Medicine Hat News

Michael Douglas and Sharon Stone retain their ‘Basic Instinct’

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Almost 30 years later, “Basic Instinct” (now streaming on Netflix) has kept its basics as a marvelousl­y adult thriller. Director Paul Verhoeven and writer Joe Eszterhas stirred considerab­le discord – even with their leading lady – when the film was released in 1992, but it remains a lushly filmed and well-performed melodrama that did nothing to diminish the box-office power Michael Douglas was enjoying at the time. He’d earned a best-actor Oscar for “Wall Street,” but he was still the go-to star to play men prone to give in to their emotional weaknesses. Here, that man is Nick Curran, a San Francisco homicide detective still recovering from a tragic incident that welded his job to his personal vices ... thus earning him the nickname “Shooter.” His investigat­ion of an ex-rock star’s vicious murder-via-ice-pick puts him and his partner Gus (the ever-likable George Dzundza) in the trajectory of the victim’s girlfriend: Catherine Tramell (Sharon Stone), a behavioral­ly cool novelist who’s basing her newest book on Curran, to his evident dismay. Her attitude does little to dissuade the cops that they should consider her a suspect in the killing, affirmed by their police-station interrogat­ion of her (in a famous scene that Stone reportedly was furious about, maintainin­g that Verhoeven filmed her in a prurient way she didn’t expect). Even as Curran can’t make up his mind about her professed innocence, he’s drawn to her, a fact that doesn’t please Catherine’s live-in girlfriend (Leilani Sarelle, later known by her then-married last name Ferrer, and impressive­ly tough and vulnerable at the same time here). While “Basic Instinct” doesn’t stint on violence, most assuredly in the film’s opening, it also has a visual elegance enhanced by a score by movie-music icon Jerry Goldsmith. That’s a particular­ly effective merger in scenes filmed on highways along the California coastline, and also in a cat-and-mouse car chase that sees Curran tail Catherine to the home of her mentor (veteran actress Dorothy Malone), who happens to be a notorious killer. The look and sound also mesh well in moments between Douglas and Jeanne Tripplehor­n, who plays Curran’s psychologi­st and still-hooked-onhim former flame. The enormous success of “Basic Instinct” led to an unfortunat­ely inevitable “Basic Instinct 2” 14 (!) years later, with Stone reprising her role in an inferior retread of the first movie’s plot. It was so little-seen, at least in America, that it hasn’t tarnished its forerunner’s reputation. Our instinct is to get engrossed in the original all over again.

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