IMDb RATING
5.5/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Johnny "Skidmark" Scardino is a free-lance crime-scene photographer and part-time blackmailer. When his associates begin to turn up murdered, he has a very short time to discover the killer ... Read allJohnny "Skidmark" Scardino is a free-lance crime-scene photographer and part-time blackmailer. When his associates begin to turn up murdered, he has a very short time to discover the killer before it is his turn.Johnny "Skidmark" Scardino is a free-lance crime-scene photographer and part-time blackmailer. When his associates begin to turn up murdered, he has a very short time to discover the killer before it is his turn.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Michael D. Weatherred
- Ernie Deemo
- (as Michael Weatherred)
William Preston Robertson
- Earl
- (as Bill Robertson)
Venessa Verdugo
- Waitress
- (as Vanessa Verdugo)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This movie was better then I expected.
What little gore there was was top notch and effective to the scene,and the production values were fine.
I loved Jack black in it...he was the only Comedy in this "dark comic mystery"
John Lithgow was over the top,and fun as a psycho cop,and Gallagher was very good as the brooding photographer.
The script was a little weak and not fleshed out that well,still all in all a good movie.
The basic story is a freelance photographer gets in over his head with blackmail...then add some twists.
What little gore there was was top notch and effective to the scene,and the production values were fine.
I loved Jack black in it...he was the only Comedy in this "dark comic mystery"
John Lithgow was over the top,and fun as a psycho cop,and Gallagher was very good as the brooding photographer.
The script was a little weak and not fleshed out that well,still all in all a good movie.
The basic story is a freelance photographer gets in over his head with blackmail...then add some twists.
forget about all the bad things you may or may not have heard about this one ,trust no one - but me. this is one fine film, enough said.
This film wants to be a black comedy, but doesn't quite pull it off. It's like the director every now and then said "Oh yeah, it's a black comedy. Do something funny now". It just isn't consistent. Watch "Fargo" instead. I think Frances McDormand was trying to reprise her wonderful role in that film and picked this loser. And John Lithgow is capable of so much better. Not bad but very ordinary.
I found Skidmarks absolutely compelling. Peter Gallagher plays a crime-scene photographer with a sideline of blackmailing men who take his prostitute friend to motels. Gallagher, whom I've not much liked in other movies, does a terrific job as the numb, depressed antihero, unaffected by the crime scenes and accident scenes he photographs until his fellow blackmailers start turning up as victims. The movie is full of deadpanned quips and black humor (e.g., the exchange between McDormand and Gallagher when she's trying to pick him up in a hamburger joint. McDormand, cool and tough: "Do you have a name?" Gallagher: "Yeah. Do you?") The film is not flashy enough ever to have made it big, but the plot and characters are utterly original and the acting is uniformly excellent.
10Digger-8
This is a really interesting movie that I thoroughly dug and enjoyed. It's part intense character study, part paranoid suspense-thriller, part chase movie. The setup is this: John Scardino is a police crime & accident scene photog who is emotionally numb inside and moonlights as the lens man for an extortion ring, taking dirty snaps of compromised businessmen in their undies with a saucy hooker named Lorraine in sleazy motel rooms. Suddenly, Scardino starts seeing the blackmail crew from his night job turning up as corpses in his day job in seemingly unrelated homicides. Scardino is the only one who notices the connection, but he can't say squat without revealing his involvement in a criminal enterprise! He rediscovers his emotional inner self by getting major league heebie-jeebies trying to figure out who the killer is. He's taken so many snaps over the years, it could be just about anybody. No one can be trusted! Halfway through, the movie explodes open and turns really grisly and intense--be prepared!
The acting--by Peter Gallagher, Frances McDormand, John Lithgow, Jack Black, Geoffrey Lower, John Kapelos, Charlie Spradling and Lee Arenberg--is great and infinitely diggable. The dialogue is really wry and darkly funny, as is the music. And the movie's look has a kind of Edward Hopper-film noir thing going that I also really dug.
Not a lot of people saw this flick when it first came out. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, then went straight to HBO. Which is weird, because it's so good. This one's a real find. Go forth and dig it!
--Richard Terhune, The Movie Digger
The acting--by Peter Gallagher, Frances McDormand, John Lithgow, Jack Black, Geoffrey Lower, John Kapelos, Charlie Spradling and Lee Arenberg--is great and infinitely diggable. The dialogue is really wry and darkly funny, as is the music. And the movie's look has a kind of Edward Hopper-film noir thing going that I also really dug.
Not a lot of people saw this flick when it first came out. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, then went straight to HBO. Which is weird, because it's so good. This one's a real find. Go forth and dig it!
--Richard Terhune, The Movie Digger
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to Jack Black, the movie performed poorly because "skidmarks" is slang for feces-stained underwear, and therefore people read it as "Johnny Shitstains".
- Quotes
Alice: How's the happy burger?
John Scardino: Mildly amusing.
- SoundtracksMagic Moments
Written by Burt Bacharach & Hal David
Performed by Perry Como
Courtesy of the RCA Records label of BMG Entertainment
- How long is Johnny Skidmarks?Powered by Alexa
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content