FALLING DOWNÂ (18)
D:Â Joel Schumacher
Warner Bros. (Arnold Kopelson, Timothy Harris &
Herschel Weingrod)
USA 🇺🇸 1993
115 mins
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Crime/Drama/Comedy
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W:Â Ebbe Roe Smith
DP: Andrzej Bartkowiak
Ed: Paul Hirsch
Mus: James Newton Howard
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Michael Douglas (D-Fens), Robert Duvall (Det.
Martin Prendergast), Barbara Hershey (Beth), Rachel Ticotin (Sandra), Tuesday Weld (Mrs. Prendergast)
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Arguably Joel Schumacher's finest hour as a director.
Michael Douglas plays a disgruntled civil servant who has reached breaking point. He abandons his car on a gridlocked Los Angeles freeway and makes his way on foot through the urban jungle to
confront his ex-wife on his daughter's birthday. His conflicts with other civilians begin with minor irritants like the price of a can of cola and being a few minutes too late to order
breakfast from a takeout diner before he gets in serious trouble with LA gangs over a territorial issue when he merely takes a rest on "their" land. Â The only person who seems to share
and admire his rebellion is a homophobic Neo-Nazi, much to Douglas' disgust.
Part black comedy, part acerbic crime thriller, the film
owes much to it's canvas of characters, especially Robert Duvall as mild-mannered cop aiming to put a stop to Douglas' shenanigans and Barbara Hershey as the estranged wife. This is Michael
Douglas' film though, delivering his best performance since his Oscar-winning turn in Wall Street.
7/10
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