From the director of Bad Lieutenant comes this riveting look at the dark side of Hollywood filmmaking. Vividly raw and shocking, Dangerous Game stars two of today’s most passionate and controversial performers: Harvey Keitel and Madonna. Although he’s an experienced director, nothing can prepare Eddie Israel (Keitel) for what occurs on the set of his new project. Helming a film about an abusive marriage, Eddie gets incredibly real performances from his actors. But more horrifying than the scripted violence is the fact that the brutality begins to seep off the set and into real life. As Eddie becomes more involved with his production, and specifically his leading lady (Madonna), he too becomes entangled in this terrifying trap, one where the fantasy world of his film becomes his haunting reality. –MGM
Independent New York filmmaker Abel Ferrara became best-known for his low-budget, shockingly violent films that explore the roughest parts of the Big Apple and the darkest reaches of the human soul, with films such as China Girl (1987), his unique version of Romeo and Juliet, generating a devoted following. Ferrara was born in the Bronx, but spent most of his childhood in Peekskill, NY, where he met the two young men who would eventually become his primary screenwriter (Nicholas St. John) and occasional consultant (John McIntyre). As boys, they would play around with 8 mm cameras. In the mid-‘70s, the three reunited and founded Navaron Films, where they produced an adult film. In 1979, they released their most notorious film, Driller Killer, for which Ferrara starred, edited, and wrote the songs under the pseudonym Jimmie Laine. In this movie, a young man goes berserk and begins killing vagrants with a portable power drill. Ferrara continued making low-budget shockers until the late… read more
rated 'Dangerous Game' 3 out of 5 stars COMMENTS: Incredible performances by Keitel, Madonna and James Russo, but was in desperate need of a good story editor.
Ferrara abandona ese mal llamado "realismo" de películas más conocidas (Bad Lieutenant, King of New York) y se decanta por un juego con la narrativa que nos engaña, nunca sabemos si lo que vemos es real o no, hablando obviamente del contexto de la película misma, hasta el punto de llegar a ser desesperante pero de una buena manera. Al final la película trata entre otras cosas de eso: desesperación.
I have claimed that both New Rose Hotel and Bad Lieutenant are Ferrara's best film, and either of them may be, but this feels like his most personal statement, a direct representation of who he is as an artist, and what he feels art, particularly cinema, is. So perhaps this is his masterpiece. What a frustrating auteur!
Does anyone else find it peculiar that Ferrara uses a scene of Werner Herzog describing his hellish experience directing Fitzcarrado in Les Blank's Burden of Dreams documentary, only to become furious with him over using the title of "Bad Lieutenant" years later for his own film?
Upon the release of 4:44 Last Day on Earth.
Dear Abel, Happy birthday. I guess the respectable thing—the relevant thing—would have been to wait to until a milestone year, to wait until