Home New

双面女郎 Single White Female(1992)

双面女郎 Single White Female(1992)

又名: 叠影狂花

导演: 巴贝特·施罗德

编剧: 唐·罗斯

主演: 布里吉特·方达 詹妮弗·杰森·李 斯蒂文·韦伯

类型: 惊悚

制片国家/地区: 美国

上映日期: 1992-08-14

片长: 107分钟 IMDb: tt0105414 豆瓣评分:6.9 下载地址:迅雷下载

简介:

    愛麗憎恨男友不忠,將他掃地出門,但是強烈的不全感又使她害怕獨居,就在她最需要陪伴時,海蒂出現了,這位害羞的新房客成了她的好姐妹,她們一塊購物、進餐、交換衣服、分享一切。直到愛麗重回男友懷抱,海蒂覺得被利用,她的地將被人取代,憤怒使她變得行為異常,染髮、改變造型,甚至一舉一動都在模仿愛麗,似乎是想取而代之。於是愛麗深入追查,發現事實的真象,而她的生命亦受到威脅‧‧‧

演员:



影评:

  1. Every once in a while, the Dream Factory bundles two prominent leading ladies together in a thriller, here is a triad of them cranked out within one decade, from 1987 to 1995. The sextet of performers is: Debra Winger and

    Theresa Russell in Bob Rafelson's BLACK WIDOW, Bridget Fonda and Jennifer Jason Leigh in Barbet Schroeder's SINGLE WHITE FEMALE, Sigourney Weaver and Holly Hunter in Jon Amiel's COPYCAT.

    Each film presents a very different relationship between these pairs. In BLACK WIDOW, Winger's desk-bound Justice Department agent Alexandra pertinaciously bird-dogs Russell's ruthless husband-killer Catharine, even though the case is not within her remit. She even gives up her job just to be near Catharine, who is husband-hunting in Hawaii. They become fast friends and their sisterly affinity almost takes on an incipient sapphic erotism (very understated though), which could be accounted for what makes Alexandra tick.

    She is driven by a strange fascination for Catharine, voluntarily putting herself between her and her new prey, French hotelier Paul Nuytten (Frey), only to be used as an incentive to prompt him to marry Catharine, a rather cunning move on the latter's part. Catharine is no ordinary femme fatale, her friendship with Alexandra might be plastic, her fang isn't, psychology-and-toxicology savvy, she can "almost" alway gets she wants. "Almost" is the operative word here. Her only misstep is that when she could do away with Alexandra in a freaky scuba-diving accident (or with malice aforethought), she thinks better of it. Chances are if Alexandra comes clean to Paul, it will upset Catharine's apple cart, that is exactly what happens, hubris is her Achilles heel. Although, the twist in the end feels more like a deus ex machina than an effectively engineered entrapment. Winger and Russell call forth enough appeal as both are cognizant of each other's disguises and true motives, with the latter leaving a more emphatically inscrutable patina of mystique that pips the former's conflicted interiority.

    SINGLE WHITE FEMALE has NYC's grandiose, beaux-arts Ansonia edifice as its main setting (with the interior of its apartment colored in a dark blue, sinister register as if it is underwater), where lives Alison Jones (Fonda, in her pixie-cut fashion plate glamour), a natty software designer. After kicking out her unfaithful boyfriend Sam (Weber), she is charmed by a new roommate Hedy Carlson (Leigh), a dowdy, seemingly unaggressive girl who will, in due time, become her worst nightmare. Hedy's obsession of Alison shows evidence of genuine psychopathology, losing the sense of boundary, becoming clingy and possessive, imitating Alison's wardrobe and coiffure, a deranged Hedy will stop at nothing to turn Alison into her dead twin sister. Along the way, noisome members of the sterner sex will be duly if unrealistically snuffed until it is down to a catfight between these two besties to duke it out.

    Schroeder's film is camper than BLACK WIDOW, eroticizing Leigh's voluptuousness in the buff, satirizing Alison's man-over-bestie fickleness, and a girl-on-girl kiss is brazenly effected as an impromptu means of self-preservation. But if Rafelson's film is a battle of wits between two intelligent women, here the suspense and thrill germinates from the physical manifestation of murderous intent, plus who doesn't want to watch Jennifer Jason Leigh go mental manically?

    Jon Amiel's COPYCAT has no levity in its molecules, it means business, a dead-serious police procedural not above baring its savage teeth with a serial killer named Peter Foley (McNamara, shamming pretty-boy innocuousness) wreaking havoc in San Francisco, outrageously taunting the police by imitating the murders of previous notorious killers like Albert DeSalvo, Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, among others. Two heroines are convened together, local homicide detective M.J. Monahan (Hunter) and Dr. Helen Hudson (Weaver), an expert of criminal psychology, especially as a profiler of serial killers, are forced to work together to crack the knotty case.

    But the catch is that Helen suffers from agoraphobia after barely surviving a vicious attack in the film's prologue, in the hands of Daryll Lee Cullum (an uglified Connick mimicking a menacing look), a deranged murderer currently sitting on the death row. So while M.J. and her partner Reuben (Mulroney, a knockout in his prime) diligently investigate the killer's M.O., a house-bound Helen becomes a sitting duck, especially when a connection between Peter and Daryll Lee is established. During the climax, Helen is coerced to relive the ordeal in the film's opening and tasked to grapple with the incapacitating agoraphobia. In the event, she and M.J. must save each other and the latter ensures that she will not make the same mistake twice.

    COPYCAT makes for a rapt viewing chiefly because of the excellent performances from the two leads. Weaver has that rousing stoical manfulness that could cow any man into capitulation, yet there is no trace of pretension or arrogance can be read on Helen's face, alternating eloquently between a professional and a victim, and sharing genuine bonhomie with Hunter, who makes a good fist of complementing Weaver's lofty stature with a dogged intensity both in her comportment and her action. At the same M.J. must ward off the micro-aggression being the only female inspector among her colleagues. Hunter navigates a delicate but totally credible way to imprint Helen's alterity on viewer's head space without falling back on stereotypes or platitudes (just watch the way she worms the truth out of a fellow policeman about who has arrived first on the crime scene, she is not just whip-smart, she has incomparable tact as well).

    Interestingly, in both SINGLE WHITE FEMALE and COPYCAT, the gay best friend trope is emplaced but fortunately with disparate outcomes. Also, both movies feature a prominent presence of computers, heralding the upcoming digital era while reminding us how technology rapidly progresses (Helen needs two desktop PCs, one for playing chess, another for online chat, wtf?). Unavoidably, those films also betray signs of its time, for example Far-Eastern descendants are portrayed as stock repugnant characters in both BLACK WIDOW and COPYCAT, James Hong's venal shamus in the former is especially created with a pungent distaste. That said, for what it is worth, those three films establish a cogent case of the complexity of female relations, may it be rapport, admiration, obsession, jealousy, or sheer enmity, and they all pass the Bechdel test with flying color.

    referential entries: Curtis Hanson's THE HAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE (1992, 7.0/10); Adrian Lyne's FATAL ATTRACTION (1987, 6.4/10); Barbet Schroeder's REVERSAL OF FORTUNE (1990, 7.4/10); Bob Rafelson's FIVE EASY PIECES (1970, 8.1/10); Nicolas Roeg's INSIGNIFICANCE (1985, 6.5/10); Joe Wright's THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW (2021, 6.4/10).

    Title:BlackWidow
    Year:1987
    Country:USA
    Language:English, French
    Genre:Crime, Drama, Mystery
    Director: Bob Rafelson
    Screenwriter: Ronald Nass
    Music:Michael Small
    Cinematography:Conrad L. Hall
    Editor: John Bloom
    Cast:
    Debra Winger
    Theresa Russell
    Sami Frey
    Nicol Williamson
    Terry O'Quinn
    James Hong
    D.W. Moffett
    Lois Smith
    Diane Ladd
    Dennis Hopper
    Danny Kamekona
    Leo Rossi
    Mary Woronov
    Rutanya Alda
    David Hamet
    Rating:6.8/10

    Title:Single White Female
    Year:1992
    Country:USA
    Language:English
    Genre:Drama, Thriller
    Director: Barbet Schroeder
    Screenwriter: Don Roos
    based on the novel "SWF Seeks Same" by John Lutz
    Music:Howard Shore
    Cinematography:Luciano Tovoli
    Editor: Lee Percy
    Cast:
    Bridget Fonda
    Jennifer Jason Leigh
    Steven Weber
    Peter Friedman
    Stephen Tobolowsky
    Frances Bay
    Rating:6.4/10

    Title:Copycat
    Year:1995
    Country:USA
    Language:English
    Genre:Crime, Mystery, Thriller
    Director: Jon Amiel
    Screenwriters: Ann Biderman, David Madsen
    Music:Christopher Young
    Cinematography:László Kovács
    Editors: Jim Clark, Alan Heim
    Cast:
    Sigourney Weaver
    Holly Hunter
    William McNamara
    Dermot Mulroney
    J.E. Freeman
    Will Patton
    Harry Connick Jr.
    John Rothman
    Rebecca Klingler
    Kelvin Han Yee
    Rating:6.9/10

  2. 我在Youtube上花了十二刀买了这部电影,结果是这样的劣作……

    剧情肯定是老套路,毫无悬念,放在九十年代也不显得有多新奇。

    我本以为有什么百合情节。两个女主虽然有不少两点全露的镜头,但也没什么精彩部分。你让两个女子抱一抱,亲几口,互相舔一下,就能打四星?RNM退钱

    JJL的脸的确很好看,就那种不耐烦,有点凶狠,像只被惹怒的猫咪那样,挺可爱的;芳达如果是金发会好看很多,戏里面的发型实在非主流。

  3. 詹尼佛.杰森.里和布里奇特.方达 都有好莱坞显赫的家世 可惜亮作不多 始终未能挤上一线 如今也鲜见人影了