Plot
A married man's one night stand comes back to haunt him when that lover begins to stalk him and his family.
Release Year: 1987
Rating: 6.8/10 (28,602 voted)
Critic's Score: 67/100
Director:
Adrian Lyne
Stars: Michael Douglas, Glenn Close, Anne Archer
Storyline Happily married New York lawyer Dan Callagher has an affair with his colleague Alex, and the two enjoy a love weekend while Dan's wife and kid are away. But Alex will not let go of him, and she will stop at nothing to have him for herself. Just how far will she go to get what she wants?.
Writers: James Dearden, James Dearden
Cast: Michael Douglas
-
Dan Gallagher
Glenn Close
-
Alex Forrest
Anne Archer
-
Beth Gallagher
Ellen Hamilton Latzen
-
Ellen Gallagher
Stuart Pankin
-
Jimmy
Ellen Foley
-
Hildy
Fred Gwynne
-
Arthur
Meg Mundy
-
Joan Rogerson
Tom Brennan
-
Howard Rogerson
Lois Smith
-
Martha
Mike Nussbaum
-
Bob Drimmer
J.J. Johnston
-
O'Rourke
Michael Arkin
-
Lieutenant
Sam Coppola
-
Fuselli
(as Sam J. Coppola)
Eunice Prewitt
-
Receptionist
Taglines:
A look that led to an evening. A mistake he'll regret...FOR THE REST OF HIS LIFE.
Release Date: 18 September 1987
Filming Locations: 400 East 14th Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $14,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $7,602,740
(USA)
(20 September 1987)
(758 Screens)
Gross: $320,145,693
(Worldwide)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
The second highest grossing film of 1987, following
3 Men and a Baby.
Goofs:
Continuity:
The radio in Dan's car was tuned to 97.1 when he popped in the cassette tape from Alex. When he arrived home and removed the tape, the radio was tuned to 107.9.
Quotes:
[first lines]
Beth Gallagher:
[to Ellen]
You better get going, kiddo. You're gonna be late.
User Review
Justifiably one of the most talked-about movies ever
Rating:
There are a handful of movies out there that have become so
ingrained in our collective dialogue as an American society, it's
practically a crime to have not seen them. If you haven't experienced the
joy of Casablanca, you probably haven't seen from where "Here's looking at
you, kid" originally came. Ever heard someone make jokes about quarter
pounders with cheese in France? That's Pulp Fiction, ladies and gentlemen.
Ever have anyone make you an "offer you can't refure?" Well, that person's
seen The Godfather. Ever had a former one-night stand try to inflict
long-running physical and psychological pain on you and your family?
Err...probably not, but if you haven't seen 1987's Fatal Attraction,
you're
missing out on one of the biggest pop-culture phenomenons of recent
decades.
Because of Swimfan and other subpar (but, in Swimfan's case,
guiltily entertaining) efforts of tribute and homage, the plot of Fatal
Attraction (and maybe even its ending) is obvious before the movie even
starts. Adrian Lyne's (last year's magnificent Unfaithful) film is about
Dan
Gallagher (Michael Douglas), a New York lawyer with an attractive wife
(Anne
Archer) and little girl who takes a walk on the wild side one weekend and
has a passionate liason with an originally casual acquaintance, Alex
Forrest
(Glenn Close). Dan wants it all to be over right afterwards, but Alex
doesn't let him cut it off that quickly. Dan begins being harrassed by
Alex
in mounting forms of revenge that eventually reach his family - and become
deadly (cheesy writing, huh?). Alex's continual acts of vengeance aren't
easy to fight back against, though, for Dan must try to keep his secret
from
his wife and deal with the moral and legal implications that become
increasingly complicated.
If it sounds like a 'typical' movie of that sort, it is. Why?
Because it was the prototype for all the rest of them to come. One can't
really dock the movie for being the typical "affair goes dead wrong"
movie,
because it was the first one of its kind that truly perfected the formula.
It'd be like saying Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew is WAAAAY too
much
like 10 Things I Hate About You. The thing is, Fatal Attraction really
defied the expectations that I had set for it. The movie starts out kind
of
like Lyne began last year's Unfaithful - happy family together, and the
parents getting ready to go out to a soiree. At that evening's party, Dan,
while away from his wife, runs into Alex for the first time, and the
sparks
begin to fly. Now, the movie's title kind of gives away the fact that the
woman is going to go completely nuts on him later, but James Dearden's
screenplay, and Glenn Close's careful rendering of her character makes
Alex
a decent person to begin with. I was immediately impressed that Alex isn't
some creepy, eccentric vixen that looks like bad news to begin
with.
The inevitable begins, and Dan's wife and child must go away for
the weekend. Alex turns up at a meeting at Dan's law firm, and shortly
thereafter the affair begins. Right before they engage in some of the most
protracted and unintentionally funny sex in film history, Lyne gives us an
exquisite little scene in a restaurant between Dan and Alex. This is one
of
the crucial scenes in the film, for it sets the tone for the rest of the
movie. Unlike Unfaithful, the two don't spend an increasingly longer
amount
of time with each other and then hastily have sex. Their dialogue right
before their first tryst is direct. Like consenting adults, they simply
agree that they're going to do it. No dancing around his apartment to sexy
jazz music, no braille cookbook seduction. They simply sign a verbal
agreement and then go at it on the kitchen sink, complete with running
water
and Douglas's odd obsession with having Close's breast in his mouth. The
rest of their weekend consists of sex, more sex, and even more sex, with
the
obligatory 'funny scene where they almost get caught doing it in public.'
The movie really takes off on it's nail-biting, visceral course when Dan
decides he must leave.
The woman goes nuts, and that's an understatement. Calls and
unexpected visits occur. Alex calls the house, but just stays silent when
Dan's wife answers. Family pets are murdered. The tension mounts
unbearably.
The whole section of the film leading up to its exciting conclusion really
makes an amazing impact. I had a huge list of expectations for what
certain
things would happen, but most of them didn't. This may be the prototypical
erotic revenge thriller, but it certainly jumps over some of its own
limitations. Anne Archer, Dan's wife, is an interestingly written
character,
for she is unsuspecting of it all until, well, until Dan must break down
and
confess. There is no bra discovered that isn't hers, no story that doesn't
check out with someone else, no 'why have you been so distant since that
one
weekend when I left you completely alone?' All of the tension in the movie
lies with what Alex will do next to remind Dan that he can't just let her
go. The movie throws out another convention by actually letting Alex meet
Dan and his wife in an incredibly uncomfortable scene where Alex slyly
obtains their phone number after it has been changed. Fatal Attraction,
along with its incredible building suspense, becomes less and less of the
cookie-cutter genre film that it's been categorized as. This is in part
thanks to amazing work by Close. As the movie's 'villain,' she radiates a
dangerous sexuality and inital vulnerability that makes a great
combination.
Once she goes apes**t on Dan, she's simply a blast to watch. In that
'please
let me never cross paths with a woman like her' sense, of
course.
I love Fatal Attraction for much of the same reason that I loved
Unfaithful. Hidden carefully beneath the movie's "thriller" facade is
actually an excellent morality fable. This is hinted at when Alex is
introduced as a likeable, sympathetic character, but fully fleshed-out
once
Dan must go back to his family. Sure, the woman's a freak, but Dan was the
one that had the affair with her, so he's somewhat responsible. He told
her
that things would have to end, but no affair can just be extinguished like
that. When he nicely tells her that it can't continue, I actually kind of
felt bad for Alex. Sex has an emotional attachment to it that Dan tried to
put behind him, but Alex couldn't. There is a crucial plot twist
introduced
into the film nearly halfway through that I won't reveal here, but it adds
most importantly to the whole idea of Dan's moral quandry. At times, I was
torn. For a while, Alex is simply a fling that's hanging on and one
actually
feels sympathy for her somewhat. Sure, it's all dispelled by the end of
the
film, but for a while the movie really turns the preconceived notions of
its
characters upside-down. Dan is trying to get back to his family, but isn't
he somewhat of a creep for screwing around in the first place? That's the
rocky terrain of infidelity, and Lyne's film explores it with an
underlying
expertise that can be seen through all the knife-weilding and
bunny-boiling.
The movie has a handful of truly exciting, somewhat violent
scenes
that add an extra punch to its escalating progress. At one point, Dan
breaks
into Alex's apartment and has a violent encounter with her as he tells her
to quit messing with his family. Alex enacts schemes of such raw cruelty,
it's easy to understand why Dan is scared to death of her. Nothing
compares
to the movie's violent, bloody finale that has become a movie thriller
landmark (one word, guys: catfight). It's truly one of the most well-done
and exciting action scenes in film, and it's a bravura closer to a movie
that deserves nothing less. Sure, it may not do anything creative to tie
up
the ends of the movie, but I'm glad Lyne used such an explosive scene. On
the Special Edition DVD, an alternate ending can be viewed, and I was
disappointed - it may be more creative and mean more in the context of the
film (and may be technically better), but I'll stick with punches, guns,
and
knives for my revenge flick finales any day. Fatal Attraction is and
always
will be one of the most exciting, nail-bitingly intense, and entertaining
movies of all time. It got six Academy Award nominations in 1987,
including
nods to Glenn Close and Anne Archer AND Best Picture. That's a testament
to
how much of a phenomenon it was then, but the fact that it stands up so
well
even today says so much more. GRADE: A-
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