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Jesse

Original title: Shattered Image
  • 1998
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
4.8/10
774
YOUR RATING
Jesse (1998)
CrimeDramaFantasyMysteryThriller

Jessie, a cool assassin on a mission, dreams she is a traumatized, paranoid rape victim on her honeymoon. This Jessie dreams that she is a cool assassin on a mission.Jessie, a cool assassin on a mission, dreams she is a traumatized, paranoid rape victim on her honeymoon. This Jessie dreams that she is a cool assassin on a mission.Jessie, a cool assassin on a mission, dreams she is a traumatized, paranoid rape victim on her honeymoon. This Jessie dreams that she is a cool assassin on a mission.

  • Director
    • Raúl Ruiz
  • Writer
    • Duane Poole
  • Stars
    • Anne Parillaud
    • William Baldwin
    • Lisanne Falk
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.8/10
    774
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Raúl Ruiz
    • Writer
      • Duane Poole
    • Stars
      • Anne Parillaud
      • William Baldwin
      • Lisanne Falk
    • 22User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos12

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Anne Parillaud
    Anne Parillaud
    • Jessie
    William Baldwin
    William Baldwin
    • Brian
    Lisanne Falk
    Lisanne Falk
    • Paula…
    Graham Greene
    Graham Greene
    • Conrad…
    Billy Wilmott
    • Lamond
    O'Neil Peart
    • Simon
    Leonie Forbes
    Leonie Forbes
    • Isabel
    Bulle Ogier
    Bulle Ogier
    • Mrs. Ford
    Rick Ravanello
    Rick Ravanello
    • Man in Restraurant
    Marc Akerstream
    Marc Akerstream
    • Man in Motorboat
    Peter Hanlon
    Peter Hanlon
    • Dr. Cohen…
    Alwyn Scott
    • Hotel Manager
    Pablo Hoilett
    • Waiter…
    Fae A. Ellington
    Fae A. Ellington
    • Shop Clerk
    • (as Fay Ellington)
    Ilona Margolis
    • Lucy
    Roger Allford
    Roger Allford
    • Father
    Ben Odberg
    • Jimmy
    Johanna Ulett
    • Stewardess
    • Director
      • Raúl Ruiz
    • Writer
      • Duane Poole
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    4.8774
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    Featured reviews

    5Afracious

    Enigmatic, but ultimately unconvincing

    This is an enigmatic film with an interesting premise. Jessie (Anne Parillaud) has just married, and arrives in Jamaica on her honeymoon with her husband Brian (William Baldwin). She is troubled by dreams of herself in another life as an assassin, with her next target being antiques dealer Conrad, also played by William Baldwin. Most of the characters in one side of the confused lady's life are in the other side as different characters. Which is the dream and which is the reality? That's for us to decide. The film constantly switches between both characters, and it is puzzling at times. It is interesting at first, but ultimately the film fails because the acting isn't convincing. It's worth a look though if you like mysterious and surreal films.
    7gridoon

    Haunting enigma; not for all tastes.

    This is the third Raoul Ruiz film I have watched recently (after "Three Lives and Only One Death" and "Genealogies of a Crime"), and it is easily the best of the three. Why? Because it's less talky and pseudo-philosophical, more colorful and cinematic. Imaginatively directed and sprinkled with all sorts of quirky visual surprises (some of which are directly linked to its title) and surreal ideas (a painting that gets different every time you look at it), it captures the netherworld between dream and reality better than any "Nightmare on Elm Street" movie. And if all the pieces of the puzzle don't fit together at the end (though a second viewing will help you clear up a few details), at least you can feel the director's joy in assembling them anyway. (***)
    5lastliberal

    For those who like Hitchcock

    One of the the things you can do as a new director is to get a great Director of Photography. He can help you avoid mistakes and save your butt.

    Raoul Ruiz is not a new director, he has over 90 films to his credit, but he is fairly new to the United States. This is supposed to be his "official" debut film.

    So, he gets Robby Müller to do the cinematography. Great choice, as directors like Wim Wenders (13 times, including Paris Texas) and Jim Jarmunch (Ghost Dog, Way of the Samauri) like to use him on their pictures.

    Unfortunately, the great cinematography and a sexy star, Anne Parillaud (La Femme Nikita, Innocent Blood), can't make up for lousy music and bad "B" movie dialog, even if the story is somewhat interesting. Yes, I hung in there to see what happens, and, no, I am still not sure.

    It did have Graham Greene (Die Hard with a Vengeance, The Green Mile) and that made it more palatable through the bad parts.

    Don't rent, but you may want to catch it on cable.
    chaos-rampant

    Osmosis of shattered images

    I think a crucial point in developing an individual taste for cinema is to be able to unwaveringly focus on the things that we feel personally matter. To coast without distraction through the small handicaps that hamper and limit a film in pursuit of the spark of creative vision (assuming one such that matters to us exists). This is to be able to enjoy Argento for who he is rather than in spite of his storytelling deficiencies.

    One such thing we have here. A package that looks from a distance as straight-to-video fodder as vehicle for an almost recognizable name, acting that is ho-hum, stilted dialogue. The reward for a casual watcher catching this on latenight TV might be simply to cope a smile at William Baldwin playing actor.

    I come to this for the filmmaker though with his potent notions about convergent realities and fictions passing as real, as part of my quest on Raoul Ruiz. Coming from two films he did back in France, both crushingly dry and tedious, for his American debut he reverts back to the heady magic he weaved in his 80's stuff. Soaking in colors, strange portents, frames that become real; a reality hung askew from which we are transported back and forth into the folds of the imaginative mind.

    The scaffold: two women (played by Anna Parillaud) as figments of the one damaged mind, each in her separate reality dreaming up the other. Transitions between the two worlds, mostly through sex or objects as mirrors (an acquarium, a painting, even -rather painfully obvious- the frame of what we're watching shattering into shards).

    So there is one subconscious where all the hurt is arranged into a wish-fulfillment fantasy (the woman plays a contract killer paid to kill men, eventually discovers the target she falls in love with to be innocent), and the conscious mind in the other plane trying to cope with the anxieties of a situation real or imagined (as seeping back from the dream and flowing into it). It is all about this cinematic flow of a nightmare that renews itself - a half-way intelligent device, perhaps squandered under the auspice of something for latenight cable.

    Then there is the ending, no doubt imposed upon Ruiz by producers demanding some solid ground for their audience. It all makes sense eventually, what was real and what not. Again we may disregard this.
    5claudio_carvalho

    Confused Mind, Messy Screenplay

    In New York, Jessie Markham (Anne Parillaud) is raped by a man with mask and now she is recovering from the rape and an attempted suicide. However her mind is confused and she lives two realities. In one life, she is a newly wed with Brian (William Baldwin) spending honeymoon in Jamaica with the guest Paula (Lisanne Falk) snooping around the couple. In the other life, she is a hit woman that executes men and Laura (Lisanne Falk) is her client that wants Brian killed. Which life is real?

    "Shattered Image" is a film about a raped woman that has become paranoid with a confused mind and she lives two women with opposite personalities. The promising storyline is wasted by a messy screenplay and the viewer ends the film without solving the mystery and knowing who Jessie is. My vote is five.

    Title (Brazil): "A Imagem de um Pesadelo" ("The Image of a Nightmare")

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Last Movie Of Marc Akerstream as an Actor
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Prince of Egypt/Shattered Image/Little Voice/A Simple Plan/Central Station (1998)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 10, 1999 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Canada
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Jessie
    • Filming locations
      • Jamaica
    • Production companies
      • Fireworks Entertainment
      • Schroeder Hoffman Productions
      • Seven Arts Pictures (II)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $7,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $106,116
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $31,859
      • Dec 6, 1998
    • Gross worldwide
      • $106,116
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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