Very Bad Things
Very Bad Things | |
---|---|
Directed by | Peter Berg |
Screenplay by | Peter Berg |
Produced by | Cindy Cowan Diane Nabatoff Michael Schiffer[1] |
Starring | Cameron Diaz Jon Favreau Daniel Stern Jeremy Piven Christian Slater with Leland Orser and Jeanne Tripplehorn |
Cinematography | David Hennings |
Edited by | Dan Lebental |
Music by | Stewart Copeland |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | PolyGram Filmed Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $30 million[2] |
Box office | $21 million[3] |
Very Bad Things is a 1998 American black comedy film directed by Peter Berg. It stars Cameron Diaz, Jon Favreau, Daniel Stern, Jeremy Piven, Christian Slater, Leland Orser and Jeanne Tripplehorn.
Plot
Before his wedding to fiancée Laura (Cameron Diaz), Kyle Fisher (Jon Favreau) organizes a bachelor party in a Las Vegas hotel with his friends: Charles Moore (Leland Orser), Robert Boyd (Christian Slater), brothers Adam and Michael Berkow (Daniel Stern and Jeremy Piven). Michael pays Tina (Kobe Tai), a stripper/prostitute, for sex in the bathroom and accidentally kills her. Soon thereafter, a security guard comes to investigate the ruckus and discovers Tina's corpse. In desperation, Boyd stabs the guard to death. Boyd convinces the group to dismember the bodies, bury them in the desert, and never speak of it again.
At the rehearsal dinner, Adam cracks under the pressure, leading to a confrontation with Michael outside. The fight is broken up and Michael is convinced to leave. While leaving, he tries to ram his jeep into Adam's beloved minivan. Adam runs in front of his van and is crushed in the collision. In the hospital, Adam whispers something to his wife Lois (Jeanne Tripplehorn) before dying, as Boyd looks on through a glass window.
Lois demands answers about what happened in Las Vegas. Fisher makes up a story about Adam sleeping with a prostitute. Boyd, suspecting she does not believe them, kills Lois. Later, Boyd calls Fisher and Moore to bring Michael to the house, where he kills him. He concocts a story about a Michael/Lois/Adam love triangle to answer any interrogation by police. After these events and being named beneficiary of Adam and Lois' estate, Fisher breaks down and confesses the story to Laura, who demands that the wedding she has dreamed about proceed as planned.
On the wedding day, Boyd confronts Fisher, demanding the money from Adam's life insurance policy. Fisher refuses and a fight ensues which ends with Laura bludgeoning Boyd. During the ceremony, Fisher and Moore realize that Boyd has the wedding rings. Moore goes to retrieve them, opening a door that knocks Boyd down a stairwell where he dies. Laura demands Fisher bury Boyd's body in the desert and then ensure no loose ends remain by killing Moore. Ultimately, Fisher cannot go through with the act and as drives home, he loses focus and crashes into an oncoming car.
After the collision, Fisher has had both his legs amputated below the knee and Moore is brain damaged and confined to a motorized wheelchair, leaving Laura to care for all of them in addition to raising Adam's sons. As Laura watches Fisher's futile attempt to control the two boys, she realizes her life and dreams are totally ruined and suffers a nervous breakdown as she runs out of the house and collapses screaming in the street.
Cast
- Christian Slater as Robert Boyd
- Cameron Diaz as Laura Garrety-Fisher
- Jon Favreau as Kyle Fisher
- Daniel Stern as Adam Berkow
- Jeremy Piven as Michael Berkow
- Leland Orser as Charles Moore
- Jeanne Tripplehorn as Lois Berkow
- Joey Zimmerman as Adam Berkow Jr.
- Kobe Tai as Tina
Reception
The film scored a 44% on Rotten Tomatoes, with the consensus, "Mean-spirited and empty".[4] Roger Ebert wrote that Very Bad Things is "not a bad movie, just a reprehensible one".[5] Some critics appreciated the cold-blooded approach, however. Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide said, "In a world filled with crude movie sitcoms, Berg's bitter, worst-possible-case scenario really does stand alone".[6]
References
- ^ "Full cast and crew for Very Bad Things (1998)". IMDb. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
- ^ http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=verybadthings.htm
- ^ http://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Very-Bad-Things#tab=summary
- ^ [1]
- ^ "Very Bad Things". Chicago Sun-Times.
- ^ [2]
External links
- 1998 films
- 1990s comedy films
- American black comedy films
- American films
- American comedy films
- Crimes against sex workers in fiction
- Directorial debut films
- English-language films
- Films about weddings
- Films directed by Peter Berg
- Films set in the Las Vegas Valley
- Necrophilia
- Interscope Communications films
- PolyGram Filmed Entertainment films
- Film scores by Stewart Copeland