Identity (film)

Identity is a 2003 American psychological mystery slasher film directed by James Mangold from a screenplay by Michael Cooney and Mangold, who both derived from Cooney's original story. The film stars John Cusack, Ray Liotta, Amanda Peet, Alfred Molina, Clea DuVall and Rebecca De Mornay.

Identity
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJames Mangold
Produced byCathy Konrad
Screenplay byMichael Cooney
James Mangold
Story byMichael Cooney
Based onAnd Then There Were None
by Agatha Christie
StarringJohn Cusack
Ray Liotta
Amanda Peet
Alfred Molina
Clea DuVall
Rebecca De Mornay
John Hawkes
John C. McGinley
William Lee Scott
Jake Busey
Pruitt Taylor Vince
Music byAlan Silvestri
CinematographyPhedon Papamichael Jr.
Edited byDavid Brenner
Production
company
Distributed bySony Pictures Releasing
Release date
  • April 25, 2003 (2003-04-25)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$28 million[1]
Box office$90.2 million[1]

Loosely based from the story structure of Agatha Christie's 1939 whodunit And Then There Were None, the film follows ten strangers in an isolated hotel, who are temporarily cut off from the rest of the world, and are mysteriously killed off one by one. Several events which take place in the hours before the characters' arrival are introduced at key moments in the film using reverse chronology structure, and in a parallel story, a murderer awaits a verdict at a crucial trial that will determine whether he will be executed for his crimes.

The film received polarizing reviews, but has since garnered a slow cult following.

Plot

A convict named Malcolm Rivers awaits execution for several vicious murders that took place at an apartment building. Journals belonging to Malcolm are discovered mis-filed in the case evidence, not introduced during the trial. Malcolm's psychiatrist, Dr. Malick, and his defense attorney argue that the evidence was intentionally suppressed by the prosecution and move to stay Rivers' execution, contending that Malcolm is legally insane. With this late evidence brought forth, a midnight hearing takes place, to determine if the journal is adequate evidence to grant their motion.

Meanwhile, ten strangers find themselves stranded in the middle of a torrential rainstorm at a remote Nevada motel, run by Larry Washington. The group consists of an ex-cop, now limousine driver, Ed Dakota; Caroline Suzanne, a washed-up, irritable actress; Officer Rhodes, who is transporting convicted murderer Robert Maine; Paris Nevada, a prostitute; newlyweds Lou and Ginny Isiana; and the York family, George, Alice and their nine-year-old son, Timmy, who is in crisis because Alice has been struck by Ed's car.

With both ends of the road completely flooded, the group is forced to spend the night at the motel. Rhodes handcuffs Maine to a toilet in his room to prevent him from moving about freely. As everyone is settling down for the night, Suzanne is attacked by an unknown assailant after she leaves her room looking for a cell phone signal. Ed hears a loud banging noise outside as he's laying in bed, venturing outside and discovering Suzanne's head in a dryer, along with the number 10 motel key. Maine is suspected to be the killer, who is found to have escaped his captivity.

Ed alerts the others about Suzanne's death and Maine's escape. Lou and Ginny get into a fight, leading them back to their motel room. Ginny locks herself in the bathroom as they argue through the door, but Lou later starts banging in a frantic manner and goes quiet. Ginny slowly unlocks the door only to see a silhouette approaching with a knife. As she screams and retreats to the bathroom again, she jumps out of the window and the other guests find Lou's corpse in the corner of the room, stabbed to death.

At the hearing, the contents of Malcolm's diaries are revealed, indicating Malcolm suffers from an extreme case of dissociative identity disorder, harboring eleven distinct personalities. His journal contains entries written by his different personalities, each with distinct handwriting and prose, as if they were the personal thoughts of several different people. His defense attorney argues that Malcolm is completely unaware of the crimes for which he is being executed, which is in violation of existing Supreme Court rulings on capital punishment. Dr. Malick is introducing the concept of integrating the personalities of someone with dissociative identity disorder, when Malcolm arrives, strapped into a wheelchair.

While taking photos of Lou's crime scene and talking with Paris, Ed finds the number 9 key in Lou's bloody hands. He begins to suspect that the killer is counting down and targeting them in order. Meanwhile, Maine is making his escape over the wet terrain, but strangely finds himself right back at the motel, having gone full circle. Rhodes spots Maine trying to hide; he and Ed subdue Maine in a brief struggle. They tie Maine to a pole and Larry is appointed to guard him, but Larry is later seen away from his post. Maine is discovered to have been killed with Larry's own baseball bat, with the weapon sticking out of the corpse's mouth in a grisly manner. Rhodes and Ed find the number 8 key next to Maine's body, and harass Larry, who grabs Paris and threatens to cut her if they continue to accuse him. Paris wrestles him off and the freezer is opened accidentally to reveal the frozen body of the real motel manager; Larry runs away and attempts to escape in his truck, but he accidentally crushes George against a dumpster as he tries to save Timmy from being run over.

Rhodes binds Larry with rope to a chair, and tells the other guests that they're going to stay together until dawn, or he'll shoot the next suspect. Larry tearfully tells them the story of how he came upon the dead body of the manager and started running the motel for him, convincing Paris and Ed that he's not the perpetrator. Alice, still in bed, is checked on and presumably has died from her injuries, but Rhodes finds the number 6 key. George's body is recovered from the front of Larry's truck and the number 7 key is found in his pocket, which confuses the others.

Ed tells Ginny and Timmy to flee in a car near the edge of the motel, but it explodes, leaving no trace of the two behind. The last four survivors discover that the bodies of all the previous victims have disappeared. Paris, yelling in hysterics at their unknown assailant, says that her birthday is the next week; it transpires that all eleven people were born on May 10 — which is also Malcolm's birthday, and the day he committed the murders.

Ed leaves the other three and checks their ID cards in the office, discovering that each one of them is named after a state, and that their birthdays all do indeed match. Ed begins to hear a voice call out to him, and as he listens he finds himself in a different building, strapped to a chair, with Dr. Malick calling out to him. Ed finds he is at the meeting to argue and postpone Malcolm's execution, but is confused as to why he's being told of the crimes and Malcolm Rivers' past. Dr. Malick explains that he is in fact one of the personalities that Malcolm Rivers created as a child to cope with the abandonment and abuse he was subjected to. Informed that one of the personalities is the homicidal template that went on a killing spree, Ed is instructed to "go back" to the motel to try to eliminate this identity.

Ed 'awakens' to find himself standing in the rain, looking at the motel from a distance. Paris finds convict-transportation files for both Maine and Rhodes in the police car. A flashback reveals that Rhodes killed the correctional officer transporting him and Maine, put the officer's body in the trunk, and then assumed his identity. Rhodes attacks Paris, but she is saved by Larry, who is subsequently shot to death by Rhodes. Finally believing Rhodes to be the murderous personality, Ed goes after him and the two men end up shooting each other fatally, leaving only Paris still alive.

When Malick demonstrates that the homicidal personality is dead, Malcolm's execution is stayed and it is determined that he should be placed in a mental institution under Malick's care. In Malcolm's mind, Paris has driven back to her hometown in Frostproof, Florida. As she tends to some soil in her orange grove, she shakily discovers the number 1 key buried in the dirt, and finds Timmy behind her. Flashbacks reveal that Timmy orchestrated all of the deaths at the motel, and made it appear that he had been killed with Ginny. Timmy kills Paris, while Malcolm strangles Malick, causing the van that is en route to the mental institution to swerve off the road and stop before Timmy's voice repeats the poem "Antigonish" by William Hughes Mearns one more time, now the sole personality of Malcolm Rivers.

Cast

  • John Cusack as Edward "Ed" Dakota, a limousine driver and a former Los Angeles police officer
  • Ray Liotta as Samuel Rhodes, an escaped convict masquerading as the correctional officer who was transporting him and Maine
  • Amanda Peet as Paris Nevada, a prostitute leaving Las Vegas to buy a citrus grove in Florida
  • John Hawkes as Larry Washington, the motel manager
  • Clea DuVall as Ginny Virginia, a superstitious newlywed
  • William Lee Scott as Lou Isiana, Ginny's husband
  • Rebecca De Mornay as Caroline Suzanne, an '80s Hollywood TV actress chauffeured by Ed
  • Leila Kenzle as Alice York, a wife and mother who is injured in a car accident
  • John C. McGinley as George York, Alice's husband and Timmy's stepfather
  • Bret Loehr as Timothy "Timmy" York, Alice's son and George's stepson
  • Jake Busey as Robert Maine, Rhodes' fellow inmate still in his prison jumpsuit
  • Pruitt Taylor Vince as Malcolm Rivers, a convicted mass murderer
  • Alfred Molina as Dr. Malick, Rivers' psychiatrist
  • Holmes Osborne as Judge Taylor
  • Frederick Coffin as Detective Varole
  • Carmen Argenziano as Defense Lawyer and Attorney
  • Matt Letscher as Assistant District Attorney
  • Marshall Bell as District Attorney

Production

All filming was undertaken in the United States. Some took place in Lancaster, California and other places in Los Angeles County, while the majority was shot on a sound stage at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City.

Angelo Badalamenti was originally signed to score the film, but his music was replaced with a new score by Alan Silvestri (Silvestri had previously replaced Badalamenti on 1991's Shattered).

Reception

Critical response

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 62%, based on 173 reviews, with an average rating of 6.38/10. The site's consensus states: "Identity is a film that will divide audiences -- the twists of its plot will either impress or exasperate you."[2] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 64 out of 100 points based on 34 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[3] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale.[4]

Film critic Roger Ebert wrote upon the film's release, "Altogether, there are 10 guests. One by one, they die. Agatha Christie fans will assume that one of them is the murderer—or maybe it's the clerk... I think it is possible that some audience members, employing [my] Law of Economy of Characters, might be able to arrive at the solution slightly before the movie does."[5]

Mick LaSalle of SFGate reported, "At first, Identity seems like nothing more than a pleasing and blatant homage (i.e. rip-off) to the Agatha Christie-style thriller where marooned guests realize that a murderer is in their midst ... we've seen it before. Yet make no mistake. Identity is more than an entertaining thriller. It's a highly original one."[6]

The Village Voice's Dennis Lim wrote of the film's premise, "The premise of the one-rainy-night thriller Identity seems like mothballed Agatha Christie," and of the film's third act twist, "The ultimate cliché of plot-twist implausibility, the crucial revelation is so outlandishly fatuous it might have given Donald Kaufman pause. But there's nothing self-parodic about Identity—the viewer must not only swallow the nullifying third-act bombshell but actually re-engage with the movie on its new, extremely dubious terms."[7]

Brian Mckay of eFilmCritic.com wrote, "This film's cardinal sin was not that it had an engrossing but extremely far-fetched setup to a lackluster resolution—a resolution that probably sounded good during the initial script pitch, but which nobody realized was going to be such a misfire until the production was already at the point of no return. No, what Identity is guilty of most is bad timing—it simply gives away too much, too soon. At about the halfway mark (if not much sooner), the film's big "twist" will finally dawn on you (and if it doesn't, they'll end up coming right out and saying it five minutes later anyway). And once it does, you will no longer care what happens afterward."[8]

Box office performance

Identity opened on April 25, 2003 in the United States and Canada in 2,733 theaters.[1] The film ranked at #1 on its opening weekend, accumulating $16,225,263, with a per theater average of $5,936.[9] The film's five-day gross was $18,677,884.[10]

The film dropped down to #3 on its second weekend, behind newly released X2 and The Lizzie McGuire Movie, accumulating $9,423,662 in a 41.9% drop from its first weekend, and per theater average of $3,448.[11] By its third weekend it dropped down to #4 and made $6,477,585, $2,474 per theater average.[12]

Identity went on to gross $52.1 million in the United States and Canada and $38.1 million overseas. In total, the film has grossed over $90 million worldwide, making it a box office success against its $28 million budget.[1]

Accolades

The film was nominated for Best Action, Adventure or Thriller Film and Best DVD Special Edition Release at 30th Saturn Awards, but lost to Kill Bill Volume 1 and The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, respectively.

References

  1. "Identity (2003)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved October 10, 2013.
  2. "Identity (2003)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
  3. "Identity (2003)". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  4. "CinemaScore". cinemascore.com.
  5. Ebert, Roger (April 25, 2003). "Identity (2003)". Chicago Sun-Times. RogerEbert.com. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  6. LaSalle, Mick (September 5, 2003). "There's no way out of motel from hell". SFGate.com. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  7. Lim, Dennis (April 29, 2003). "No Exit: Hell Is Other People". The Village Voice. VillageVoice.com. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  8. McKay, Brian (August 5, 2003). "Review: Identity (2003)". eFilmCritic.com. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  9. "Weekend Box Office Results for April 25–27". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  10. "Daily Box Office Results for April 29". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  11. "Weekend Box Office Results for May 2–4". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  12. "Weekend Box Office Results for May 9–11". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved January 29, 2015.

Further reading

  • Earnshaw, Tony, ed. (2016). "James Mangold and Cathy Konrad – Identity". Fantastique: Interviews with Horror, Sci-Fi & Fantasy Filmmakers (Volume 1). pp. 208–221. ISBN 978-1-59393-944-1.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.