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Sunday, July 25: The A.D.D. Detective

EROTIC MYSTERY THRILLERS

by Leigh Lundin

I found myself in a conversation with friends about erotic mystery thrillers. As we chatted, I realized we had the makings for another John Floyd Movie List™, including several nominated for Edgar Allan Poe awards, the Edgar.

Not a lot of introduction is necessary. Perhaps because of our American penchant to mentally package together sex-n-violence, virtually all of these fall into the noir genre involving dark motives and lots of betrayal. Nobody seems to make a cops ‘n’ robbers show where our hero simply has a bangin’ good home life.

Inclusion in my list requires (a) the mystery be good and (b) sex be non-gratuitous. It seems to me this subgenre can be divided into a couple of different categories– those that take place in New Orleans, and those that don’t, or those with John Goodman and Ellen Barkin and those without. My list, in release order includes:

 
1981   Body Heat
directors   Lawrence Kasdan
producers   Fred Gallo, Robert Grand, George Lucas (uncredited)
writers   Lawrence Kasdan
starring   William Hurt, Kathleen Turner
music   John Barry
awards   nominated: Edgar Allan Poe Award
  New York Times: Tuner in her ""jaw-dropping movie debut … built a career on adventurousness and frank sexuality born of robust physicality." That’s the plot. Sex. Somebody gets killed. Sex. Somebody gets blamed. Sex. Watch the ending carefully.
 
1984   Tightrope
directors   Richard Tuggle
producers   Clint Eastwood, Fritz Manes
writers   Richard Tuggle
starring   Clint Eastwood, Geneviève Bujold
music   Lennie Niehaus
  A sexual killer threatens the daughters and girlfriend of a flawed detective. Despite positive reviews, audiences hated seeing Eastwood portraying a vulnerable, imperfect man in this dark but satisfying noir thriller.
 
1986   The Big Easy
director   Jim McBride
producers   Mort Engelberg, Stephen J. Friedman
writers   Daniel Petrie Jr.
starring   Dennis Quaid, Ellen Barkin
music   Brad Fiedel
awards   nominated: Edgar Allan Poe Award
  Straight-laced DA and tainted cop combine forces to solve a mobster’s murder while steaming up the screen. Good story and satisfying, even romantic ending.
 
1987   Angel Heart
directors   Alan Parker
producers   Elliott Kastner, Alan Marshall
writers   William Hjortsberg, Alan Parker
starring   Mickey Rourke, Lisa Bonet
music   Trevor Jones
  A mysterious client hires a seedy private eye to determine what happened to a crooner badly injured during World War II. This disturbing noir film has voodoo, sex, violence, and a devilishly tricky plot.
 
1987   Black Widow
directors   Bob Rafelson
producers   Laurence Mark, Harold Schneider
writers   Ronald Bass
starring   Debra Winger, Theresa Russell
music   Michael Small
  Two smart women– one good, one evil (a serial husband killer)– battle wits. Less sex, more brains.
 
1989   Sea of Love
directors   Harold Becker
producers   Martin Bregman
writers   Richard Price
starring   Al Pacino, Ellen Barkin
music   Trevor Jones
awards   nominated: Edgar Allan Poe Award
  NYC detectives investigate the deaths of three guys who placed ads in a singles column by placing their own ad. Great premise and one of them gets the man… and the girl.
 
1990   Presumed Innocent
directors   Alan J. Pakula
producers   Sydney Pollack, Mark Rosenberg
writers   Scott Turow, Frank Pierson, Alan Pakula
starring   Harrison Ford, Greta Scacchi
music   John Williams
awards   nominated: Edgar Allan Poe Award
  As a prosecutor investigates the murder of a colleague he had an affair with, the net closes around him. One of the best mysteries ever written, it’s a great novel and film (with a sequel, Innocent).
 
1992   Final Analysis
directors   Phil Joanou
producers   R. Gere, M. Wilde, PJ Witt, C. Roven, T. Thomas
writers   Wesley Strick, Robert H. Berger, Wesley Strick
starring   Richard Gere, Kim Basinger
music   George Fenton
  Femme fatale kills husband and seduces shrink to get her off. In a period of several similar movies, this one stands out for its smart plot, although the story arc peaks much too soon.
 
1994   The Last Seduction
directors   John Dahl
producers   Jonathan Shestack
writers   Steve Barancik
starring   Linda Fiorentino, Bill Pullman
music   Joseph Vitarelli
awards   nominated: Edgar Allan Poe Award
  Sociopathic femme fatale black widow manipulates naive boyfriend to kill her husband. This isn’t top of my list and nightmares will probably ruin this as a date movie.
 
1994   Disclosure
directors   Barry Levinson
producers   Michael Crichton, Barry Levinson
writers   Michael Crichton, Paul Attanasio
starring   Michael Douglas, Demi Moore
music   Ennio Morricone
  This mystery and thriller without a murder (although you’ll probably want to kill a participant) features several smart women and one smart but clueless guy.
 
1995   Devil in a Blue Dress
directors   Carl Franklin
producers   J. Demme, Ed Saxon, J. Beaton, G. Goetzman
writers   Walter Mosley, Carl Franklin
starring   Denzel Washington, Jennifer Beals
music   Elmer Bernstein
awards   nominated: Edgar Allan Poe Award
  Set against a post-WW-II political backdrop, a black man is hired to find a white woman. What could go wrong? Good characterization and atmosphere, which reminded me for some reason of Cannery Row.
 
1999   Eyes Wide Shut
directors   Stanley Kubrick
producers   Stanley Kubrick
writers   Arthur Schnitzler, Stanley Kubrick, Frederic Raphael
starring   Tom Cruise, Nicole Kidman
music   Jocelyn Pook
  Man investigates secret cult, provokes murders, barely survives. Almost everyone can find something here to dislike. A painful marriage and a dark theme against a Christmas background disturbed me, and the costume shop scene failed to move the story forward. But, the oblique, well-told plot rewards an attentive viewer.

No Basic Instinct?

Readers may ask why I didn’t round out the list with Basic Instinct (1992). Writer A.C. Law cast it as number one in his Arts & Entertainment list of top erotic thrillers and it certainly caused a lot of box office chatter, but not all of us were fans. This Sharon Stone movie grabbed considerable attention but snatched no major awards, save for music.

Sometimes studios manage to hype a film to a kind of audience hysteria. A matter of opinion, of course, but the movie and characters seemed dull to me. Even A.C. Law commented the movie was "no stunning feat of cinema and it’s got some questionable plot twists that make it seem implausible." To me, a movie plot with gaping holes isn’t a mystery and not even a good movie. It had sex but no soul.

Foreign Entries

Blockbuster provides their own erotic thriller list, although their definition is broad, delving into science fiction and other genres.

I hadn’t intended to focus solely on Hollywood. Upon prompting (see comments below), I’ve added a list of foreign erotic mystery/thrillers compiled by Chris Pence, a Break Studios contributor for MadeMan, the on-line magazine. His list has become my new to-see list.

year film origin
1985 The Girl Sweden-Italy
1992 Husbands and Lovers Italy
2000 O Fantasma Portugal
2001 Read My Lips France
2003 Swimming Pool France-UK
2003 Nathalie France
2005 Dot the I Spain
2005 Next Door Norway
2008 The Underneath Poland
2009 Bandaged Germany

More Information

Premier’s Glenn Kenny compiled a list of twenty steamiest movies, not necessarily mystery thrillers. His list includes some of ours and did not include Basic Instinct, but his has a couple of surprises, such as Blowup (1966) and Walkabout (1971). I would have thought Walkabout too subtle and Blowup the opposite, but that’s the point…

The beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

What’s on your list?

Posted in The A.D.D. Detective on July 25th, 2010
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18 comments

  1. July 25th, 2010 at 1:17 am, margo Says:

    Fine list though Body Heat didn’t work for me and Basic Instinct nil. I agree Tightrope is underrated and not understood, but its one of his best.

    I now have food for my netflix list, though I might skip Last Seduction. How about foreign films?

  2. July 25th, 2010 at 7:39 am, Leigh Says:

    Can’t say we don’t listen!

    With my movie star-challenged mental database, it took me far too much time to come up with the above list. (Seriously: set in New Orleans, one word, starts with the letter T…) For more than two hours, Final Analysis resisted efforts to wrest loose its name. (Woman murders husband, woman and sister use shrink to beat murder rap, tries to kill him atop a lighthouse… it defies googling.)

    My challenge would be coming up with foreign films with feet planted solidly in both genres. We’ve mentioned foreign thrillers before (Diva, De Zaak Alzheimer) and I can think of classic erotic/romantic films (Belle du Jour, Camille 2000, Bette Bleu) but not the two together. However, a quick google turns up a fellow named Chris Pence at MadeMan magazine has assembled a list, which I updated the post to include. If anyone has a good source of links for the list, I’ll be happy to include them.

    Thank you for the suggestion.

  3. July 25th, 2010 at 7:52 am, fran rizer Says:

    Hi Leigh,
    Just wanted to let you know “Sea of Love” is one of my all-time favorite films, which I still watch regularly when my mood is down. Also, fourth Callie is coming out the end of November.
    fran

  4. July 25th, 2010 at 9:03 am, Yoshinori Todo Says:

    Looks like I am in the minority here, but I think Basic Instinct is one heck of a movie, and I mean that in a positive way. And not just because of Sharon Stone, but also because of the great setting San Francisco and (for me) the late Jerry Goldsmith’s outstanding musical score. The main theme alone expresses so much: sensuality, lust, paranoia, obsession, and danger.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqOfl2w9Vqk

    Also, Presumed Innocent (directed by Alan J. Pakula and skillfully scored by John Williams) is a great mystery movie with several steamy sex scenes. I prefer this one over Disclosure any day.

  5. July 25th, 2010 at 9:28 am, Leigh Says:

    Hi Fran! Congratulations! One more winner! What’s the title?

    You’re right, Josh, people who didn’t care for Basic Instinct liked the music.

    Presumed Innocent (novel and film) is one of the all-time most ingenious mysteries, near the top on my favorites list. It crossed my mind to include it (and I could still be persuaded), but I mentally classified it as primarily a mystery as opposed to an erotic thriller.

    What does everyone think? Should Scott Turow’s Presumed Innocent be in the erotica list?

    Never mind, Yoshinori is right. I like this story so much I included it in my list.

    Also, be sure to check the excellent French thriller with Harrison Ford, Frantic.

  6. July 25th, 2010 at 9:39 am, Velma Says:

    There goes my brilliantly subtle heading of 9-1/2 Works.

    Unless we slip ‘im a Mickey.

  7. July 25th, 2010 at 10:35 am, John Floyd Says:

    I’ve seen all those on your list, including Basic Instinct, and I liked ’em all. (I was a little disappointed in Disclosure because I don’t think it lived up to the book, and Eyes Wide Shut and Angel Heart were a bit too creepy, even for me.) My favorite will always be Body Heat, partly because of John Barry’s fantastic music.

    And yes, I loved Presumed Innocent.

    Great list!

  8. July 25th, 2010 at 1:15 pm, Elizabeth Says:

    Devil in a Blue Dress, novel by Walter Mosley, starring Denzel Washington.

  9. July 25th, 2010 at 1:40 pm, Leigh Says:

    I remember that! I hadn’t thought of it. Thanks, Elizabeth.

  10. July 25th, 2010 at 5:56 pm, Jon L. Breen Says:

    I’ll second Josh’s favorable remarks on BASIC INSTINCT. Thanks for the kind words about EYES WIDE SHUT, which may well share the fate of some of Kubrick’s other films: denigrated when they came out, celebrated as classics later.

  11. July 25th, 2010 at 6:53 pm, Elizabeth Says:

    And I almost forgot my favorite, A Murder of Crows, written & directed by Rowdy Herrington, starring Cuba Gooding, Jr. It was in the $4 DVD bin at Walmart.

  12. July 25th, 2010 at 10:46 pm, Leigh Says:

    Jon, while I was researching, I came across notes to the effect that days before he died, Kubrick told his brother-in-law and a colleague that Eyes Wide Shut was his best work. I do love a clever plot.

    Elizabeth, I never heard of the film. Did A Murder of Crows go directly to DVD? I couldn’t find it formally reviewed, yet viewers largely like it, about 2 out of 3. One called it a “Criminally overlooked, highly original thriller.” The main complaints contend it was “under-budgeted”! I’m checking my WalMart $4 bin!

  13. July 26th, 2010 at 12:24 am, Jeff Baker Says:

    If we count t.v. and historicals then we have to mention “I Claudius,” from the ’70’s. A bunch of crimes people in power get away with and plenty of offstage sex…

  14. July 26th, 2010 at 7:15 am, John Floyd Says:

    Leigh, another point about A Murder of Crows: its protagonist is an aspiring writer who steals another man’s novel, and then . . . well, I shouldn’t say more. There are plenty of surprises. AMOC is a very good movie, one I’d forgotten about until I saw Elizabeth’s note. You’d enjoy it.

  15. July 26th, 2010 at 9:21 am, Yoshinori Todo Says:

    Leigh: Yeah, Presumed Innocent is definitely one of the very best. Great story, and one of the best surprise endings I’ve ever come across–when I first saw the movie I remember being totally shocked. I’d never suspected that person!

    Just a small point. You listed Richard Wolf as one of the composers, but in actual fact John Williams is solely responsible for the subtly brilliant score. Richard Wolf wrote just one (negligible) pop song, I believe, which is heard briefly at some point during the movie.

  16. July 26th, 2010 at 9:34 am, Leigh Says:

    Okay, buddy, it’s a sign of my faith in you!

    The great thing about Presumed Innocent is that it plays totally fair with the reader (and the audience) and still manages to fool almost everyone, the mark of a superb mystery.

  17. July 26th, 2010 at 5:49 pm, alisa Says:

    ….attention but snatched no major awards,…

    Leigh, LOVE your choice of wording there, you li’l punner you…..

    Surprised Caligua isn’t on your list….touts many (what I call) intellectual and snobby but excellent actors and quite the film for 1979…..not for everyone I suppose.

    Out of your list, I like The Big Easy……..

  18. July 26th, 2010 at 11:12 pm, Deborah Says:

    At the time that Angel Heart was being filmed in Louisiana, my Mom lived there and decided to audition for a part. She tells great stories about the making of the movie. She swears she was in the movie and had the check stub to prove it, but I never saw her on screen. Must have been those minutes they cut when the ratings were so risque.

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