Mortal Thoughts (1991)

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Country: US
Technical: DeLuxe 103m
Director: Alan Rudolph
Cast: Demi Moore, Glenne Headly, Bruce Willis, Harvey Keitel

Synopsis:

A woman tells two police officers of how she became implicated in her best friend's killing of an abusive husband.

Review:

Certainly not Willis's most glamorous role, but it is easy to see why Moore became attracted to the project: it is her film, her hunted, conscience-stricken features which dominate. Although filmed with a little more sophistication than the run-of-the-mill thriller of this type, as one would expect from Rudolph, the picture is over-extended and, despite its foreseeable last-minute revelation and contemplation of the female killer instinct, offers little more dramatically than yet another demonstration of what a messy business murder is.

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Country: US
Technical: DeLuxe 103m
Director: Alan Rudolph
Cast: Demi Moore, Glenne Headly, Bruce Willis, Harvey Keitel

Synopsis:

A woman tells two police officers of how she became implicated in her best friend's killing of an abusive husband.

Review:

Certainly not Willis's most glamorous role, but it is easy to see why Moore became attracted to the project: it is her film, her hunted, conscience-stricken features which dominate. Although filmed with a little more sophistication than the run-of-the-mill thriller of this type, as one would expect from Rudolph, the picture is over-extended and, despite its foreseeable last-minute revelation and contemplation of the female killer instinct, offers little more dramatically than yet another demonstration of what a messy business murder is.


Country: US
Technical: DeLuxe 103m
Director: Alan Rudolph
Cast: Demi Moore, Glenne Headly, Bruce Willis, Harvey Keitel

Synopsis:

A woman tells two police officers of how she became implicated in her best friend's killing of an abusive husband.

Review:

Certainly not Willis's most glamorous role, but it is easy to see why Moore became attracted to the project: it is her film, her hunted, conscience-stricken features which dominate. Although filmed with a little more sophistication than the run-of-the-mill thriller of this type, as one would expect from Rudolph, the picture is over-extended and, despite its foreseeable last-minute revelation and contemplation of the female killer instinct, offers little more dramatically than yet another demonstration of what a messy business murder is.