
Sliver
1993 theatrical version, 1080hd
Johnny's comments:
One more for the 90s
weekend, today it's the 1993 erotic thriller Sliver,
basically an attempt to cash in on the success of
Sharon Stone (and writer Joe Eszterhas) in Basic
Instinct and it shows as it's a mess of a movie. Shame
really as it's directed by Australian director Phillip
Noyce who came to the movie off the back of a few hits
including Patriot Games and Dead Calm (and Blind Fury
is a pretty decent movie too) but Sliver has the
feeling that there was a lot of fiddling done along
the way particularly the clumsy ending. The idea of a
voyeur overlooking an entire building is an
interesting idea but the murder mystery plot is an
utter mess not helped by a massive rewrite after a
poor screening which also changed the identity of the
killer. The ending is an absolute stinker and the
final line completely laughable followed by, you know
what it is, the screen turning to black after someone
presses a remote control at it. I read about the
original ending and I've gotta admit, it's actually
not bad although I can see why it didn't go over well
with a testing audience. It definitely would have been
better and more trickier than the ending as it stands.
Sadly, I found out the Bluray I
had was the theatrical version, which is a minute
shorter and that the uncut version isn't available on
Bluray, only DVD. There's not much more to cap, a
couple of slightly longer shots in the sex scene that
don't really show much more and a couple of shots
featuring better looks at the bodies of Polly Walker
and Allison Mackie in the scenes below. Still, it's
frustrating not to have the complete version.
Considering most involved in Sliver seemed to have
washed there hands of the movie, I seriously doubt
we'll get an uncut Bluray and I'm not buying a DVD
I'll never watch, so unless I can find it elsewhere,
I'm afraid this is the best I can do at the moment.
Tuna's notes:
Sliver (1993) is a Sharon Stone thriller which also
stars Tom Berenger, William Baldwin and Polly Walker.
All four were nominated for Razzies.
Stone plays a book editor, and moves into the swanky
Sliver building, a very up-scale apartment building.
Two tenants, Baldwin and Berenger, start hitting on
her immediately. She ends up with Baldwin, who turns
out to own the building, and to have every room in the
building bugged with sound and video. His first gift
to her is a telescope, which she immediately uses to
spy on other buildings, assuring him that he has found
his soul mate. Stone learns that the girl in the
apartment before her looked like her, and fell to her
death from the window. When other tenants are
murdered, she is unsure if it is Berenger or Baldwin.
Scoop's notes
COMPLETE SPOILERS:
Although the original source material is a novel by
Ira Levin (Rosemary's Baby, The Stepford Wives, The
Boys From Brazil), Sliver is a Joe Eszterhas script
and it adheres to his most successful formula, in
which the protagonist wonders whether he/she is being
paranoid in thinking his/her lover may be a killer. In
the process of creating a film from Levin's book,
several things went wrong, and the final script ended
up as a jumbled mess. First of all, Levin's book is
really about the relationship of the book editor and
the evil mastermind who owns and runs the building
(the Stone and Baldwin characters, respectively). The
owner not only runs the building, but uses a high-tech
system to watch and manipulate the lives of his
tenants.
The Tom Berenger character, an impotent author who
lives in the building, was not even in the book. It
existed in the film script merely to add a red
herring, somebody else who might have committed the
murders, thus adding some suspense and a bit of
tenuous logic to explain why Stone did not leave
Baldwin as soon as she found out that he was watching
and taping every apartment. ("Oh, sure, he's a pervert
with a God complex, but the other guy is the murderer,
right?") The fact that the script uses the author
character (Berenger) for that purpose is not so bad,
ipso facto. It's just one of those devices normally
used by screenwriters when adapting and simplifying a
convoluted print source. The film's real problem was
created when test audiences didn't like the movie's
original ending, in which the mastermind was finally
revealed to be an evil mastermind.
The studio suits overreacted, Mr. Eszterhas was told
to write some alternative endings, and the legend is
that he completed five fully scripted endings in one
long weekend of work. Irrespective of the truth of
that legend, the final theatrical version promoted the
impotent writer from insignificant red herring to
killer, but by doing so it introduced several
contradictions in the film's internal logic:
1. The film's first victim and Sharon Stone were both
chosen as tenants by the building's owner because they
looked like his mother, a semi-famous actress. It
would make sense for him to be obsessed with the
women, but does not make sense for the author, who had
no connection with either of them.
2. Stone finds some hidden tapes in which the
building's owner is having sex with two of the prior
victims, despite his vigorous protestations to the
contrary. This was obviously the logical prelude to
his revelation as the killer. Except that he wasn't
the killer after re-writes. He was just sexually
exploiting the women who were killed, and lying to
Stone about it. It's just a coincidence that they were
killed!
3. In the final cut of the film, we find out that
Berenger is the killer because Baldwin has the first
murder on one of the hidden tapes, including a
conveniently clear view of Berenger's face! But if
Baldwin is not the killer, why was he hiding a tape
proving that someone else committed the murder?
Obviously, all of that set-up was written with the
assumption that Stone would find the hidden tape, and
it would prove that Baldwin was the murderer. In that
scenario, the denouement would include her effort to
inform the outside world before he could kill her.
When the ending was changed to make Berenger the
killer, Baldwin's prior actions made no sense.
4. The murderer wore a hood to commit the first murder
- indoors; in a locked apartment; with no witnesses.
Since there was no reason to hide his identity from
the soon-to-die victim, the only possible reason for
the hood would be to hide his face from the
surveillance cameras. That made perfect sense in the
original script when Baldwin (who knew of the cameras)
was the murderer, but Berenger didn't know about the
cameras, so why would he be wearing the hood?
5. Polly Walker (playing another victim who lived in
the building) was killed by someone who knew she was
in the stairwell at a time which could not have been
predicted. The building owner (Baldwin) could have
known she was headed there because of his video
hook-ups. He could have been there, waiting for her,
ready to kill her. On the other hand, the author
(Berenger) could not have been there waiting for her,
because he had no way to know she was there or would
soon be there. Only the guy with the magical
omniscient video connection could know that, and
therefore had to be the murderer.
I have written some unkind words about some of
Eszterhas's other scripts, but he's off the hook on
this one. One cannot fault Eszterhas for the problems
caused by the forced re-write. He had written all the
clues correctly in the first place, and every one of
them pointed to Baldwin. Before the marketing guys got
involved, director Philip Noyce had shot the original
Eszterhas script shot-for-shot, word-for-word.
Unfortunately, Noyce and Eszterhas were told at the
eleventh hour to change the ending. Given that
mandate, it would not have been possible to alter
every previous event which proved that the other guy
did it unless the entire film had been re-written from
scratch, but that possibility was considered to be off
the table because an entire film was already in the
can! Eszterhas did some re-writes, and there
were some re-shoots to make some previous events match
the revised ending, but Eszterhas was not given the
latitude to re-write the entire film from scratch, so
he had to cobble the details together as best he
could. The result was a mess, but not one of his
making. A complex murder mystery is created by an
author who creates every scene knowing the solution
and the details which are hidden from the reader. The
solution hinges on all of the details, and all of the
details hinge in turn on the fact that "x" is the
correct solution. One cannot simply change the answer
without changing the question.
BOOK SPOILERS
1. The book has a very strong Oedipal theme, which was
glossed over in the final version of the film. Not
only is the evil mastermind obsessed with women who
resemble his mother, but he ends up with his eyes
gouged out, just like Oedipus! This is particularly
appropriate since he spent all of his life staring at
his surveillance monitors.
2. The movie has one of the worst endings ever. The
book, on the other hand, has a very cool ending. After
the killer is hauled off, still alive but sightless,
the video room is sealed off by police tape, but the
Sharon Stone character still has her key to the room,
and she can't resist watching the hidden camera
dramas! I tried to find a copy of Eszterhaz's original
script to see whether he had incorporated this ending
into his screenplay, but I wasn't able to find it.
END BOOK SPOILERS
The film had some potential to be both a thriller and
a reflection on the loss of privacy in the modern
high-tech world. Indeed, in its obsession with
watching other people's lives, it foreshadowed the era
of reality TV, especially Big Brother. Unfortunately,
the final cut failed on both counts. The thriller part
was spoiled by the re-writes, and the reflections on
society resulted in some boring sequences in which
Stone and/or Baldwin eavesdropped on the soap opera
lives of random people for what seemed like
interminable periods, thus making the plot not only
illogical, but often unfocused and boring as well. I
was watching with others, and the words, "Jeez this is
boring" were heard frequently - the kiss of death for
a "thriller."
"But it is not just a thriller, but an erotic
thriller," you are thinking, "perhaps the erotic
elements picked up the ball when the thriller elements
fumbled it?" Unfortunately not. Given the re-teaming
of Eszterhas and Stone from the highly successful
Basic Instinct, it was not unexpected that critics
compared the eroticism in the two films, and Sliver
tended to suffer in that comparison for a few reasons:
1. Sharon Stone is much more effective as the cold,
calculating, sexually omnivorous killer in Basic
Instinct than she is as the vulnerable, sexually
repressed housewife in Sliver.
2. Basic Instinct came first, and in many ways Sliver
tends to seem like a "me, too" effort.
3. Basic Instinct is filled with really hot sex scenes
and plenty of clear nudity. The sex in Sliver is not
as hot, not as prolific, and is either very dark or
seen on a black and white TV screen within the film.
The oblique, dark approach was taken out of necessity
because Sharon Stone had gotten out of shape. Producer
Robert Evans noted, after viewing the dailies, "You
can't even shoot her ass anymore. It's too spongy.
She's over already. Who'd want to fuck her anymore?
Who's gonna buy their popcorn and come watching her?"
He wasn't the only one aware of Sharon's flabby bum.
Stone herself told Joe Eszterhas, "My ass hangs
halfway to my knees. I'm pushing forty. Why didn't you
write this script twenty years ago?" (The quotes come
from Eszterhaz's tell-all, Hollywood Animal, pages
338-341 in the hardcover edition.)
By the way, there is a good reason why the R-rated and
unrated versions of this film have the same running
length. They both include the exact same footage! The
difference between them is that four minutes of the
R-rated version have been pan-'n'-scanned to obscure
particularly graphic nudity and/or sexual activity.
For example, the scene where Stone sits on Baldwin's
lap is seen in its entirety in the unrated version,
but is cropped to "head & shoulder" action in the
R version. (In this particular example, neither
version has any nudity.)
Bottom line: Sliver does not cut the mustard as a
thriller, as a comment on the decline of privacy, or
as erotica. It really deserved all of those Razzie
nominations.
Sharon
Stone film clip (collages below)
Polly
Walker film clip (capture below - double?)
Allison
Mackie film clip (sample below)
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