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Compromising Positions

  • 1985
  • R
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Susan Sarandon, Raul Julia, Edward Herrmann, Mary Beth Hurt, and Judith Ivey in Compromising Positions (1985)
ComedyDramaMysteryThriller

An ex-newspaper woman who is now a suburban housewife can't resist getting involved in an investigation of the murder of a philandering dentist who had been having affairs with several of he... Read allAn ex-newspaper woman who is now a suburban housewife can't resist getting involved in an investigation of the murder of a philandering dentist who had been having affairs with several of her neighbors.An ex-newspaper woman who is now a suburban housewife can't resist getting involved in an investigation of the murder of a philandering dentist who had been having affairs with several of her neighbors.

  • Director
    • Frank Perry
  • Writer
    • Susan Isaacs
  • Stars
    • Susan Sarandon
    • Raul Julia
    • Edward Herrmann
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Frank Perry
    • Writer
      • Susan Isaacs
    • Stars
      • Susan Sarandon
      • Raul Julia
      • Edward Herrmann
    • 16User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
    • 65Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos28

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Susan Sarandon
    Susan Sarandon
    • Judith Singer
    Raul Julia
    Raul Julia
    • David Suarez
    Edward Herrmann
    Edward Herrmann
    • Bob Singer
    Judith Ivey
    Judith Ivey
    • Nancy Miller
    Mary Beth Hurt
    Mary Beth Hurt
    • Peg Tuccio
    Joe Mantegna
    Joe Mantegna
    • Bruce Fleckstein
    Anne DeSalvo
    Anne DeSalvo
    • Phyllis Fleckstein
    • (as Anne De Salvo)
    Josh Mostel
    Josh Mostel
    • Dicky Dunck
    Deborah Rush
    Deborah Rush
    • Brenda Dunck
    Joan Allen
    Joan Allen
    • Mary Alice Mahoney
    Kaiulani Lee
    Kaiulani Lee
    • Scotty Hughes
    Tanya Berezin
    • Newsday editor
    William Youmans
    William Youmans
    • Motel clerk
    Amanda Lyons
    • Kate Singer
    Chris Cunningham
    • Joey Singer
    Jason Beghe
    Jason Beghe
    • Cupcake
    Timothy Jerome
    • Rabbi
    Jack Gilpin
    Jack Gilpin
    • Patrol car cop
    • Director
      • Frank Perry
    • Writer
      • Susan Isaacs
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    5.91.2K
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    Featured reviews

    10negevoli-44

    The secret life of vegetables. Vegetarians beware!

    A good script (with adult themes) and an excellent cast make this a most enjoyable caper-comedy about the secret life of an upscale dentist. What this one does with vegetables gives one pause about eating salads anywhere but home, as Judith Ivy (particularly good as an oversexed suburban housewife) dryly points out in one of the funniest lines in the film. The movie is fast-paced with very good direction and production values. Maybe not quite a "10," but close to it.
    7bzynaitisme

    Not a bad comedy but....

    I liked the movie but not Edward Herman's chauvinistic role. What I really didn't like is Raul Julia aka Sgt Suarez constantly hitting on Susan Sarandon when he knew full well she was married, not to mention it was unprofessional. It just didn't make any sense or add to the plot since there was no way she would leave her husband even if he was a jerk.

    It would have been better if Edward Hermann was in cahoots with the dentist Joe Montegna where he killed Montegna for whatever reason. Then her husband would go to jail and she could have an excuse to be with Suarez.

    Nevertheless I loved her neighbor played by Judith Ivey. She stole every scene she was in.
    6mysteriesfan

    Likable but thin and uneven

    I recently rediscovered this movie in a box of old tapes. Unable to remember much about it, I watched it twice more. This made me appreciate the film more, but also reminded me of its flaws and limitations.

    A sleazy, tacky, womanizing dentist (Joe Mantegna) serving an upscale New York suburb is murdered in his office one night. A new patient (Susan Sarandon) is drawn into an amateur investigation of the case, rekindling her own spirits and interests. She is the unassuming, dowdy housewife of an egotistical, stressed-out, button-down corporate law firm attorney (Edward Herrmann). Years ago, she was a reporter.

    Many in her circle of female friends and neighbors are either gossiping about or had affairs with the dentist (he would say "there is only one way to find out if you are a natural blonde"; when first going out with a new woman, he would take her to a Chinese restaurant by a motel; afterward, he would not even spring for the meal, heading directly to the motel "so they could spend the most time together"). A married woman is desperate to recover the dentist's nude photos of her in lewd poses, which he also took of others, including his nurse.

    The suspects include these women, along with Sarandon's tight-lipped neighbor; the dentist's short, nasal, hard-edged wife with the "Nazi dog" (Sarandon's term, after it practically pushes her up and over the back of an armchair trying to take a bite out of her groin); the dentist's chubby, bald, weak-willed brother-in-law, who is a printer and may have worked with him and the mob to produce pornography that "would make a child molester happy"; and the brother's tall, blonde wife.

    As she investigates, Sarandon takes abuse from her self-centered, work-absorbed husband and from a sulky, tall-dark-silent-type police detective (Raul Julia). They complain that she is imposing on them, is in over her head, is getting in the way, and is endangering herself (at one point, her kitchen is vandalized). She perseveres, wins the cop's heart and finally her husband's grudging respect, hatches a plan that causes her to stumble into the solution of the murder, and triumphantly presents her free-lance story to a previously skeptical, patronizing editor for publication. As the movie fades to credits, she is working on another.

    Sarandon is immensely likable as the down-to-earth, wide-eyed, spunky heroine. Her interplay with her female friends and neighbors -- who range from prim-acting and reserved to bawdy and flamboyant -- is fun. In particular, these characters are drawn with wit, intelligence and attention to detail. The acting is uniformly good. There are nice touches of black humor (e.g., the killer is provoked by the dentist's extra insensitivity in including a certain subject along with the featured woman in one of his photos). Mantegna gets almost no screen time, but we learn enough about his crude tactics through other characters that it might even have been heavy-handed to see more of him in action.

    Yet, the film is unsatisfying. Although there is some smart, spicy detail to the dialogue and characters, and Sarandon's good-natured perseverance is endearing, the movie does not amount to much in the end. It is itself like light-weight, gossipy chatter with comfortable, quirky friends about a scandal. It may be a pleasant ride, but it does not feel as if it has much meaning. (The closest the film comes is Sarandon's talk with her brash, philandering friend about marriage and attraction to other men, but it is short and surface-level. Even War of the Roses and Heartburn make more of an impression.) And even the ride becomes a little slow and repetitive after the quirky characters are introduced and as the film wears on, including some bumpy parts (the mob/pornography angle comes off as a vague, muddled, off-putting contrivance).

    The film does a good job of creating characters to serve its humorous side. But it does a poor job of creating characters who represent the film's serious side and/or of weaving them into the comedy.

    Herrmann's part is well-written and well-acted -- for another movie. His strident rants against Sarandon for not appreciating how hard he works to provide for her and for not dropping the case and staying at home (and her screaming tirade back at him at one point about having to put up with his late-hour, uninteresting work and needing more in her life) are jarringly out-of-place with the comedy and overall tone of this film.

    Julia's bland, stiff, tight-lipped, undeveloped character is a huge disappointment. The film makes no attempt to credibly establish him as a cop; he does not make one smart, skillful move in the entire film. We know absolutely nothing about him, except his clipped answer to Sarandon late in the movie that he is divorced with two teen boys. With little more to do for most of the film than deliver tedious, by-the-book warnings, over and over again, that she should not interfere, he is reduced to a Latin Jack Webb. Then he suddenly, awkwardly, without explanation, confesses his love for her, thereafter appreciating her meddling in the case. This abrupt, poorly developed scene comes out of nowhere and goes nowhere, apparently depending heavily on the on-screen "chemistry" between the two actors rather than on intelligible, credible story development. I am all for honoring Julia as an actor, but to mean anything it should be for something meaningful in the material or his performance, not simply for being someone's idea of a "hunk."

    It is easy to agree with other reviews that this film has the makings of a fun, old favorite, perfect for revisiting for a pleasant, familiar diversion on a bad-weather weekend afternoon. But to leave a review there ignores nagging problems that get in the way of fuller enjoyment of the movie, on first or repeat viewing. As its relative obscurity suggests, the film is likable but too thin and uneven to really satisfy.
    6ksf-2

    housewife caught up in a murder

    Susan sarandon, who started out in the soap operas and was janet in "rocky horror"! When someone gets moidid in a small town, the whole neighborhood is talking about it. Apparently the victim was quite the ladies man, and was always on the make. So housewife and mom judith decides to try to figure out who-dunnit. But now she's a suspect herself! It's okay. Major over-acting by julia and herrmann. A bit slow in the middle. Some familiar faces... joe montegna, judith ivey, anne desalvo, ed herrmann, raul julia. Story based on the novel by susan isaacs. She also wrote "hello again", about the death of a spouse. And that also starred judith ivey, and it also had director frank perry! Perry was nominated for "david and lisa"... has anyone ever heard of that one? He also directed mommied dearest. Raul julia died young at 54.
    8callaspadeaspade

    A must see for Susan Sarandon fans. . .

    . . .but anyone else should like it,too. I saw it for the first time in the theater when I was 19. It was the first movie I went to alone because none of my friends wanted to see a "girl's movie". It is that, but it's a wonderful one of those. Since then I've seen it a dozen times and it always makes me laugh.

    Susan is wonderful as always and Raul Julia is solid, but Judith Ivy steals every scene she's in. Some of the other characters are excentric to distraction, but over all it's very entertaining. It's the kind of comedy that's amusing even if it's not laugh-out-loud funny all the time. Now it's a little dated, but still really fun to watch.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Susan Sarandon has stated that money was a big factor regarding her decision to make this film. Not terribly enamored by her character, she agreed to do the film because she was pregnant with her first child at the time and it would allow her to take time off after giving birth.
    • Goofs
      When Nancy and Judith are talking in the car, a crew member's finger can be seen poking Susan Sarandon's back to cue her in about delivering her lines.
    • Quotes

      Bob Singer: Wouldn't you just love to kill a dentist?

    • Connections
      Features Jane Eyre (1943)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 30, 1985 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Situations équivoques
    • Filming locations
      • East Hampton, Long Island, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Blackhawk Productions
      • C.P. Productions
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $6,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $12,531,831
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,014,756
      • Sep 2, 1985
    • Gross worldwide
      • $12,531,831
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 39 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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