Carter Page III holds a special place in Washington society: the gay son and grandson of powerful men, he has connections, manners, and he’s no threat, so he’s an available escort when a woman’s husband would rather not accompany her to a public event. When the secret lover of one of his women friends is murdered, she asks Carter to cover for her, and his acquiescence gets him into immediate trouble with the police and an ambitious prosecutor. Carter, with the help of his lover Emek, starts his own investigation. They’re warned off by someone’s hired muscle. Can Carter figure out what happened or will he lose more than he realizes he has? Human behavior is a mystery. –IMDb
Raised in a strict religious household in Michigan, writer/director Paul Schrader studied theology at Calvin College and didn’t see a movie until he was in his late teens. His stern background would fuel many of the themes throughout his career: downbeat stories of characters who violently break down in oppressive situations. Transfixed by the cinema and encouraged by critic Pauline Kael, he moved to Los Angeles and became a film scholar at U.C.L.A. He wrote movie reviews for newspapers, edited the magazine Cinema, and wrote the highly influential critical essay “The Trancendental Style: Ozu, Bresson, Dryer.” After a period of heavy drinking and serious depression, he sold his first screenplay, The Yakuza, a Japanese thriller co-written with his brother, Leonard, and Robert Towne. The next year, Schrader wrote Taxi Driver, the grim tale of urban alienation. Taxi Driver started his successful collaborative relationship with director Martin Scorsese, another… read more
Well-made, but strangely uninvolving mystery-drama from writer-director Paul Schrader. Solid performances from an impressive cast (though Woody Harrelson's accent gets annoying pretty quick) and excellent cinematography by Chris Seager - but it lacks the suspense necessary to work as a thriller, and just isn't quite compelling enough as a character study. Not a bad film, but forgettable and disappointing.