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IMDbPro

In the Cut

  • 2003
  • 12
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
27K
YOUR RATING
Meg Ryan in In the Cut (2003)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Play trailer1:58
8 Videos
99+ Photos
Suspense MysteryWhodunnitMysteryThriller

A New York City writing professor, Frannie Avery, has an affair with a police detective who is investigating the murder of a beautiful young woman in her neighborhood.A New York City writing professor, Frannie Avery, has an affair with a police detective who is investigating the murder of a beautiful young woman in her neighborhood.A New York City writing professor, Frannie Avery, has an affair with a police detective who is investigating the murder of a beautiful young woman in her neighborhood.

  • Director
    • Jane Campion
  • Writers
    • Jane Campion
    • Susanna Moore
    • Stavros Kazantzidis
  • Stars
    • Meg Ryan
    • Mark Ruffalo
    • Jennifer Jason Leigh
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    27K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jane Campion
    • Writers
      • Jane Campion
      • Susanna Moore
      • Stavros Kazantzidis
    • Stars
      • Meg Ryan
      • Mark Ruffalo
      • Jennifer Jason Leigh
    • 422User reviews
    • 109Critic reviews
    • 47Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos8

    In the Cut
    Trailer 1:58
    In the Cut
    A Guide to the Films of Jane Campion
    Clip 1:54
    A Guide to the Films of Jane Campion
    A Guide to the Films of Jane Campion
    Clip 1:54
    A Guide to the Films of Jane Campion
    In The Cut Scene: How Did That Girl Die
    Clip 1:15
    In The Cut Scene: How Did That Girl Die
    In The Cut Scene: I Can Be What You Want
    Clip 0:55
    In The Cut Scene: I Can Be What You Want
    In The Cut Scene: Somebody Asked Me Out
    Clip 1:12
    In The Cut Scene: Somebody Asked Me Out
    In The Cut Scene: Can I Talk To You?
    Clip 1:03
    In The Cut Scene: Can I Talk To You?

    Photos107

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Meg Ryan
    Meg Ryan
    • Frannie Avery
    Mark Ruffalo
    Mark Ruffalo
    • Detective Giovanni A. Malloy
    Jennifer Jason Leigh
    Jennifer Jason Leigh
    • Pauline
    Michael Nuccio
    • Frannie's Young Father
    • (as Micheal Nuccio)
    Allison Nega
    • Young Father's Fiancee
    • (as Alison Nega)
    Dominick Aries
    • Attentive Husband
    Susan Gardner
    • Perfect Wife
    Sharrieff Pugh
    Sharrieff Pugh
    • Cornelius Webb
    Nick Damici
    Nick Damici
    • Detective Ritchie Rodriguez
    Heather Litteer
    Heather Litteer
    • Angela Sands
    Daniel T. Booth
    • Luther Wilker Red Turtle Bartender
    Yaani King Mondschein
    Yaani King Mondschein
    • Frannie's Student
    • (as Yaani King)
    Frank Harts
    Frank Harts
    • Frannie's Student
    Sebastian Sozzi
    Sebastian Sozzi
    • Frannie's Student
    Zach Wegner
    Zach Wegner
    • Frannie's Student
    • (as Zack Wegner)
    Patrice O'Neal
    Patrice O'Neal
    • Hector (Baby Doll Bouncer)
    Funda Duval
    Funda Duval
    • Baby Doll Bartender
    • (as Funda Duyal)
    Theo Kogan
    Theo Kogan
    • Baby Doll Bartender
    • Director
      • Jane Campion
    • Writers
      • Jane Campion
      • Susanna Moore
      • Stavros Kazantzidis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews422

    5.427.3K
    1
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9richard-mason

    Obviously Cuts Too Deep for Some

    Deary me, some people get upset when a film isn't what they want it to be, don't they? How dare the film be what the film-makers set out to make, instead of what someone's narrow expectations dictate it should b?

    Fancy In the Cut being gritty, seamy, sexy and deeply disturbing ... just like all the publicity (and the rating) warned us it would be. What a shock. How did the people expecting another Piano, or Meg Ryan Finds True Love Yet Again ever find themselves in the cinema?

    As for those who have said they have walked out completely unmoved ... either they must be aliens or robots, or are fooling themselves, not wanting to acknowledge the truth of what they've seen on the screen. Seldom have I seen a film that so truly examines the dark side of our sexual impulses. I walked out quite shattered, and wandered around in a daze for a while.

    Meg Ryan completely miscast? Ridiculous and insulting. How dare you tell an actress she has to be Little Mary Sunshine for the rest of her life. And she pulls it off brilliantly. She and Mark Ruffalo give the most stunning lead performances for a long time. Why? Because they're playing real, multi-layered people. Not goody-goodies or baddy-baddies.

    Didn't like any of the characters? Must have a very limited range of acquaintances, or alternatively, don't like the real people you do know.

    Thriller plot not thrilling? Admittedly it's not the strongest point in the film, but it has all the required shocks and surprises (and, you'd think enough gore for the modern audience), and while the revelation of the murderer is not the biggest twist ending ever, the final shot takes your breath away.

    And anyway, Campion, while handling the thriller genre competently, is using it as a means to explore sexuality. And attraction. And how much of love involves physicality, carnality, trust, the desire to dominate, the desire to be dominated, and above all, the attraction of the DANGEROUS. Yes, adult stuff, not often tackled in mainstream films.

    I think it's her best film ever (possibly excepting Sweetie), and I give it 9 out of 10.
    6moonspinner55

    Woozy psycho-sexual thriller isn't preoccupied with logic or even with being seamless...

    Half-baked, underwritten crime drama-cum-sexual thriller has Meg Ryan playing mousy English teacher in NYC attracted to a handsome homicide investigator on a serial murder case, one that has left body parts in Ryan's yard (and yet this barely fazes her!). Sub-plots involving Ryan's half-sister (Jennifer Jason Leigh, trying hard with a bad part), ex-boyfriend (an unbilled Kevin Bacon), her students, her job, and her fetish for the English vocabulary go absolutely nowhere. Meg, trying for an understated seriousness--but mostly just looking unhappy--gives a fairly brave and intriguing performance, and it's interesting to see her in these jittery, sordid surroundings, but the plot is alternately off-putting and curiously morbid; it's a fascinating misfire. Nicole Kidman co-produced (and perhaps was in line to star in the film herself), but Ryan does as good a job as any actress might have in the role. **1/2 from ****
    7Nazi_Fighter_David

    Jane Campion's film has something that makes it worth seeing

    In fact, much of Frannie's allure is that she isn't shy about her body, or even afraid to engage in sexual activity with Detective James Malloy (Mark Ruffalo) in her two room apartment on Washington Square…

    In the Red Turtle bar, Frannie (Meg Ryan) inadvertently watched a man, with a tattoo on his wrist, receiving oral gratification from a girl with blue fingernails having diamonds in them…

    Soon after, there was a homicide in Frannie's neighborhood… The body of the woman, or part of her body, to be exact, was found in the garden outside her window…The girl who was murdered was Angela Sands with the blue fingernails …

    As the psychopath strikes again and again, Frannie embarks on a powerfully physical sexual relationship with Malloy, despite her rising suspicions, later on, that the serial killer in question may very well be the 'good cop' with the 'three of spade' she saw once…

    Meg Ryan plays a very interior character living out of her unconscious emotions and actions, seeming always scared of what she wants… Her only passion was poetry… Her former lover Kevin Bacon— mentally unbalanced—thinks he should stick around because he slept with her twice… Bacon maintains a threatening presence throughout the whole picture… Jennifer Jason Leigh— exquisitely sexy— graces the screen as Frannie's half-sister Pauline… In his few scenes with Ryan, Sharrieff Pugh proves to be sweet and charming but also bad and scary
    Buddy-51

    A Cut Above

    Meg Ryan gives what may well be the breakthrough performance of her career in 'In the Cut,' a violent, erotic thriller from maverick filmmaker Jane Campion. Ryan plays Frannie, a college English instructor who is instinctively drawn to the seamier side of life. When women in her Manhattan neighborhood start falling victim to a grizzly serial killer, Frannie, as a possible witness, becomes a prime source of interest, both professionally and personally, for a homicide detective named Malloy, who has some troubling sexual proclivities of his own to deal with. Attracted by his edgy darkness and smoldering sexuality, Frannie succumbs to his advances, fully cognizant of the possible danger he represents. Is the law enforcement official as much of a threat to this young woman as the psychopath going about town decapitating and dismembering the local ladies? It is this kind of moral ambiguity that informs the entire movie.

    From the very outset, Campion makes it clear that we are not in for a conventional police procedural. She is obviously more interested in character and mood than in the niceties of a well-oiled plot and streamlined exposition. Frannie is far from being the helpless victim or plucky heroine one usually finds at the center of such tales; she is a complex, moody, taciturn woman who seems to be drifting passively through life, with little passion, conviction or purpose to make any of it worthwhile. Even when it comes to her sexual obsessions, it often feels as if she is just going through the motions. It is hard for us to get a bead on her, for she is a perfect reflection of the world she inhabits, a world without a clear moral compass - so much so that we often don't know what we are supposed to think of her or the other people with whom she comes in contact. The script plays up the sense of dislocation by having characters appear and disappear seemingly at random throughout the movie, sometimes serving as little more than red herrings for both the story and Frannie's life. This often makes it so that we in the audience feel clueless as to where exactly the film is headed and what the overall purpose of it really is. It's often hard for us to get our bearings, yet, it is this very ambiguity, this sense of being rudderless and confused, that lifts the film above the tired conventions of the genre. In fact, the film is at its weakest when it concentrates on the intricacies of the plot - the resolution is remarkably mundane - and at its strongest when it merely records the eccentricities and passions of its two enigmatic characters.

    The sexual content of the film is highly charged but not overtly offensive, with one glaring exception, at least in the 'unrated' version (I assume this does not apply to the version released to theaters). Early in the film, we are treated to a graphic, hard core close-up of an act of fellatio that clearly is not simulated. Consider yourself forewarned.

    Ryan has never been better than she is here. She plays Frannie almost as if she were one of the urban walking dead, just right for a modern woman who feels no real emotional connection with the world and the people around her.

    Mark Ruffalo is excellent as the cop who may be more of a threat to Frannie than the killer who's terrorizing the area. Almost as an afterthought, Kevin Bacon makes little more than a cameo appearance, overacting in the role of Frannie's stalker ex-boyfriend.

    'In the Cut' is a subtle little mood piece that is more about observing behavior than it is about searching for a killer. Those looking for an intensely plotted thriller may not be as intrigued by this film as those searching for a psychosexual character study. It's the atmosphere and the performances that count in this film.
    4clydestuff

    As muddled as a dirty puddle and left me befuddled

    In The Cut is one of those films where you'll sit and watch with a certain amount of puzzlement. It's a film that is unsure of whether it wants to be a mystery thriller with sexual overtones, or a provocative story about erotic sexual liaisons with a suspense thriller tossed in as the side salad. It doesn't work on either level.

    Franny Averey (Meg Ryan) is a New York English teacher who has this strange habit of collecting words. She collects them off subway signs, from conversations, billboards or wherever they may happen to pop up. She does this because she says it is her passion. Now you may be wondering what this word collecting has to do with the story. The answer is nothing. It provides us no insight into Franny's character, and is nothing more than one of those odd character traits given to someone for no reason other than the fact that it makes them look quirky. I only bring it up because it is mentioned often in this film with no point or relevance as to why and it clearly demonstrates why so much of this film ends up being a pointless melange.

    Fran also has a sister, Pauline (Jennifer Jason Leigh) and their relationship is one of the few good things about the film. They talk as sisters who are close would, confiding intimately with each other and offering advise when needed. The problem is that Pauline's character is as murky as Fran's. She has an obsession with some medical doctor, lives over a strip club, and hangs around with the prostitutes that inhabit the premises. Pauline and Franny are two wild and crazy gals alright, but don't count on figuring out why.

    One morning before heading to teach her English class, Franny stops at a local bar to meet and converse with one of her students Cornelius Webb (Sharrieff Pugh). From what I could figured out, she meets Cornelius because he has a new slang word for Franny to add to her word and phrases collection. Either that or they've had sex at some time or another. We are never told for sure. Perhaps Director Campion felt that if we knew for sure Franny was having sex with a student, it would sully her as a sympathetic character, although everything else she does in this film would be enough to degrade even the worst street corner hooker in any big city. At one point she travels down to the dark basement to use the Restroom, and in the shadows finds a woman performing oral sex on a man. Although it is very dark, and she watches from a distance, Franny sees a tattoo on the man's hand, but is unable to see anything of his face. Call it Creative Lighting 101.

    It isn't long before Det. Malloy, (Mark Ruffalo)stops by Franny's apartment investigating the fact that some woman had lost her head, literally, in Annie's yard. There is supposed to be some underlying sexual tension between the two, but I never felt it. That must have come later that evening when Franny is lying in her bed having sexual fantasies about the good detective. We are never clued into why she is attracted by him. Malloy is a foul mouthed low class basic Neanderthal, and Franny is supposed to be educated and intelligent. I suppose some would call what Franny does as slumming.

    It goes without saying that that eventually Franny and Malloy end up in the hay together in a steamy sex scene where Meg sheds her clothes and her girl next door image all at the same time. The scene is filmed with frankness and little modesty, but it is also a scene lacking in any kind of passion. It's as if Franny and Malloy are almost performing an act of self masturbatory gratification, and in a way perhaps they are. While watching scenes such as this one, I couldn't help but think of the film Looking For Mr. Goodbar with Diane Keaton. In that film, Keaton hopped from bed to bed of just about any who could please her on any particular night. It worked well in that film because we understood Keaton's makeup and motivation, and the self-destructive tendencies that came with it. Ryan's Franny lacks any kind of motivation about anything. Besides word collecting, we get pointless scenes of Ryan daydreaming about how her parents met. These daydreams pop up at the oddest moments, and are as useless to us as Ryan's word and phrase collecting habit.

    After a while, more victims pop up. Franny begins to suspect Malloy might be the killer but sleeps with him anyway. Besides the student, Cornelius, Campion throws in a few more suspects such as Kevin Bacon playing Franny's obsessive ex, and even Malloy's partner. They don't add much to the story, except to keep you in some kind of pseudo suspense. They do have to have more than one murder suspect, don't they? The biggest problem with the murder story is Franny's own unexplained rashness and lack of intelligence. In other words, you'll earn your Nancy Drew merit badge long before Franny does.

    If Campion was trying to create a suspenseful murder mystery, she didn't succeed. If she was trying to create a provocative film with sexual undertones she didn't succeed there either. If she was trying to create an artsy hodgepodge of meaningless and pointless images, well I guess she may have succeeded in that, and of course if that's the only thing you achieve than I have no choice but to give In The Cut my grade of D.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The unrated version is notorious for a scene where fellatio is witnessed by Meg Ryan's character, although it was later revealed in the film commentary that the actress was using a rubber prop.
    • Goofs
      In the final scene, when Frannie is walking home from the lighthouse after escaping the killer, she is barefoot. When she reaches the garden of her apartment building, she is wearing sandals. When she reaches her apartment, she's barefoot again.
    • Quotes

      Detective Malloy: I want to do with you what spring does with the cherry trees.

    • Crazy credits
      Thank you fabulous Kevin Bacon!!! and "Mayor" Harvey Keitel.
    • Alternate versions
      The United Kingdom DVD has deleted scenes as a special feature.
    • Connections
      Featured in Le Guide pervers du cinéma (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      You're No Good
      by Clint Ballard Jr.

      Performed by Betty Everett

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    FAQ21

    • How long is In the Cut?Powered by Alexa
    • What are the differences between the R-Rated Version and the Unrated Director's Cut?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 17, 2003 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Australia
      • France
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Sony Pictures
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • En carne viva
    • Filming locations
      • The Baby Doll Lounge - 34 White Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Screen Gems
      • Pathé
      • Pathe Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $12,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,750,602
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $97,625
      • Oct 26, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $23,726,793
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 59m(119 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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