Cape
Fear
Released
November 1991
Starring
Robert De Niro, Nick Nolte, Jessica Lange (as Leigh Bowden), Juliette
Lewis, Joe Don Baker, Robert Mitchum, Gregory Peck, Ileana Douglas
Directed by Martin Scorsese
128 min.
Box
Office gross - $79.1 million
See
complete credits at Internet
Movie Database
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Cape
Fear was first made in 1962 and starred Robert Mitchum as Max Cody,
the psychotic prison parole who seeks revenge on the lawyer who unsuccessfully
defended him fourteen years earlier. Martin Scorsese’s lavish remake
keeps the original story intact but adds layers of psychological depth
to the characters and the violence is more graphic. In Scorsese’s version,
Sam Bowden (the victimized lawyer) is not the clean cut average American
family man - he is flawed, and to some extent, Max Cody’s revenge is
justified.
Martin
Scorsese, one of the most prominent directors working today, is known
for his dark and violent films like Taxi Driver and Goodfellas.
Jessica Lange was thrilled for the opportunity to work with the brilliant
director even though the part of Leigh Bowden did not give her much
to work with and basically she is just a terrorized wife. Scorsese did,
however, add much more dimension to her character than the original
film and here much time is given to depict the tension in the Bowden’s
marriage.
Cape
Fear was criticized by many as being a horror/slasher film. The last
twenty minutes in which the Bowden’s are terrorized on a sailboat during
an intense thunderstorm is marked by the prevalent tendency in today’s
films in which the killer keeps coming back again and again. It did
receive some praise but is not considered Scorsese’s best work. The
cast is a powerful one - Robert Mitchum and Gregory Peck (who appeared
in the original) make cameos and the supporting players are all established
names. As for the leads, De Niro is slimy and chilling and Cody and
Nolte and Lange are intense as the angst ridden couple. Juliette Lewis,
who plays the Bowden’s teenage daughter, won much praise for her part
as a Lolita-esqe nymphet.
Critical
Sampling:
"Nolte
and Lange suffer most from the script's lack of depth; they're both
strong, confident, exciting actors, but their characters here don't
allow them to express anywhere near the full range of their talents.."
- Hal Hinson, Washington Post
"Jessica
Lange plays Nolte's wife and does fairly well with a part that is doomed
to some dullness. No matter how she and Scorsese and Strick try to alter
the role, she ends up as one more wide-eyed female victim waiting for
male rescue." - Stanley Kauffmann,
New Republic
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