Showing posts with label Gregory Peck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gregory Peck. Show all posts

Friday, November 13, 2020

Movie Review: Cape Fear (1991)

DIRECTOR: Martin Scorsese. CAST: Robert De Niro, Nick Nolte, Jessica Lange, Juliette Lewis, Joe Don Baker, Robert Mitchum, Gregory Peck, Martin Balsam, Illeana Douglas, Fred Dalton Thompson.
Martin Scorsese’s remake isn’t into implying anything at all; it goes for the throat. Some of the story elements have changed—Sam Bowden is the public defender who suppressed evidence that could have gotten his client a lesser sentence or acquittal from rape charges. Max Cady was guilty as hell, but a report about his victim’s “questionable” sexual history could have set him free and Sam was not about to have that on his conscience. You might note that this is a direct violation of Cady’s constitutional right to a proper legal defense in court. Cady discovers the report while appealing his case as a jailhouse lawyer. Now he wants vengeance. Cady gets out during a time when the Bowden family is dealing with trust issues between Sam and his wife, as well as his daughter slipping between rebellious, awkward, and sexually curious. No one is perfect in Scorsese’s Cape Fear. Max’s behavior is bolder this time around too, particularly when he corners young Danny Bowden at school. Robert De Niro is very good as Max Cady, but eventually degenerates into a parody of the irrational and becomes just another horror movie killer. Strange to see Martin Scorsese resorting to stylized techniques and unnecessary slasher film ploys. Someone else could have hung their hat on Cape Fear using the same approach, but this is Martin Scorsese and it is funny how standards work. This is not one of his better movies compared to the obvious classics on his resume, but maybe that is the point: that even the great Martin Scorsese has flaws.


Sunday, April 12, 2020

Movie Review: Cape Fear (1962)

DIRECTOR: J. Lee Thompson. CAST: Gregory Peck, Robert Mitchum, Polly Bergen, Lori Martin, Martin Balsam, Jack Kruschen, Telly Savalas, Barrie Chase, Paul Comi.
This dark Hitchcockian masterpiece is one of my favorite suspense thrillers and it has never gotten old. Gregory Peck is Sam Bowden, a family man stalked by a relic of his past—a convicted rapist sent to jail by his testimony. Robert Mitchum is Max Cady, the crafty ex-con using the law to his advantage. Stalking laws did not exist back then, so nothing Cady does to torment the Bowden family is actually illegal. Sam is a lawyer, but will have to find other ways to manipulate the law and fight back when it becomes apparent what Cady has in mind for Bowden’s wife and teenage daughter. Mitchum is fantastic here; he doesn’t need a bunch of tattoos and profanities to come across as a bad, bad man. His stare is menacing enough. Max Cady is not a man selling wolf tickets. Cape Fear utilizes the psychological approach of not showing or discussing the actual act of rape. Film censor boards in 1962 would not have allowed that to happen, but it is still obvious what is going on here. Cape Fear’s strength is not in what it says, but what is implied.