Hell's Kitchen (1998)
Facts
| Directed by | Tony Cinciripini |
| Cast | Rosanna Arquette, William Forsythe, Angelina Jolie, Mekhi Phifer, Johnny Whitworth, Ryan Slater and James Haven Voight |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1997 |
| DVD Release | January 13, 2004 |
| Running Time | 101 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 783722715024 |
| Buy this item | $7.98 at Amazon.com As of Oct 1 14:43 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Allumination, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 31 new from $3.19, 16 used from $3.18 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| IT'S ONLY ME BUT: |
| Almost impossible-not to see! |
| Do Not Buy This Movie..!!! |
| tight assortment of situations |
The bathroom and bedroom scenes are pretty intense and done well. The action shots may be more questionable.
Also, I do not like were that Hayden didn't look 15 in the movie.
If they did not say that Jolie was in this movie, I wouldn't have recognized Jolie in her character for this movie. There is enough confusion in the movie for awhile to make for an interesting plot. A movie you can consider watching, but not a must have. April 14, 2006
| Is life good or is life hell? |
Hell's Kitchen is a neighborhood of New York City that has a long history of crime and violence. In recent years the area's name was changed to Clinton, apparently as part of a makeover of its notoriety. I'm told that only newcomers call it that; for those born there it's still "Hell's Kitchen" or "The Kitchen."
The movie *Hell's Kitchen NYC* aspires to be counted in the genre of what I'll term "New York City street movies." The genre can be traced back to the late '40's when *The Naked City* (1948) was made. *The Cool World* (1964) is a legendary example. *Fort Apache: The Bronx* (1981) is a more recent one.
NYC street movies are not filmed on studio sound stages but on the streets of New York. While they are scripted and played like other dramatic films, they make a fetish of realism and so have a raw documentary feel. Professional actors share the screen with everyday city people who more or less just play themselves. The camera takes us into low-income neighborhoods where we're confronted with the struggle of common men and women against economic hardship and the temptation/threat of crime. We share the daily joys and woes of these hardy people. We get to know worried parents and aimless youth, hoodlums and cops, drug dealers and addicts, pimps and prostitutes. We discover that they are human just like the rest of us.
*Hell's Kitchen NYC* embraces all the trappings of the genre but is a dramatic flop. My feeling is that writer, producer and director Tony Cinceripini lost hold of his own material. The film tries hard to bring us close to its five messed-up main protagonists: Liz, a drug-addicted nightclub singer; Patty, the young owner of the nightclub who is tormented by private guilt; Gloria, Liz's daughter and Patty's girlfriend who is consumed by rage over the shooting death of her brother; Johnny, a young boxer just released from five years in prison; and Lou, a somewhat brain-damaged ex-champion boxer who gives Johnny a job.
But the closer we get to these people the more dispiriting the experience becomes. Cinceripini wants us to feel their hurt, and that we do...but we never recover from it. The mood of the film is just too depressing. The long interludes of somber, repetitive music have a lot to do with that. As does the plodding story riddled with predictable cliches. And the lifelessly dark, washed-out, or gray tones of the cinematography. And the camera tricks (odd angles and slomo) that just bump us right out of the movie.
Cinceripini tries to show us a happy end: Lou gets past his hangups to take charge of Johnny's boxing career, and Johnny wins the championship; Gloria lets go of her loss, which permits her and Johnny to revive their love that went to hell five years before; Lia and Gloria reconcile and hug each other; Johnny and Patty reconcile and hug each other... But we don't care. We've been deadened. This movie is a total downer.
As an Angelina Jolie fan I endured *Hell's Kitchen NYC* three times just to study her performance. She has a large part in the film, which is nice simply because I always enjoy her presence on the screen. But Ms Jolie smiles only two or three times in the whole movie, and these are very short and wan smiles. Her regular expression is like that of a woman who's been told by her doctor she has a terminal disease. Sometimes she cries. Sometimes she's angry. But never once does she look happy, even when she's telling Johnny that she's pregnant and thus feels alive again. As a performance of misery it's effective. But after watching it thrice over the past several months I doubt if I'll watch it again.
Oh, I should mention that in this movie Ms Jolie speaks with a creditable New York accent. This is worth noting because in her big hit two years later, *The Bone Collector*, she starts off with the same accent (see her first scene, the before-work conversation with her boyfriend). But as *The Bone COllector* develops she reverts to her laid-back Los Angeles way of speaking. I suppose if you're not very familiar with regional American speech patterns you won't notice it. Anyway, in *Hell's Kitchen NYC* she manages to maintain the "Noo Yawk" idiom throughout. Some of her best lines (not for the easily offended)--
(Gloria to Patty, her boyfriend:) "You (...) my muddah?"
(Gloria to Liz:) "Ma, you're a (...)."
(As Gloria tosses cash to the hoodlum who sells her a revolver, but who prefers her to pay him in sex instead of money, she says:) "Go pay for some p*ssy."
Another thing I should mention is that in this movie Ms Jolie is a blonde. And in that hair color, this represents her best appearance! In *Life or Something Like It* her blonde hairdo was a caricature of Marilyn Monroe's. I couldn't take it seriously. In *Girl Interrupted* she was OK as a blonde, but her hair was hippie-ish and not well cared for. In *Hell's Kitchen NYC* her blonde hairstyle looks attractive and completely natural.
At the end of the final credits of *Hell's Kitchen NYC* a message scrolls up from "M.P." (Mekhi Phifer I guess). "Life is Good." If the good life means the one depicted in *Hell's Kitchen NYC*, then in M.P.'s dictionary "good" must mean "hell."
I'd recomment *Hell's Kitchen NYC* to the anti-terrorist police as a psychological instrument for breaking down suspects. Just lock your alleged terrorists in a room with a big video screen on the wall. Play this movie over and over nonstop. After a couple of days your guys will be pounding the door to confess everything they know.
July 23, 2005
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