Nonureva
Really Surprised!
Greenes
Please don't spend money on this.
FrogGlace
In other words,this film is a surreal ride.
Walter Sloane
Mostly, the movie is committed to the value of a good time.
blanche-2
A terrific cast consisting of Jack Nicholson, Michael Caine, Judy Davis, Steven Dorff, and Jennifer Lopez star in "Blood & Wine," a 1996 film noir directed by Bob Rafelson.Nicholson is a wine dealer in a bad marriage with Judy Davis. He and a partner, Victor (Michael Caine) steal a diamond necklace. Nicholson's wife wants to catch him cheating on her, but what she interrupts is his trip to pawn the necklace. Things go bad from there.Despite the great cast and strong direction, this noir doesn't quite hang together. The talent is there, so perhaps the script could have been stronger. It does hold one's interest, however, and some nice twists. It's downbeat for sure, with flawed characters. Not quite up to Nicholson-Rafelson collaborations of the past, but okay.
Robert J. Maxwell
The story involves the theft of a multi-million-dollar necklace by thieves Jack Nicholson, who runs a wine shop in Miami, and Michael Caine, a safe cracker on parole. Nicholson packs his suitcase intending to leave his wife, Judy Davis, and his stepson, Steven Dorff, and run off to New York with his innocent girl friend, Jennifer Lopez. In New York, he intends to sell the hot ice to a fence and return to split the cash with Caine.At the last moment, Nicholson has an argument with his wife, she clobbers him with a poker, frantically throws some clothes into Nicholson's suitcase, and drives off with her son. The necklace is stashed in a compartment of the suitcase, although neither she nor Dorff knows it.They find out soon enough. Nicholson and Caine track them to Key Largo and there are arguments, fights, a car chase, until Davis and Caine wind up dead, Dorff takes off in his new boat for the horizon, Lopez drives off alone with one of the stones, and Nicholson winds up in the hands of the law.It has a lot going for it. Nicholson and Caine rarely go wrong. Judy Davis does hysteria well. Jennifer Lopez is a natural actress, a beautiful young woman with a cantilevered rear end. The locations include some of the more colorful parts of Florida. And there's one effective action scene during, and immediately after, the car chase.So why doesn't it work any better than it does? It's a mean-spirited movie. Every character seems greedy, spiteful, and deceitful. There's nobody to root for. It's easy to argue that this is rather more like real life than having good and evil splashed across the screen, but the values don't go much beyond that. No one has any particularly generous impulses. If someone dies, they simply disappear from the story. The only scene in which a genuine conflict of motives appears is when Nicholson is rooting around the bloodied body of his dying wife in an overturned car, searching desperately for the stupid necklace and sobbing with remorse at the same time. And even this is undercut by pettiness. Her last words to Nicholson: "**** you." The ill-considered roles cripple the performances too. Nobody is poor, but no one has a chance to do much more than try to outwit the others. It's also disturbing to see actors we like, like Caine and Nicholson, in parts so petty. They're fine when they are outrageously malignant and venomous. (Nicholson ululating hoarsely and limping through the snow with an ax in his hands.) But realistically, as reprobate as the rest of us? Nope.I also can't understand why the location shooting doesn't take advantage of Miami and the Keys, where it was clearly shot. We see mostly interiors and back yards. Even a fishing boat in the Gulf of Florida feels claustrophobic. There's no sense of space or even of the city. And the photography doesn't help, somehow nudging a viewer into the perception that southern Florida is chilly rather than shimmering in humidity and heat. Where's the sweat? John Huston's "Key Largo" was all shot on a Warner Brothers' sound stage and does a better job of establishing the atmosphere. Finally, the MacGuffin -- that million-dollar necklace -- bespeaking a lack of imagination. Sounds like a job for Charlie Chan.Well, I don't mean to be too harsh. It's not badly done. It's just that so many opportunities for it to have been better were missed in the script and in the direction. Disappointing.
dixxjamm
This may be the best Steven Dorff performance I've seen. It blew me away,very demanding role played beautifully.And Nicholson and Caine were something else, great chemistry and top-notch acting.Judy Davis is great as always (love this actress). Jennifer Lopez must be the luckiest bad actress in the world.I mean, 2 excellent film noirs (this and U-Turn) and working with the likes of Rafelson and Stone??? The movie has great pacing and tension.Michael Caine and Steven Dorff shine here, even more than Nicholson. Loved the amorality of the movie (that's one of the reasons why I like the film noir-genre in the first place). Great scenes and atmosphere.It would be a definite 10, but Jennifer Lopez annoyed me, so...just 9/10.
perfectbond
I thoroughly enjoyed the twists and turns of Blood & Wine's plot as I steered through it by some very interesting characters who were brought to life magnificently by a talented cast, especially Nicholson and Caine. None of the characters are white as snow but all of them, even the Caine character, elicit some sympathy. My only complaint is that the ending although poetic is slightly unsatisfying. Then again that could be because of my sympathy and bias for Nicholson's character. All in all very enjoyable, 8/10.