23 opiniones
It seems like Larry Cohen was trying to emulate DePalma with this ambitious, but poorly realized knock off of "Body Double." Some nice sets and decent shots cannot change the fact that Zoe Tamerlis is the WORST actress ever captured on film. If you thought Bo Derek or Pia Zadora were bad actresses, then after seeing Zoe in THIS, those ladies will look like Kathryn Hepburn and Meryl Streep by comparison. Usually poor acting isn't too much of a distraction if the material is good, but every time Tamerlis speaks it is painful. Eric Bogasian and Brad Rijn fare much better. Larry Cohen has made so many great movies, mostly in the 1970's, which seemed to be his decade. Interestingly he made another film the same year as "Special Effects," called "Perfect Strangers," which is actually MUCH better than this one. Strangely it's not nearly as well-known, probably due to the fact that it isn't flashy, and loaded with sex and violence. You do get plenty of that in this film. My advice is to skip this one and seek out "Perfect Strangers" instead. This movie gave me a headache, and I feel like i lost some brain cells in the process.
- Falconeer
- 12 mar 2018
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Larry Cohen's "Special Effects" is an average snuff-themed horror film.Eric Bogosian plays here an on-the-decline director who murders a starlet(brilliant Zoe Tamerlis,who sadly died in 1999)on camera and decides to use a dead ringer to make a film about the killing."Special Effects" is average-the script is mediocre and the action is dull at times.Still the snuff/murder scene(the strangling)is pretty nasty!The ending is also effective.All in all I'd recommend this film for undemanding horror fans-it's really nothing special,but if you want a passable time-killer...
- HumanoidOfFlesh
- 20 oct 2002
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I'm a really big fan and admirer of writer/director Larry Cohen. Are cult, horror and exploitation fanatics even fully aware of all the things he did?!? Cohen co-created the super successful Blaxploitation genre, with milestones like "Bone", "Black Caesar" and "Hell up in Harlem". He also invented the bizarrely uniquely and blackly comical monster trilogy "It's Alive", as well as several other imaginative and unforgettable horror gems like "The Stuff", "Q – The Winged Serpent" and "The Ambulance". Larry Cohen is also a very versatile and experimental director who even tried out religious thriller ("God told me to"), werewolf comedy ("Full Moon High") and political biography ("The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover"). But I'll also tell you what Larry Cohen is not, though
He's not Brian DePalma. Cohen penned it down for himself to direct, but here's one script he maybe should have donated to De Palma
With its convoluted plot and an ambiance reminiscent to "Blow Out" and "Obsession", this film is straight up the alley of Brian De Palma and he presumably would have done more with it. "Special Effects" is a very Hitchcockian thriller about a flamboyant but failing NY movie director who goes berserk whilst seducing an aspiring young actress and strangles her on camera. He – Chris Neville – dumps her body on Coney Island but after meeting his victim's desperate husband he develops the brilliant idea of turning is crime into a movie! He casts the husband as the naive culprit, an unknown look-alike as the willing victims and he even hires the investigating police detective as counselor. Half dark satire and half serious thriller, "Special Effects" is overly talkative and quite often too dull. In sheer contrast to Cohen's other films, there's very little violence and bloodshed in this movie, but the two murder sequences that are shown are quite unsettling and macabre. Practically all characters are hateful and unidentifiable, even the ones that are supposed to be likable ones. I'm not a fan of Eric Bosogian, but he's ideally cast as the megalomaniac director, who lives in a bizarrely decorated loft full of flowers and ugly relics. Zoë Tamerlis stars in a double role, as the strangled actress and her dead ringer, but doesn't impress in either of them. Tamerlis is considered a cult heroine by many exploitation fanatics, but apart from her sole legendary role in Abel Ferrara's "Ms. 45" and dying far too young she didn't really accomplish a lot. Who knows, perhaps the whole "aspiring actresses dying whilst trying" premise was Larry Cohen's own personal tribute to Dorothy Stratten who tragically died at the age of 20 in 1980. Like Tamerlis' character in the beginning of the film, Stratten also was a naive and overly enthusiast young beauty who surrounded herself with the wrong men. By getting murdered at such a tender age, before her career even properly started, she became more famous and legendary that an actual long-running career ever could have made her.
- Coventry
- 20 sep 2016
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Keefe Waterman (Brad Rijn) travels to New York to find his wife Mary-Jean (Zoë Lund), who has abandoned him and their young son to find fame and fortune as a movie actress. Mary-Jean, now going by the name of Andrea Wilcox, is none too pleased to see her husband, and escapes to the swanky pad of film director Christopher Neville (Eric Bogosian), who talks the woman into his bed. However, when the aspiring actress realises that Neville is filming their romp, she rejects him, which leads to the director strangling her to death.
The discovery of the strangled woman's body in her car on wasteland leads to the arrest of Keefe, but he is bailed out by Neville, who reveals that he is intending to make a film about the murder, with Keefe playing himself. All they need is someone to play Mary Jean. That person is Elaine Bernstein (also played by Lund), an exact double of the dead woman. The filming commences, with Neville planning to splice in the actual footage of the murder into his movie. His plan also involves setting up Keefe for an exciting final act in which the young man dies - for real!
Special Effects is B-movie director Larry Cohen's attempt at a sexy, sophisticated thriller al la Brian De Palma, a film that attempts to say something meaningful about the world of movie-making, in particular the way in which film-makers can use the medium to break down the boundaries between reality and make-believe. Perhaps if Cohen had employed better actors than Zoë Lund and Brad Rijn as his protagonists, the theme of blurring of illusion and real life might have been more effective, but at no point are his performers remotely believable. Eric Bogosian, as murderous director Christopher Neville, is a much better actor, but even he can't make this trite nonsense bearable, his character insufferable (he would have been more chilling had he been more charismatic).
True to his B-movie roots, Cohen ensures there's some nudity, sex and a modicum of violence, and one can't help but feel that, in trying to be stylish and classy, the director is punching way above his weight, and that things would have been much better had he just been out and out exploitative in his approach.
3.5/10, rounded down to 3 for the extremely intrusive and irritating synth score.
The discovery of the strangled woman's body in her car on wasteland leads to the arrest of Keefe, but he is bailed out by Neville, who reveals that he is intending to make a film about the murder, with Keefe playing himself. All they need is someone to play Mary Jean. That person is Elaine Bernstein (also played by Lund), an exact double of the dead woman. The filming commences, with Neville planning to splice in the actual footage of the murder into his movie. His plan also involves setting up Keefe for an exciting final act in which the young man dies - for real!
Special Effects is B-movie director Larry Cohen's attempt at a sexy, sophisticated thriller al la Brian De Palma, a film that attempts to say something meaningful about the world of movie-making, in particular the way in which film-makers can use the medium to break down the boundaries between reality and make-believe. Perhaps if Cohen had employed better actors than Zoë Lund and Brad Rijn as his protagonists, the theme of blurring of illusion and real life might have been more effective, but at no point are his performers remotely believable. Eric Bogosian, as murderous director Christopher Neville, is a much better actor, but even he can't make this trite nonsense bearable, his character insufferable (he would have been more chilling had he been more charismatic).
True to his B-movie roots, Cohen ensures there's some nudity, sex and a modicum of violence, and one can't help but feel that, in trying to be stylish and classy, the director is punching way above his weight, and that things would have been much better had he just been out and out exploitative in his approach.
3.5/10, rounded down to 3 for the extremely intrusive and irritating synth score.
- BA_Harrison
- 29 jun 2020
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Eric Bogosian of "Talk Radio" fame stars as Chris Neville, a hotshot young filmmaker. His career is going downhill fast, so he decides to try something unusual. He films himself murdering aspiring starlet Mary Jean (the late Zoe Lund of "Ms. 45" cult stardom), then proceeds to make a movie telling Mary Jeans' sad life. Swept into the filmmaking process are Mary Jeans' husband Keefe (Brad Rijn, "Smithereens"), and the detective (Kevin O'Connor, "Let's Scare Jessica to Death") investigating the case; the detective quickly gets stars in his eyes. Neville actually finds a young woman who's a dead ringer for the murdered actress, also played by Lund.
There is a good idea here, about satirizing the entire movie-making business, and showing what happens as real life and reel life blend together. It's written and directed by low budget movie icon Larry Cohen, so you know that he will come up with some interesting material, and movie moments. (It IS intriguing to think what a filmmaker of Brian De Palmas' sensibilities could have done with this!) It's a good blend of art and trash, with a little bit of sex and shots of the beautiful Lund baring her body. It's also a marvel of art direction: dig that garish studio and townhouse in which Neville does his dirty work. Perhaps the most entertainment value arises out of O'Connor enjoying his "technical adviser" capacity and becoming fixated on receiving the appropriate credits. Given that Neville is such a smarmy character, you watch and keep waiting for him to get his just desserts. Michael Minard supplies a fun electronic score that unfortunately is used a little too much.
The performances are fine. Lund has a field day in her dual roles. Bogosian is superb as the creepy director. Rijn, O'Connor, Bill Oland, H. Richard Greene ('Mad Men'), and Steven Pudenz offer fine support.
The most striking image of all: Neville standing on a floor completely covered with headshots. (Among those he thumbs through is one of Dustin Hoffman as "Dorothy Michaels" in "Tootsie".)
Seven out of 10.
There is a good idea here, about satirizing the entire movie-making business, and showing what happens as real life and reel life blend together. It's written and directed by low budget movie icon Larry Cohen, so you know that he will come up with some interesting material, and movie moments. (It IS intriguing to think what a filmmaker of Brian De Palmas' sensibilities could have done with this!) It's a good blend of art and trash, with a little bit of sex and shots of the beautiful Lund baring her body. It's also a marvel of art direction: dig that garish studio and townhouse in which Neville does his dirty work. Perhaps the most entertainment value arises out of O'Connor enjoying his "technical adviser" capacity and becoming fixated on receiving the appropriate credits. Given that Neville is such a smarmy character, you watch and keep waiting for him to get his just desserts. Michael Minard supplies a fun electronic score that unfortunately is used a little too much.
The performances are fine. Lund has a field day in her dual roles. Bogosian is superb as the creepy director. Rijn, O'Connor, Bill Oland, H. Richard Greene ('Mad Men'), and Steven Pudenz offer fine support.
The most striking image of all: Neville standing on a floor completely covered with headshots. (Among those he thumbs through is one of Dustin Hoffman as "Dorothy Michaels" in "Tootsie".)
Seven out of 10.
- Hey_Sweden
- 29 mar 2017
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After making a disastrous, special-effects laden film, a movie director decides to make a low budget biography of a murdered actress. To make her murder look as real as possible the director murders the actress himself. Could have been a very good film about snuff films, but the film's direction is a letdown. Zoe (Ms. 45) Lund (in a dual role) and particularly Eric Bogosian are very good in their respective roles of the murdered actress and the actress playing her, and the Cecil B. Demented director. Brian DePalma would have had a field day with this film.
- mrseldomseen
- 21 ago 2000
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"Special Effects" follows a filmmaker who murders a naive, wannabe actress in his New York City home. After, he cons the woman's ex-husband into appearing in his film about her life and demise, attempting to recreate her murder with a lookalike actress.
Larry Cohen is alternately considered an auteur and utter hack depending on which critical circles you ask, and I frankly have not seen enough of his work to make a judgment call. That said, "Special Effects" is a bit of a tiresome thriller that juggles some interesting ideas surrounding self-reflexivity and voyeurism, but as a movie, never quite satisfies.
Part of this is due to the screenplay feeling lopsided and disorienting, and Eric Bogosian frankly does not make for an effective or menacing villain. The lack of threat and any sense of true danger legitimately strips the film of suspense, which is ironic given Cohen's clear admiration for Hitchcock. Zoe Lund's performance here is effective as Elaine (the second actress who becomes a vessel for Bogosian's replication of reality), but her turn as the naive Texas woman who first meets her demise is laughably bad. Brad Rijn is a serviceable and handsome leading man, though his chemistry with the other actors feels shaky. Like with most of the film, the pacing and tone of the finale is bizarre and feels rushed and slightly sloppy, though it is ostensibly the only moment where Cohen seems to ramp up toward something daring.
In the end, "Special Effects" feels like a lost opportunity. Its core thematic ideas are intriguing, but the execution is half-witted and feels quite sloppy at times. Save for Lund's turn as would-be-dead-girl-number-two and some time capsule photography of 1980s Manhattan, there is frankly not a whole lot to praise here. Worth a watch for hardcore genre fans, but that's about it. 5/10.
Larry Cohen is alternately considered an auteur and utter hack depending on which critical circles you ask, and I frankly have not seen enough of his work to make a judgment call. That said, "Special Effects" is a bit of a tiresome thriller that juggles some interesting ideas surrounding self-reflexivity and voyeurism, but as a movie, never quite satisfies.
Part of this is due to the screenplay feeling lopsided and disorienting, and Eric Bogosian frankly does not make for an effective or menacing villain. The lack of threat and any sense of true danger legitimately strips the film of suspense, which is ironic given Cohen's clear admiration for Hitchcock. Zoe Lund's performance here is effective as Elaine (the second actress who becomes a vessel for Bogosian's replication of reality), but her turn as the naive Texas woman who first meets her demise is laughably bad. Brad Rijn is a serviceable and handsome leading man, though his chemistry with the other actors feels shaky. Like with most of the film, the pacing and tone of the finale is bizarre and feels rushed and slightly sloppy, though it is ostensibly the only moment where Cohen seems to ramp up toward something daring.
In the end, "Special Effects" feels like a lost opportunity. Its core thematic ideas are intriguing, but the execution is half-witted and feels quite sloppy at times. Save for Lund's turn as would-be-dead-girl-number-two and some time capsule photography of 1980s Manhattan, there is frankly not a whole lot to praise here. Worth a watch for hardcore genre fans, but that's about it. 5/10.
- drownsoda90
- 18 sep 2018
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"Special Effects" could easily pass for a weak episode of "Columbo", except for two things. There is nudity and there is no Peter Falk. I can just imagine an episode titled "Reel Death" on my television screen. This is not far fetched, as director Larry Cohen wrote no less than three episodes of "Columbo". Unfortunately "Special Effects" has problems. The gorgeous Zoe Tamerlis would not be one of them, that is until she opens her mouth. Her acting was perfect in Ms.45 since she played a mute. The New York locations and Eric Bogosian's artistically decorated film studio offer more entertainment than the film itself, which is almost awful ........................... MERK
- merklekranz
- 5 ago 2010
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- paulclaassen
- 26 ago 2023
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- Scarecrow-88
- 24 jun 2010
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- ksf-2
- 25 ago 2021
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- bigpappa1--2
- 26 jun 2000
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This was a laughably awful train wreck of a movie. It has some of the worst acting ever committed to celluloid. Zoe Lund is one of the most annoying, terrible actors I've ever seen. If Larry Cohen picked a random person off the street to star in the film, she would have done a better job than Zoe Lund. Zoe Lund couldn't have done a worse job if she read her lines off of cue cards. I don't know how any competent director could look at her abysmal performance and think the film was worth releasing. Brad Rijn is also an awful actor, who puts on a hilariously bad accent, and does the film no favors. Add to that the fact that Eric Bogosian turns in a pathetic, inept performance, and it makes the film a real slog. In addition to the awful acting, you get the z-grade, incompetent directing and writing of Larry Cohen. He attempts to imbue this film with some pathetic, third rate Hitchcockian by way of De Palma characterization and atmosphere, but he fails completely. Also, the score is an annoying, tepid stew of random drum machine sounds and uninspired synth washes. A big fail all around.
- firma_ment
- 7 sep 2021
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Special Effects is kind of a serious parody, if that makes any sense, of what De Palma did back in the 80's (or perhaps Larry Cohen's work too), where a filmmaker becomes a murderer when he lets in a would-be actress to his home, films having sex with her and also films the act of death. But instead of going on the run or just hiding it and going on with his life, he decides to make a movie about this girl, using Keefe, the girl's husband (played by Brad Rijn), getting a police detective to be a consultant (because who needs to solve any crimes) and, via Keefe making a trip to the Salvation Army and her just happening to work there, a girl who with a hair change looks just like the dead Andrea Wilcox (both played by Zoe Lund of Ms 45 fame).
Eric Bogosian is the reason to see the movie, playing this nasty, brutal director with some level of... do we call it humanity? He sometimes plays it over the top, but not in a way where it chews the scenery. He is really there to be the best actor he can be, which is more than can be said of Lund (who is maybe half-good, not as Wilcox but as the 'new' Andrea, Elaine), and certainly not Rijn, who tellingly only made a few movies and is just terrible here as this angry, despondent husband.
Maybe the problem is that Cohen is just a bit too obvious with his satire, or maybe, in a way, not obvious enough. This should be really funny - once or twice I did laugh, more from the police detective's meddling - and when he does an actual sex scene with two characters it stops the movie dead in its tracks. Special Effects has a little fun with its premise, which is rather dark and takes not just from De Palma but liberally from Hitchcock (Vertigo, duh) and even Peeping Tom with the idea of a camera that, ahem, kills in its way. It also has a rather obnoxious 80's synth soundtrack, which could be fine in small doses but is laid over every scene like a cocaine-diddled cloak. And the horror scenes, when they come, are kind of shoddily filmed.
But, again, if you like Eric Bogosian, this is one of his better performances, and a good indication of what he would do later in the decade with Talk Radio.
Eric Bogosian is the reason to see the movie, playing this nasty, brutal director with some level of... do we call it humanity? He sometimes plays it over the top, but not in a way where it chews the scenery. He is really there to be the best actor he can be, which is more than can be said of Lund (who is maybe half-good, not as Wilcox but as the 'new' Andrea, Elaine), and certainly not Rijn, who tellingly only made a few movies and is just terrible here as this angry, despondent husband.
Maybe the problem is that Cohen is just a bit too obvious with his satire, or maybe, in a way, not obvious enough. This should be really funny - once or twice I did laugh, more from the police detective's meddling - and when he does an actual sex scene with two characters it stops the movie dead in its tracks. Special Effects has a little fun with its premise, which is rather dark and takes not just from De Palma but liberally from Hitchcock (Vertigo, duh) and even Peeping Tom with the idea of a camera that, ahem, kills in its way. It also has a rather obnoxious 80's synth soundtrack, which could be fine in small doses but is laid over every scene like a cocaine-diddled cloak. And the horror scenes, when they come, are kind of shoddily filmed.
But, again, if you like Eric Bogosian, this is one of his better performances, and a good indication of what he would do later in the decade with Talk Radio.
- Quinoa1984
- 10 jun 2015
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Directed by Larry Cohen. Starring Eric Bogosian, Zoë Tamerlis, Brad Rijn, Kevin O'Connor, Bill Oland, H. Richard Greene, Steven Pudenz. (R)
Disgruntled filmmaker Bogosian pressures an actress (Tamerlis) into a sexual encounter before murdering her, then decides to make a movie about the incident using the slain girl's husband (Rijn) and a lookalike (also played by Tamerlis). Strange but tantalizing premise and subject matter is ultimately undone by lack of credibility, ineffective execution of style (heavily indebted to Brian De Palma's Hitchcock homage/plagiarization phase), and Tamerlis' poor performances, one of which is also poorly dubbed. Writer/director Cohen is clearly fascinated by the confusion of reality and invention (and seems to be exorcising some film industry demons through Bogosian's egotism), but the results are far too uneven and underwhelming to invest the effort. For no apparent reason (other than maybe an out-of-place throwaway joke?), one of the head shots that Bogosian reviews while trying to find the right actress for his movie is of Dustin Hoffman in his "Tootsie" get-up.
40/100
Disgruntled filmmaker Bogosian pressures an actress (Tamerlis) into a sexual encounter before murdering her, then decides to make a movie about the incident using the slain girl's husband (Rijn) and a lookalike (also played by Tamerlis). Strange but tantalizing premise and subject matter is ultimately undone by lack of credibility, ineffective execution of style (heavily indebted to Brian De Palma's Hitchcock homage/plagiarization phase), and Tamerlis' poor performances, one of which is also poorly dubbed. Writer/director Cohen is clearly fascinated by the confusion of reality and invention (and seems to be exorcising some film industry demons through Bogosian's egotism), but the results are far too uneven and underwhelming to invest the effort. For no apparent reason (other than maybe an out-of-place throwaway joke?), one of the head shots that Bogosian reviews while trying to find the right actress for his movie is of Dustin Hoffman in his "Tootsie" get-up.
40/100
- fntstcplnt
- 13 mar 2020
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I recently watched Special Effects (1984) on Tubi. The story follows a director on the brink of a career collapse who decides to sell his home and invest everything he has into one final film. He recruits actors and plans to make this project as real as possible-perhaps even more real than the cast is prepared for.
Directed by Larry Cohen (It's Alive), the film stars Zoe Lund (Bad Lieutenant), Eric Bogosian (Uncut Gems), Brad Rijn (Perfect Strangers), and H. Richard Greene (Armageddon).
This film features an entertaining premise, intriguing subplots, and a devious, unpredictable villain that keeps your attention. The opening photo shoot is fun, and there are plenty of twists and turns you won't see coming. However, the ending doesn't quite live up to the setup.
In conclusion, Special Effects has enough worthwhile elements to keep you invested, though it ultimately doesn't quite stick the landing. I'd score it 5/10 and recommend it only if you have the appropriate expectations.
Directed by Larry Cohen (It's Alive), the film stars Zoe Lund (Bad Lieutenant), Eric Bogosian (Uncut Gems), Brad Rijn (Perfect Strangers), and H. Richard Greene (Armageddon).
This film features an entertaining premise, intriguing subplots, and a devious, unpredictable villain that keeps your attention. The opening photo shoot is fun, and there are plenty of twists and turns you won't see coming. However, the ending doesn't quite live up to the setup.
In conclusion, Special Effects has enough worthwhile elements to keep you invested, though it ultimately doesn't quite stick the landing. I'd score it 5/10 and recommend it only if you have the appropriate expectations.
- kevin_robbins
- 4 abr 2025
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Nicely twisted and rather unpredictable thriller, with a very interesting character played by Bogosian. Worth a check...
- Parca
- 12 jul 1999
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- anaconda-40658
- 25 ene 2016
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- Woodyanders
- 5 ago 2009
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- monstermonkeyhead
- 8 dic 2004
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'Special effects' takes longer than I would like to really pick up. In characterizations, dialogue, and the orchestration of some scenes, the writing in maybe the first half is notably rough around the edges. Even as the film becomes increasingly engrossing, there's a certain off-putting gracelessness at times to how it's crafted, and the result is a bit uneven. Yet overall the narrative is swell - the concept is outstanding - and movie as a whole is well worth checking out.
The casting is immediately striking. Zoë Lund's name and face are emphasized, and for good reason - much to my delight, she takes on two roles here. The quiet poise she demonstrated in Abel Ferrara's 'Ms .45' was alluring, and here we get to see even greater range in very different parts. The ease with which she inhabits different characters is captivating, and it's a joy to watch her. Eric Bogosian, deservedly acclaimed actor, carries himself with a sobriety that matches the unmistakable timbre of his voice, and the steadiness in his portrayal of film-maker Chris Neville is absorbing. Brad Rijn is far less recognizable, bearing few credits to his name, and his acting as Keefe Waterman does leave a bit to be desired - yet he still adequately captures the range of confused, conflicting, heightened emotions of the character. If 'Special effects' is to be his greatest claim to fame, than it was a solid one.
Larry Cohen's direction is more balanced than his writing. While some of his scenes don't come off well in their arrangement as written, most do, and there's no doubting he has a fine eye behind the camera. Just as he builds tension and suspense with scene composition, he captures some marvelous shots - cigarette smoke under a street light, an organization of casting photos, characters silhouetted against bright light, unconventional angles, and more.
The building thrills are mesmerizing, and the great cast is aided by impeccable work from hair and makeup departments, lighting, set design and decoration, location scouts, costume designers, and props. Composer Michael Minard's music lends further to the noir-esque atmosphere and excitement. And the sum total is a picture that at turns seems playfully sardonic, like a few simple changes could have made it a vehicle for Peter Falk as Columbo - and also deviously twisted, reminding of a psychological thriller in the way that the movie within a movie impacts characters' mindsets.
For all the deficiencies that come out at one point or another - especially near the beginning - ultimately the feature is brilliantly written and designed, with growing strong attention to detail as the story progresses. My attention began to wander at first, but by the end my gaze was fixed. 'Special effects' is a highly entertaining thriller that's well worth seeking out, and earns my hearty recommendation.
The casting is immediately striking. Zoë Lund's name and face are emphasized, and for good reason - much to my delight, she takes on two roles here. The quiet poise she demonstrated in Abel Ferrara's 'Ms .45' was alluring, and here we get to see even greater range in very different parts. The ease with which she inhabits different characters is captivating, and it's a joy to watch her. Eric Bogosian, deservedly acclaimed actor, carries himself with a sobriety that matches the unmistakable timbre of his voice, and the steadiness in his portrayal of film-maker Chris Neville is absorbing. Brad Rijn is far less recognizable, bearing few credits to his name, and his acting as Keefe Waterman does leave a bit to be desired - yet he still adequately captures the range of confused, conflicting, heightened emotions of the character. If 'Special effects' is to be his greatest claim to fame, than it was a solid one.
Larry Cohen's direction is more balanced than his writing. While some of his scenes don't come off well in their arrangement as written, most do, and there's no doubting he has a fine eye behind the camera. Just as he builds tension and suspense with scene composition, he captures some marvelous shots - cigarette smoke under a street light, an organization of casting photos, characters silhouetted against bright light, unconventional angles, and more.
The building thrills are mesmerizing, and the great cast is aided by impeccable work from hair and makeup departments, lighting, set design and decoration, location scouts, costume designers, and props. Composer Michael Minard's music lends further to the noir-esque atmosphere and excitement. And the sum total is a picture that at turns seems playfully sardonic, like a few simple changes could have made it a vehicle for Peter Falk as Columbo - and also deviously twisted, reminding of a psychological thriller in the way that the movie within a movie impacts characters' mindsets.
For all the deficiencies that come out at one point or another - especially near the beginning - ultimately the feature is brilliantly written and designed, with growing strong attention to detail as the story progresses. My attention began to wander at first, but by the end my gaze was fixed. 'Special effects' is a highly entertaining thriller that's well worth seeking out, and earns my hearty recommendation.
- I_Ailurophile
- 27 ago 2021
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This is a really underrated Cohen film. It has great art direction and terrific performances by Zoe and Eric.
The film obviously borrows big from Hitchcock but it never feels like it's stealing overtly (like the way certain DePalma films feel) Watch this if you can find a copy.
The film obviously borrows big from Hitchcock but it never feels like it's stealing overtly (like the way certain DePalma films feel) Watch this if you can find a copy.
- ivanpoulas
- 13 dic 2021
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"Special Effects" is a thriller that delves into the darker aspects of Hollywood, where reality and illusion collide. The film tells the story of a megalomaniacal movie director, Neville, who murders a young actress and then casts her husband as the patsy in a film about the crime.
While the premise is intriguing, the execution falls short. The film's pacing is slow, and the acting is uneven. Zoe Tamerlis's performance is particularly cringe-worthy, making it difficult to watch her scenes without wincing.
However, Eric Bogosian and Brad Rijn fare better, bringing some much-needed depth to the film. Larry Cohen's direction is also noteworthy, as he attempts to emulate the style of Brian De Palma.
Despite its flaws, "Special Effects" is a thought-provoking commentary on the darker side of Hollywood. The film's exploration of the blurred lines between reality and illusion is both fascinating and unsettling.
Overall, "Special Effects" is a mixed bag. While it has its moments, the film's poor acting and slow pacing make it a chore to sit through. However, fans of Larry Cohen and those interested in a behind-the-scenes look at Hollywood's darker side may find it .
While the premise is intriguing, the execution falls short. The film's pacing is slow, and the acting is uneven. Zoe Tamerlis's performance is particularly cringe-worthy, making it difficult to watch her scenes without wincing.
However, Eric Bogosian and Brad Rijn fare better, bringing some much-needed depth to the film. Larry Cohen's direction is also noteworthy, as he attempts to emulate the style of Brian De Palma.
Despite its flaws, "Special Effects" is a thought-provoking commentary on the darker side of Hollywood. The film's exploration of the blurred lines between reality and illusion is both fascinating and unsettling.
Overall, "Special Effects" is a mixed bag. While it has its moments, the film's poor acting and slow pacing make it a chore to sit through. However, fans of Larry Cohen and those interested in a behind-the-scenes look at Hollywood's darker side may find it .
- njavwanakawala-78613
- 10 ene 2025
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