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The Black Dahlia
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Directed by Brian De Palma
Director Brian De Palma returns to the helm for the first time since 2002's Femme Fatale with this stylish screen adaptation of James Ellroy's novel detailing one of the most notorious unsolved murders in Hollywood history. Elizabeth Short (Mia Kirshner) was a struggling actress looking to make a name for herself in 1940s-era Tinseltown. Unfortunately for Elizabeth, it was her grim fate that would ultimately overshadow anything she would accomplish during her short and tragic career. When police discover Elizabeth's body cut clean in half and with all of her organs missing, ex-pugilist detectives Lee Blanchard (Aaron Eckhart) and Bucky Bleichert (Josh Hartnett) are the men charged with cracking the case and apprehending the killer. This isn't your average murder case, however, and as Blanchard's marriage to Kay (Scarlett Johansson) begins to suffer due to his obsession with the sensational crime, his partner Bleichert discovers a troubling link between the victim and the mysterious Madeleine Linscott (Hilary Swank), a prominent socialite and the daughter of one of the town's most connected key players. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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"What irony- just a week ago was talking to my fellow cineasts about how bad movies have been this year, and then I see a truly great picture, only the third new four star film I've seen so far. I have always found Brian De Palma to be an interesting filmmaker although he's never been one of my favorites- I found his often purported "best film", The Untouchables, to be an over directed and underwritten cartoon. But De Palma has outdone himself with The Black Dahli " [More]
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"...don't bother with this one...I don't know how de Palma with a cast like this managed to completely destroy the dark mystery that is the Black Dahlia murder. Skip this and watch James Ellroy's Feast of Death instead.Just to be clear...I'm a Mia Kirshner FANATIC...with the right script she would have completely stolen this. And will someone please tell Josh Hartnett that moody does not have to equal boring! Ugh...he's playing the same character he " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
There's a fascinating film to be made about Hollywood's grisliest unsolved murder. Brian De Palma's The Black Dahlia isn't it. Aside from De Palma's multitude of minor blunders, there are several major ones, the most problematic being that the film deals only peripherally with the ritualistic butchering in question. The lion's share of Josh Friedman's adaptation concentrates on two boxers turned detectives, nicknamed Mr. Fire and Mr. Ice, who may have been interesting characters in James Ellroy's novel, but are rendered dull and duller, respectively, by Aaron Eckhart and Josh Hartnett. We know they are both haunted by the murder, but we're never given a reason why, because the script squeamishly refuses to wade into the tawdry waters of Elizabeth Short's desperate grab for stardom. It's Short's mysterious persona that has fed the public curiosity about the Black Dahlia for decades, yet she's seen only in recovered film footage, no greater than a subplot in this melodramatic love quadrangle between the detectives and two standard-issue femme fatales, played by Scarlett Johansson and Hilary Swank. (Swank, presumably high on all the accolades, attempts a vampish aristocratic accent that seems vaguely ridiculous). De Palma's last film, tellingly named Femme Fatale, previewed that he'd lost his grip on directing actors, and The Black Dahlia resoundingly confirms it. The director gains back some credibility with a decent production design, but nowhere near what it would take to redeem the unintelligible plot, not to mention the hackish reliance on clumsy snippets of flashback dialogue. Ironically, a correctly placed flashback would have helped things immensely, if De Palma had opened with the murder before burdening us with the banal detective back story. Only when a fleetingly seen corpse finally shows up at the 30-minute mark does the viewer even remember what the film's about. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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