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IMDbPro

Cold Light of Day

  • 1990
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
460
YOUR RATING
Cold Light of Day (1990)
BiographyCrimeHorror

Fictionalized account based on the actions of serial killer Dennis Nilsen.Fictionalized account based on the actions of serial killer Dennis Nilsen.Fictionalized account based on the actions of serial killer Dennis Nilsen.

  • Director
    • Fhiona-Louise
  • Writer
    • Fhiona-Louise
  • Stars
    • Bob Flag
    • Martin Byrne-Quinn
    • Geoffrey Greenhill
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    460
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fhiona-Louise
    • Writer
      • Fhiona-Louise
    • Stars
      • Bob Flag
      • Martin Byrne-Quinn
      • Geoffrey Greenhill
    • 9User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos66

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Bob Flag
    Bob Flag
    • Dennis Nilsen
    Martin Byrne-Quinn
    Martin Byrne-Quinn
    • Joe
    Geoffrey Greenhill
    • Inspector Simmons
    Mark Hawkins
    • The Poor Boy
    Andrew Edmans
    • Stephen
    Jackie Cox
    • Julie Stay
    Bill Merrow
    • Albert Green
    Claire King
    • Prostitute
    Eugene Cheese
    • Grandfather
    • (as Paul Jay)
    Deborah Manship
    • Mother
    Gary Ewell
    • Young Jorden
    Lol Coxhill
    • Priest
    Joe Owen
    • Detective Taylor
    Carlos Downie
    • Pick up in cafe
    Malcolm Rogers
    Malcolm Rogers
    • Forensic Officer
    Ken Say
    • Police Officer #1
    John Baxter
    • Police Officer #2
    Louis Haslar
    • Rent Boy
    • (as Louis Hasler)
    • Director
      • Fhiona-Louise
    • Writer
      • Fhiona-Louise
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    5.4460
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    Featured reviews

    7mysteryskeats

    Low budget serial killer

    One has to admire the balls it took to make this movie. For a start, the atmosphere is cloying and intense, and if you've taken the time to track this movie down then chances are you probably know a little bit about it. Based on the crimes of British serial Killer Dennis Nielson, cold light of day is a slice of docu-drama little like anything you've ever seen before. i saw this on video in its 75 minute entirety, and it is a difficult movie to sit through. It makes you feel so uncomfortable, and tries, in its own way to present its characters with some compassion, but they are all so cold and pathetic that you squirm in your seat and wait for it to end. It took me a long time to track this little gem down, and it has had a couple of releases in the UK throughout the 1990's, but its a hard film to watch. Certainly a must for serial killer movie buffs or anyone interested in lensing their first movie, cold light of day is awkward and, in several places, downright unpleasant. Henry Portrait of a serial killer was gruesome, Cold Light of Day is a shiver than runs down your spine in the dead of night.
    3tim-935

    Turn down the sound, lipread the dialogue.

    If you are reading this you will have come here with a purpose. The sadistic trail of murderous narcissism left behind by Dennis Nilsen from 1978 until being caught in 1983 will be familiar.

    This low budget retelling, in the style of a reject Channel 4 documentary, disappoints on several levels. The production could have been much more effective as a Film Noir. Narrative should drive the action which takes place in the shadows. Much more should have been made of conceptual imagery. The long, wandering take of Nilsen's room that concludes the film hints at what is possible.

    One of the first ideas drummed into fledgling film editors is that sound is king. People will forgive the occasional wobble or slip in focus, even a dreadful edit, but will only endure a few moments of poor sound. From the opening whirl and deafening whoosh of whistling wind underpinned with rhythmic thumps, through the oh so too long tolling funeral bell complete with Darth Vader breathing, to the invasive wild-takes in street scenes, the soundtrack is jarring.

    The action of the film, concerning the enticement of the victims, their strangulation and drowning, followed by their dismemberment and disposal, is interspersed with sections of the police interview after arrest. My reading of the notes taken at the time, this was before PACE and the routine tape recording of interviews, along with the subsequent evidence at trial, portrays a civil interrogation of a compliant, emotionless Nilsen, calmly admitting to his crimes. In Fhiona Louise's version here we have the lead detective, Chief Inspector Simmons (Geoffrey Greenhill), in real life DCI Peter Jay, railing and shouting with his suspect, trying to obtain admissions of perversion and worse.

    The Nilsen character is played by Bob Flag, bearing an uncanny resemblance to the murderer. For the film he is renamed Jorden March, possibly a nod to Whitemoor prison where, for a while, he was held.

    If you know nothing about this case then pass this one by. If you are knowledgeable then you will find nothing new here except interpretation. If you are looking for a low budget, amateurish, short to deconstruct then you have hit the jackpot.
    2TomFarrell63

    Just awful.

    How this ever got a blu ray release is beyond me, so amateurish in terms of acting and production, and the picture quality is truly appalling. Like some mates have got together with a camcorder and decided to make a film. Really not worth your time.
    7CurriedGoolies

    A little-known but extremely disturbing chiller, based on a notorious true story

    Between 1978 and 1983, Dennis Nilsen - an outwardly unremarkable former soldier and police officer turned civil servant - killed at least fifteen men and boys (most of them students or homeless) in gruesome circumstances, allegedly retaining the corpses for sex acts before disposing of the butchered remains by hiding them in cupboards, under the floorboards, or simply by flushing them down the toilet. This grimy, clammy, little-seen independent film is a lightly fictionalised account of Nilsen's hideous deeds, with a standout performance from Bob Flag as the milquetoast murderer, here renamed Jorden March.

    Fhiona Louise's film, clearly made on a shoestring budget, steers clear of exploitation tactics, choosing instead to cast its characters adrift in a singularly bleak, uncaring and desolate world of tatty pubs, squalid bed-sits, greasy cafés and grubby bathrooms. The police interrogation of March is inter-cut with flashbacks that reveal not just his crimes (a living room disembowelment and the discovery of what's blocking the drains will send a shiver down the spines of even the hardiest souls) but also provide a window of understanding into what has tipped the apparently kindly loner over the edge. Louise's direction is unobtrusive and detached, allowing the lengthy exchanges between the characters to play out in several lengthy takes, but it's this cold, flat, cinema-verité style that affords the proceedings much of their chilling power, conveying the sense that such horrors really could be unfolding in the street, or even the house, just around the corner.

    It's an easy film to admire - it won several awards - but it's not an easy film to watch, let alone enjoy. As a fitting footnote, a caption card dedicates the preceding horrors to "those too sensitive for this world" - which, in his own perverse and twisted way, Nilsen surely was.
    7a_baron

    Cold Light Of Day

    "Cold Light Of Day" is more of a dramatisation than a film; fairly short, it explores the psychology of one of modern Britain's monsters. Dennis Nilsen murdered twelve, possibly more, young men, purely for his own gratification. A necrophiliac as well as a sexual sadist, his fascination with death is believed to have sprung from the death of his grandfather, that is if we can believe anything he said.

    We see flashbacks to his boyhood but the film concentrates on his picking up his victims and murdering them. There is also an attempt to humanise him by showing his acts of kindness to an elderly neighbour. To which the best reply is so what? Ted Bundy actually worked on a suicide prevention helpline.

    The names have been changed, which is understandable for victims and incidental characters, but was it necessary to change Nilsen's name to Jorden March? Lead actor Bob Flag bears a striking resemblance to Nilsen - hopefully only a physical one! - and it is easy to see why this ultra-low budget effort picked up a prize at the 1990 Venice Film Festival.

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    Related interests

    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Crime
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Claire King has a small role in this film as a Prostitute who is better known as Kim Tate in popular UK Drama Emmerdale.
    • Goofs
      In the end credits, the word 'prosthetics' is misspelled 'prosphetics'.
    • Crazy credits
      Before the end credits, a caption appears that reads 'For those too sensitive for this world - Fhiona'.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 905: Talk to Me + Extra Terrestrial Visitors (2023)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Cold Light of Day?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 1990 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Killers Kiss
    • Filming locations
      • Durdle Door, Dorset, England, UK
    • Production company
      • Creative Artists Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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