Slam Dance (1987)
Facts
| Directed by | Wayne Wang |
| Cast | Virginia Madsen, Tom Hulce, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Adam Ant, Sasha Delgado, Robert Beltran, Rosalind Chao, John Doe, Dennis Hayden, Harry Dean Stanton and Herta Ware |
| Theatrical Release | November 6, 1987 |
| DVD Release | June 3, 2003 |
| Running Time | 100 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 027616886644 |
| Buy this item | $12.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 6 0:49 EDT (details) 1 DVD, TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT, Usually ships in 24 hours, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), Spanish (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled) Or 42 new from $3.55, 13 used from $3.57 |
About Slam Dance
An all-star cast including Tom Hulce (Amadeus) Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio (The Perfect Storm) Virginia Madsen (The Haunting) Adam Ant (Nomads) and Harry Dean Stanton (The Green Mile) enlivens the stark stylishness of this stunning cold neo-punk tale of murder and madness (Los Angeles Times)! Underground L.A. artist C.C. Drood (Hulce) courts danger and excitement when he begins an illicit affair with a high-class call girl (Madsen). But he gets more than he bargains for when she is found dead in his home and he s being framed for her murder! Now pursued by crooked cops and with nowhere to turn Drood makes a desperate attempt to reclaim his life and stay alive!System Requirements:Running Time: 100 Min.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: MYSTERY/SUSPENSE Rating: R UPC: 027616886644 Manufacturer No: 1004623 Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Give this movie a chance.... |
| A MOVIE THAT STARS TOM HULCE.....REMEMBER HIM? |
Drood is cool enough at least to have Adam Ant play his best friend. Adam doesn't do a whole hell of a lot in this movie except wear late 80s mod clothes and come out with bad jokes like "How many surrealist painters does it take to screw in a lightbulb? The fish."
It seems that before the movie started Drood was involved with a mysterious blond played by Virginia Madsen, who made an 80s career out of playing mysterious blonds before she was in "Candyman." She was recently resurrected from the dead for the movie "Sideways" and earned an Oscar nomination for it. I'm glad the Academy is no longer prejudiced against walking corpses. But I digress. Virginia isn't in the movie very much except in flashback sequences and a reoccurring photograph where she's smiling at two men facing her wearing scuba masks looking like they're going to pee on her. But hey, she got on the DVD cover!!! She's been murdered and Drood is the main suspect. I guess because he slept with her. Among his other problems, Drood keeps getting stalked by a skinny guy wearing sunglasses and a red Members Only jacket. The guy beats up Drood a lot and sticks a gun in his face while saying stuff like "she thought you were so smart." Alluding to the concept that he knew the mysterious blond.
Flashbacks seem to be the main way Wang tells the story. And he makes that very clear about 20 minutes into the movie. Problem is, the flashbacks he's showing are things that we, the audience, viewed in the first 20 minutes as well. Why does he feel a need to show us these things again? It actually doesn't help the plot along and it just makes the movie longer. Maybe that's the point. Because actually there really isn't much of a plot to sustain the running time. To fill the gaps Wang uses the aforementioned flashbacks, music montages, and long gaps between dialogue bits. The dialogue is sparse in this film which is effective for two reasons, one because it helps to maintain the strange atmosphere (which the film has plenty of) but also because the dialogue sucks, so the less of it the better. One example:
Drood: Are you going to help me or not?
Adam Ant: No! You're a selfish f%@k! I'm calling the police.
Drood: Let me borrow your car.
Adam Ant: No.
Drood: Give me the keys.
Adam Ant: No.
Drood: I said give me the f%&king keys!!
You get the point. Somehow I don't think Wang was too concerned about the dialogue, he was more concerned about being stylish. And in that he succeeds. The film ultimately makes no sense but Wang uses a lot of deliberate pausing, an effective score, and great photography to wrap around a crappy script. Hey, it worked for me, I own it. It's a great film to have on when you want to go brain-dead or when you're playing the game, "Zombies." Other than that, forget it.
September 15, 2005
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