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Suture

  • 1993
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
Michael Harris and Dennis Haysbert in Suture (1993)
After his brother tries to kill him, a man survives only to find himself in another man's body.
Play trailer2:06
1 Video
21 Photos
DramaThriller

After his brother tries to kill him, a man survives only to find himself in another man's body.After his brother tries to kill him, a man survives only to find himself in another man's body.After his brother tries to kill him, a man survives only to find himself in another man's body.

  • Directors
    • Scott McGehee
    • David Siegel
  • Writers
    • Scott McGehee
    • David Siegel
  • Stars
    • Dennis Haysbert
    • Mel Harris
    • Sab Shimono
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    2.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Scott McGehee
      • David Siegel
    • Writers
      • Scott McGehee
      • David Siegel
    • Stars
      • Dennis Haysbert
      • Mel Harris
      • Sab Shimono
    • 37User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Trailer

    Photos21

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Dennis Haysbert
    Dennis Haysbert
    • Clay Arlington
    Mel Harris
    Mel Harris
    • Dr. Renee Descartes
    Sab Shimono
    Sab Shimono
    • Dr. Max Shinoda
    Dina Merrill
    Dina Merrill
    • Alice Jameson
    Michael Harris
    Michael Harris
    • Vincent Towers
    David Graf
    David Graf
    • Lt. Weismann
    Fran Ryan
    Fran Ryan
    • Mrs. Lucerne
    John Ingle
    John Ingle
    • Sidney Callahan
    Sanford Gibbons
    Sanford Gibbons
    • Dr. Fuller
    • (as Sandy Gibbons)
    Mark DeMichele
    • Detective Joe
    Sandra Ellis Lafferty
    Sandra Ellis Lafferty
    • Nurse Stevens
    • (as Sandra Lafferty)
    Capri Darling
    • Soprano
    Carol Kiernan
    Carol Kiernan
    • Ticket Agent
    Laura Groppe
    • Sportswoman
    Mel Coleman
    • Sportsman
    Lon Carli
    • Man with Camera
    Ann Van Wey
    • Mrs. Lucerne's Nurse
    Sam Smiley
    • Doctor #1
    • Directors
      • Scott McGehee
      • David Siegel
    • Writers
      • Scott McGehee
      • David Siegel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    6.52.2K
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    Featured reviews

    kel_har

    In the style of Hitchcock...

    The filmmakers have created a stylish suspenser that would make the master of suspense proud. Filmed in black and white, "Suture" weaves a tale of two brothers, one whom wants to use the other as a pawn for his devious scheme involving murder and mistaken identity. If I could mention two scenes that reminded me of Hitchcock, it would be these: 1) the first scene that sets up the film, and 2) Vincent explaining his dreams to a psychiatrist--reminiscent of "Spellbound." This is an excellent thriller that should be seen.
    bob the moo

    Cinematically impressive but a touch too arty for mainstream tastes

    Working class Clay travels into the city to meet his wealthy half-brother Vincent for the first time. Their shared father has just been killed. Shortly after Gus arrives, Vincent announces that he must fly out of town overnight and Gus drives him to the airport. On the drive back Vincent sets off a car bomb to kill Gus, however Gus survives despite being badly disfigured. Believing him to be Vincent the surgeons rebuild his face and try to bring his memories back. However Gus finds he is now accused of murder (as Vincent) and that he has only strange dreams about a possible past life.

    I have seen this twice in an attempt to try and break into the deeper issues that it alludes to. I have not been totally successful but this not to say that I think this is a bad film. The plot involves the complexity of personality. I first watching it thinking it sounded like a good set-up for a thriller – if you think the same then you may be let down. The plot is more about how our personalities are formed – are we an ID picture, are we who we chose to be? The split personalities and the dual aspects of the plot are best seen in the casting of the two main roles. At first I thought it was a lazy art-house trick to cast a black and a white actor as `similar brothers' but the metaphor is used quite well.

    The problem with the film is that the inner themes are not fully explained (pr at least I found them hard to reach fully). I know roughly what it was saying but I would find it very hard to explain. This means that if you can't get inside the plot you are left with what's on the surface and this isn't enough. It moves slowly and appears to go nowhere in particular. But focus on the bigger picture and this will give you something to think about even if it fails to grip you for the whole running time.

    Haysbert is pretty good – if fact all the cast are OK bu they all seem to know they're in an arty movie. The result is that they talk slowly, say big meaningful sentences and stare into the distance regularly. What saves this film is the direction. The use of black and white is superb, the framing of every shot is interesting and I was honestly transfixed by the bleak beauty of every shot. Things that would have been ordinary in colour are fascinating in this bleak frame. On top of this the music is good too – lots of classic music gives a cold, unsure feel to the film but the use of `ring of fire' is brave and, happily, comes off.

    Overall is this for everyone? No. Is it worth a try? Yes. On my second viewing I feel that it has layers I'm yet to understand and fully appreciate. The visual aspect of the film alone is worth a watch. Although I suspect that the plot is not as deep or as clever as it thinks it is, I know that there is plenty ot be discovered about this. Give it a shot – I did and now am about to go and give it a 3rd watch.
    6claudio_carvalho

    Burying the Soul

    The construction worker Clay Arlington (Dennis Haysbert) meets his wealthy half-brother Vincent Towers (Michael Harris) in their father's funeral and sooner Clay travels from Needles to the city to visit Vincent. When Clay arrives, Vincent changes their IDs, gives his clothes to Clay and tells that he needs to travel but would be back on the next day. Clay drives Vincent to the airport in his car and Vincent explodes a bomb planted in the car. However Clay survives with amnesia and with his face and bones are restored by the specialist Dr. Renee Descartes (Mel Harris) that uses a video and pictures of Vincent to rebuild his face. The amnesic Clay assumes the identity of Vincent and learns that he is the prime suspect of Lieutenant Weismann (David Graf) for the suspicious murder of his father. Further, Renee and he fall in love for each other. With the support Dr. Max Shinoda ( Sab Shimono), Clay finally retrieves his memory and has to decide which life shall be buried.

    "Suture" has a good story but the viewer shall buy first that the African American Dennis Haysbert and the Caucasian Michael Harris resemble each other. The plot has many flaws, and I believed that the brotherhood of Vincent and Clay had been kept in secret due to racial issues. Therefore, there is no explanation why the brothers have different social conditions having a wealthy father. And what about the fingerprints of Clay and Vincent, how could they match each other? The black and white cinematography is very beautiful and the camera work is excellent. My vote is six.

    Title (Brazil): Not Available.
    7gavin6942

    A Hidden Gem of the 1990s

    Brothers Vincent (rich playboy) and Clay (average construction worker) meet up for the first time after their father's funeral and remark on how similar they look. But unknown to Clay, who thinks his life is taking a turn for the better, Vince is actually plotting to kill him with a car bomb and pass the corpse off as his own, planning to start a new life elsewhere with his father's inheritance.

    Before the script was even written, those involved were looking into identity, paranoia and amnesia, and drew strong influences from Hiroshi Teshigahara's "The Face of Another", "Seconds" and "Manchurian Candidate", among others. (One of the writer-directors almost pursued a PhD in Japanese film, actually.) Mix that in with the tropes and cinematography of film noir, and you have the birth of "Suture", a minor masterpiece that anticipates such films as "Memento" (which unfortunately have overshadowed this).

    Being an independent film, the budget was low, and the production ironically benefited from the recent S&L crisis and scandals. Shooting in Phoenix, they found some buildings closed down, including a bank that became Vincent's palatial estate. This was fortuitous, as the space works perfectly (I would never have known it wasn't an actual mansion.) Other corners were cut in more clever ways... watch close to see how they afforded blowing up a car -- they use an almost Troma-esque maneuver.

    There seems to be a deeper message in the writing, with an obvious nod to Descartes, and a psychiatrist who seems overly reliant on quoting Freud. I am not sure what I missed. But you have to love the brilliance of the casting. Maybe I am a little bit daft, but it took me forever to get past the two brothers looking identical... while looking nothing alike. That was a purely genius move. (Not surprisingly, producers balked at the film's central "conceit" and their insistence of filming in black and white... this could easily have ruined some careers.)

    The Arrow Video release is packed with goodies. Not only does it have the full-length audio commentary (with no less a person than Steven Soderbergh), but we have a 30-minute behind-the-scenes series of interviews with just about everyone. We have deleted scenes. And, perhaps best of all, we have "Birds Past", a short film from the directors that has very rarely been seen anywhere. This is a must-own film, and for true film geeks, you will want to listen to the commentary: there is as much discussion about this film as there is about film-making in general, with plenty of stories about "sex, lies and videotape", Terrance Malick, and more.
    7lasttimeisaw

    the bona-fides of the overlooked standing of McGehee-Siegel's oeuvre

    The debut feature of US filmmaker-duo Scott McGehee and David Siegel is a pristine-looking psychological forensics of an individual's confused identity, shot in widescreen black-and-white cinematography, SUTURE has its unmissable neo-noir panache awash but also undeniably undercut by its slight story-telling stratagem.

    McGehee-Siegel's conceit is surprising and madcap, the purportedly identical half-brothers Vincent Towers (a dour-looking Harris) and Clay Arling (Haysbert) are diametrically different in their appearances (the racial distinction strikes as a self-aware but caustic jape), which at once impels viewers to suspend our disbelief and blatantly dissociates its scenario from any pretension of realism, as if to declare in its opening: don't trust what you've seen.

    Truly, what we see is a rather simple identity-swapping scheme goes amiss, after murdering his minted father, Vincent plots to liquidate Clay, his doppelganger half-brother, whose existence is conveniently sealed from the outside, thus Clay would be the whipping boy passing off as Vincent, guilty and perished, then the real Vincent can return as Clay to claim his munificent inheritance. The plan is seamless a priori, but miraculously Clay survives the car comb and ends up with a disfigured visage and severe amnesia. Treated by Dr. Renee Descartes (Harris) to reconstruct his face, now believing he is Vincent, Clay's memory has to take a longer divagation to recover his true identity under the psychoanalysis of Dr. Max Shinoda (Shimono), who is welded together with the image of Rorschach test and passes wisdom in shrink's parlance by rote, and it goes without saying, the real Vincent will not have Clay usurping his heirdom for too long, danger and myth (for instance, what is the ulterior motive of Vincent's recently widowed mother Alice Jameson, played by an elegantly dressed, seemingly benignant Dina Merrill?) are hovering like dark cumuli, and the film's ending sternly keeps the lid on its barbed irony of Clay's ultimate choice.

    In lieu of salting the plot, McGehee-Siegel duo resolves to making the mark of their cinematic style with their puny budget ($900,000). Potentially intensified by the sagacious choice of monochrome, the film emanates a beguiling retro-experimental flair with its punctiliously arranged compositions, high contrasted lighting and shades (inside the post-modern edifice equipped with bed-sheet- covered furniture and unadorned walls functioning as Vincent's clinical abode) and jumpy montages.

    Another boon to this glossy debut is Dennis Haysbert, a straight-up leading man material endowed with virility, sensibility and fine fettle, who totally has it in him to rival Denzel Washington's prominent status in Hollywood only if we were living in a world of justice, and SUTURE, at any rate, is the bona-fides of the overlooked standing of McGehee-Siegel's oeuvre.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Directorial debut of both Scott McGehee and David Siegel.
    • Connections
      Featured in Lacerations: The Making of 'Suture' (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      (The Guest) Arrival at Wartburg
      from "Tannhauser"

      Written by Richard Wagner

      Performed by Parry Music Library

      Courtesy of Promusic, Inc.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 24, 1994 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Швы
    • Filming locations
      • Scottsdale, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Kino Korsakoff
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $102,780
    • Gross worldwide
      • $102,780
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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