Fatal Beauty

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Fatal Beauty
Theatrical release poster
Directed byTom Holland
Written byHilary Henkin
Dean Riesner
Story byBill Svanoe
Produced bySamuel Goldwyn, Jr.
Leonard Kroll
Starring
CinematographyDavid M. Walsh
Edited byDon Zimmerman
Music byHarold Faltermeyer
Production
company
Distributed byMGM/UA Communications Co.
Release date
  • October 30, 1987 (1987-10-30)
Running time
104 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$12 million

Fatal Beauty is a 1987 American action comedy thriller film directed by Tom Holland, and starring Whoopi Goldberg as Detective Rita Rizzoli, and Sam Elliott as Mike Marshak. The screenplay was written by Hilary Henkin and Dean Riesner. The original music score was composed by Harold Faltermeyer. The film was marketed with the tagline "An earthquake is about to hit L.A. It's called Detective Rita Rizzoli."

Plot[edit]

Los Angeles Police Department narcotics detective Rita Rizzoli stages an undercover buy of a new strain of cocaine called "Fatal Beauty" with drug dealer Tito Delgadillo, but ruins the bust by leaving to save her informant Charlene from a beating by her pimp. Rizzoli saves Charlene and shoots the pimp, but Delgadillo steals her money and retreats to a warehouse in Chinatown where Fatal Beauty is manufactured. Two small-time hoods, Leo Nova and Earl Skinner, storm the warehouse and kill the entire gang, unknowingly stealing a botched batch of the drug with a lethally high concentration of cocaine. Rita later identifies Delgadillo's body and discovers another corpse in a van labeled "Kroll Enterprises." Rizzoli asks to investigate the company's owner Conrad Kroll but is rebuffed by her superior Lt. Kellerman due to Kroll's connections in Californian politics and Rizzoli's botching of her previous drug bust.

After Charlene tells Rizzoli that the owner of the warehouse drove a Rolls Royce, she sneaks into Kroll's Beverly Hills mansion accusing him of drug dealing. After she is ordered to leave by Kellerman, Rizzoli hears a call for assistance over the scanner involving a police standoff at Charlene's house in Hollywood. She rushes to the house as a man heavily intoxicated on Fatal Beauty emerges, fires at the police, and remains standing after getting shot twelves times due to the potency of the drugs in his system. Rizzoli discovers Charlene dead from an overdose, and after failing to resuscitate her she learns from her young son that she bought the drugs from her new pimp Jimmy Silver. The LAPD discovers Fatal Beauty has a 50 percent purity and is and cut with phencyclidine, causing its users to rapidly go insane and die. Rizzoli and her partner Detective Jiminez track down and arrest Jimmy and his supplier Rafael. She gets into a shootout with Nova and Skinner, but is saved by Kroll's bodyguard Mike Marshak.

After Rizzoli recovers from a gunshot wound, Marshak convinces her to let him drive her home as Jiminez gets in a shootout with Nova. Rizzoli and Marshak discover that numerous preteen children in Rizzoli's neighborhood are dying from taking Fatal Beauty, including ten of her neighbor Zach Yeager's friends after they were given the drug by his mother Cecille. Rizzoli admits to Marshak that she became addicted to drugs after having a child as a teenager, but recovered after her infant child got into her stash and died. However, she later discovers that Marshak was spying on her for Kroll.

After Zack attempts suicide, Cecille informs Rizzoli that her drug dealer Denny Mifflin will be buying Fatal Beauty from Nova and Skinner at Kroll Plaza that night. As Rizzoli prepares to arrest Mifflin Kroll orders Marshak and the rest of his security guards to kill Nova, Skinner, and Rizzoli. However, Marshak alerts Rizzoli to their presence in time. In an extended three-way gunfight Nova and Skinner kill most of Kroll's security guards as well as Kroll, while Rizzoli and Marshak kill Nova and Skinner. As a wounded Marshak is taken aboard an ambulance he tells her that he will likely go to prison for his involvement in Kroll's crimes, and she assures him that she will wait for his release and kisses him.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

In May 1986, Cher was announced as star.[1] In July 1986, John Milius was working on the script and intending to direct.[2] Cher ended up dropping out to star in Moonstruck. By November, Tom Holland was attached as director with Whoopi Goldberg to star.[3] MGM/UA had wanted to cast Tina Turner in the role, but Holland fought for Goldberg. Billy Dee Williams was considered for the role of Mike Marshak before Sam Elliott was cast.[4]

Filming began on February 23, 1987, in Los Angeles. During the filming of one scene United States Secret Service agents mistook the production for a real robbery, leading to the real Los Angeles Police Department storming the set.[4]

Goldberg and Elliott originally filmed a sex scene, but it was cut from the film after poor reactions from test audiences. Both actors alleged that the scene had been cut because of anxieties about interracial sex, which the studio denied. The Motion Picture Association of America originally gave the film an X rating, but it was later reduced to an R rating on appeal.[4]

Brad Dourif's performance as the villain led to Holland casting him as the villain in Child's Play.[5]

Reception[edit]

Critical[edit]

The film was unpopular with many critics (though Roger Ebert gave it a positive review of 3 stars), some of whom considered it a rip-off of Beverly Hills Cop (which Faltermeyer also scored); others cited a lack of chemistry in the romance between Goldberg and Elliott's characters.[6] Movie historian Leonard Maltin called it "inexcusably awful, with gratuitous violence and mind-boggling dialogue, using an anti-drug message to rationalize its excesses."[7] Fatal Beauty holds a score of 20% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 15 reviews.[8]

Director Holland later admitted that Fatal Beauty was an effort to expand his range as a filmmaker beyond the horror genre, but that Fatal Beauty was a mistake. "Initially," he says today, "they planned to cast Cher as Rita. But she bowed out early on, which is what I should have done."

Soundtrack[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ COOLIDGE TO SCREEN CANADA'S BEST: [THIRD Edition] Carr, Jay. Boston Globe 05 May 1986: 21.
  2. ^ "Dirty Harriet". Los Angeles Times. 27 July 1986.
  3. ^ Pond, Steve (13 Nov 1986). "Puttnam's Complaint". The Washington Post. p. B9.
  4. ^ a b c "Fatal Beauty". AFI Catalog. Retrieved 2023-04-29.
  5. ^ "AICN HORROR talks with fear-meister Tom Holland about CHILD'S PLAY, PSYCHO 2, FRIGHT NIGHT, and his new project TWISTED TALES!". Aint It Cool news. March 20, 2014.
  6. ^ "Fatal Beauty". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2011-01-28.
  7. ^ Maltin's TV, Movie, & Video Guide
  8. ^ Fatal Beauty at Rotten Tomatoes Flixster

External links[edit]