the lives
of their less calculating acquaintances, daring each other
to ever-more-dastardly acts of manipulation and betrayal. Why?
Just because they can; it's their perverted way of getting
get their kicks in a dead-end, pre-Revolutionary culture. Among
their voluptuous and virtuous prey are fair-haired angels played
by Michelle Pfeiffer and Uma Thurman, who have never looked
more ripe for ravishing. When the Vicomte finds himself beset
by bewilderingly genuine emotions for one of his victims, the
Marquise considers it the ultimate betrayal and plots her heartless
revenge. Dangerous Liaisons is a high-mannered revel for the
actors, who also include Swoosie Kurtz, Mildred Natwick, and
Keanu Reeves. --Jim Emerson |
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| GALLERY |
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| PRESS |
| Japan program cover |
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| Hong Kong movie
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| REVIEW |
| coming
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