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La blessure

Original title: Cutter's Way
  • 1981
  • 12
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
8.2K
YOUR RATING
Jeff Bridges, John Heard, and Lisa Eichhorn in La blessure (1981)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer2:24
1 Video
98 Photos
CrimeDramaMysteryThriller

Richard spots a man dumping a body, and decides to expose the man he thinks is the culprit with his friend Alex Cutter.Richard spots a man dumping a body, and decides to expose the man he thinks is the culprit with his friend Alex Cutter.Richard spots a man dumping a body, and decides to expose the man he thinks is the culprit with his friend Alex Cutter.

  • Director
    • Ivan Passer
  • Writers
    • Newton Thornburg
    • Jeffrey Alan Fiskin
  • Stars
    • Jeff Bridges
    • John Heard
    • Lisa Eichhorn
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    8.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ivan Passer
    • Writers
      • Newton Thornburg
      • Jeffrey Alan Fiskin
    • Stars
      • Jeff Bridges
      • John Heard
      • Lisa Eichhorn
    • 85User reviews
    • 68Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:24
    Official Trailer

    Photos98

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Jeff Bridges
    Jeff Bridges
    • Richard Bone
    John Heard
    John Heard
    • Alex Cutter
    Lisa Eichhorn
    Lisa Eichhorn
    • Maureen Cutter, 'Mo'
    Ann Dusenberry
    Ann Dusenberry
    • Valerie Duran
    Stephen Elliott
    Stephen Elliott
    • J.J. Cord
    Arthur Rosenberg
    Arthur Rosenberg
    • George Swanson
    Nina van Pallandt
    Nina van Pallandt
    • Woman in the Hotel
    Patricia Donahue
    Patricia Donahue
    • Mrs. Cord
    Geraldine Baron
    • Susie Swanson
    Katherine Pass
    • Toyota Woman
    Francis X. McCarthy
    Francis X. McCarthy
    • Toyota Man
    • (as Frank McCarthy)
    George Planco
    • Toyota Cop
    Jay Fletcher
    Jay Fletcher
    • Cord Security Guard
    George Dickerson
    • Mortician
    Jack Murdock
    Jack Murdock
    • Concession Owner
    Essex Smith
    • Black #1
    Rod Gist
    • Black #2
    Leonard Lightfoot
    • Black #3
    • Director
      • Ivan Passer
    • Writers
      • Newton Thornburg
      • Jeffrey Alan Fiskin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews85

    6.88.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8davemccrea-1

    Brilliant script and direction

    This movie is beautifully shot with a great score that sounds unlike any other score I've ever heard. Then you have a great performance from John Heard and a great screenplay that obviously had a tremendous novel behind it.

    If you like those gritty late 70s early 80s California noir movies like Straight Time, Who'll Stop The Rain and Chinatown, this is as good as any of those. I have just watched it and I don't think I will forget it anytime soon. It's packed with memorable moments and fully-developed characters.

    They don't make movies like this anymore. It makes me wonder what Jeff Bridges thinks about on the set of Iron Man 2 - I've never been a huge fan but the guy did a string of great dramas in the 80s like Fabulous Baker Boys, American Heart and this. He must be thinking "what happened to all those good scripts that used to be knocking around??"
    manuel-pestalozzi

    Don Quixote At The Country Club

    Cutter's Way cannot be overpraised. This movie is a masterpiece of the first order. Ivan Passer, a compatriot of Milos Forman, came to the USA as an experienced Czech movie director. Not unlike Alfred Hitchcock or some German directors 30 years before him, he seems to have made a thorough analysis of the American social conditions and general manners. He then transformed his findings into movies. Two of them I know deal with New York. They are appropriately gritty. The setting of Cutter's way is a Californian beach community for the rich and beautiful – and the movie is appropriately glossy. The whole story takes place in those paradisiac locales. They are presented like an enchanted kingdom, a country of its own.

    Under the glossy surface, there is a darker side to the place. There is prostitution, drug abuse and murder. Cutter, living on the fringes of the enchanted kingdom, sees that more clearly than everyone else. He has his own code of chivalry by which he wants to live. He develops conspirational theories and strains to convert them into hard facts. The world around him, populated by indifferent, amoral rich and beautiful people, does not understand him, does not even want to listen, laughs at him. So Cutter mounts a white stallion and rides a charge.

    Repeatedly the film slips into surrealistic situations, in which the impression made on the viewers is more relevant than the storyline. This technique was well known in the forties (e.g. in film noir), present day audience are less used to it. In the earlier days of film making, surrealism was created on a soundstage, and the change between reality and "dream" became immediately clear. Passer uses real locations for situations removed from reality – a daring experiment that rewards the viewers with hauntingly beautiful pictures but might also confuse many. The director took this risk and we are rewarded with a magnificent picture about a distinguished slice of America. I predict: Cutter‘s way will one day become an honored classic.
    tiarings

    Radically better than anyone could expect....

    Ostensibly this film appears to be a buddy movie from the 1980s, but it is actually something much more interesting. Employing standard Hollywood clinches with its thriller/ investigation narrative and many of of its "stock" characters and situations, the little guys - Heard and Bridges - take on Mr Fat Cat Capitalist who rules the peacetime world like an untouchable and corrupt monarch. The film, though well-executed and enjoyable, at first seems no more than a well-scripted, well-acted (Heard is particularly good as the embittered, crippled Vietnam Veteran) genre piece. However, what emerges by the end is something far more exciting and radical - an indictment of US politics and power relations, and a genuinely bleak reflection on the impossibility and rarity of real justice both at the micro and macro levels.

    Vietnam and its true significance is used to great effect in the film, as is the interplay between the two buddies. Whilst Bridges won't accept that he has witnessed the ultimate, bleak truth of US power relations until the film's abrupt, punchy end, Heard knows the truth intuitively and automatically because he understands and hates the world from the the start. He has given up on notions such as forgiveness and even the need for legal process, and seeks only revenge on the rich and the powerful. He understands, correctly, that is the only way a kind of momentary justice is possible, since everything else is either controlled by the elites or made to protect them. Without wishing to spoil the film's brilliant final moments, it is here that the whodunnit story is stripped away and the guilt they have been seeking to prove, as Richard Bone realises, becomes entirely political or metaphysical, and the the crime itself becomes irrelevant.
    9greenscreen2

    A hauntingly beautiful portrayal of cynicism and the pathetic human condition

    I stumbled upon this movie at the Nickelodeon on Cape Cod the year of its release...at a time when VCR's and DVD's weren't a part of our culture...when you had to travel to obscure and far-out theaters to see obscure and far-out films during the fading window of opportunity offered as its limited run at the movie house. What a gem. I was instantly riveted by the story and the classic performances that brought it to life. The pathetic human condition personified in Cutter, Bone, and Mo is so exquisitely rendered as to be tragic...only salvaged by the clear-eyed wit and insight of John Heard's Cutter and the tempered and logical cynicism and indifference offered up by Bone(Jeff Bridges)as the balance that only these begrudging friends could provide each other. Lisa Eichorn's character(Mo) exhibits equal measures of the qualities both her male couterparts have and her subtle performance points up the conflict she feels in simultaneously rejecting and craving their opposing energies. The scene where she chews them both out for their selfish and naive plot and their spirited responses seems to spill from their beings as genuine emotion...not written dialogue...and it still sends chills through me...very powerful...and the scene where she is made painfully aware of Bone's incurable drive to bed women as she falls prey to his momentary sympathies ..when coupled with her husband's(Cutter) inability to give a soft refuge to her is so tragically realistic...tears flow. Everyone's shortcoming's cross-up everyone else's and as the surrealistic climax develops its symbolism and power are Shakespearian. This movie works as a crime thriller, a portrait of the underbelly of American culture most evidenced in its loss of confidence and embrace of cynicism that came to the surface post-Vietnam...but most successfully as a great character-driven love story and tragedy.
    screamin' hamster

    not really "underrated" but more like ignored. This movie is very good.

    A friend of mine gave me the novel Cutter and Bone (AKA Cutter's Way) was based on, so that immediately creates a problem, comparing two different art forms.

    Forget the novel (by the obscure Newton Thornburg) for this purpose only. The movie is a moving meditation on power, desperation, and paranoia. It is also a great love story.

    I always end up writing "...you've read the other comments so you know what this is about" but Cutter and Bone is so many things, it cannot be pinned down easily.

    As noted in the favorable reviews here, this is chock full of great film acting that moves the story along as well as making come alive. Who was the clueless shmoe who said "nothing happens"? What movie was he watching?

    Adrift in post-Vietnam America, Cutter finally finds something in life that has meaning; the murder of a young hitchhiker.

    But any meaning is too much for the damaged Cutter who becomes relentless in the pursuit of a possible killer who also is of the wealthy, powerful elite that sent OPS (other people's sons) to Vietnam. Cutter finally has a genuine target ("he's not anyone Rich, he's RESPONSIBLE" says Cutter to Richard Bone in a great line delivery by John Heard) for his unfocused righteous anger.

    Bone tries to sabotage the investigation but ends up buying in at the very end. Why? He has the rage also, as did many Americans who weren't politically active, did not serve in Vietnam. It's a rage that infected a nation with guilt, self-doubt, and eventually, a new hubris, a kind of "never again" attitude toward "less developed" nations that has us yet again on the brink of yet another war in a series of wars that seem to never end and we hardly even notice anymore (remember Grenada? Bombing Tripoli and Benghazi? proxy armies in Nicaragua and El Salvador, etc.?)

    The other part of Cutter and Bone is a love triangle and a very well explicated one at that. Cutter and Bone both love Mo who can't love herself. Bone is not as shallow as he appears and it scares him. Cutter is too damaged and angry to love her enough until she is gone.

    I've known these people in one way or another, and that is why this movie has always meant so much to me. It is also about a great country I used to live in that began to disappear about the time this movie is set, and has since metamorphosed into a large wounded, angry monster, bereft of the tears for near-paradise lost that this excellent movie depicts.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Before production started on this film, Ivan Passer and producer Paul R. Gurian went to Jeff Bridges' house to ask him if he would agree to play Bone. After both entered Bridges' property, the actor's dog, a big German shepherd, attacked Gurian, biting him on the jaw. Gurian nearly died. Bridges later confessed that, after this incident, he had no choice but to accept the role in order to avoid being sued for several million dollars.
    • Goofs
      Valerie's disappearance is neither explained nor noted by the main characters.
    • Quotes

      Alex Cutter: I don't drink. You know, the routine grind drives me to drink. Tragedy, I take straight.

    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Raiders of the Lost Ark, City of Women, I Sent a Letter To My Love, Cutter's Way (1981)
    • Soundtracks
      We're Old Enough to Know
      Music by Jack Nitzsche

      Lyrics by John Byrum

      Vocals by Jack Nitzsche

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 10, 1982 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Cutter's Way
    • Filming locations
      • 800 Alvarado Place, Santa Barbara, California, USA(El Encanto Hotel scenes.)
    • Production company
      • Gurian Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,729,274
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,752,634
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 49 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Jeff Bridges, John Heard, and Lisa Eichhorn in La blessure (1981)
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