I Shot a Man in Vegas explained

Director:Keoni Waxman
Producer:Alec Chorches
Adam Gainsburg
Molly M. Mayeux
Scott Moore
Starring:John Stockwell
Janeane Garofalo
Cinematography:Steven Finestone
Editing:Ken Blackwell
Studio:Trans Atlantic Entertainment
Distributor:Arrow Entertainment
Country:United States
Language:English
Italic Title:I Shot a Man in Vegas

I Shot a Man in Vegas is a 1995 crime thriller film written and directed by Keoni Waxman and starring John Stockwell and Janeane Garofalo. The film follows five friends dealing with a getaway after one of them guns down another and dumps the corpse into the trunk of a car.

Plot

On a night of youthful carousing in Las Vegas, a scuffle erupts between hustler Johnny and his friend Grant in an alley. Watching the fight are Gale, Grant's girlfriend, and Martin and Amy. The fight ends in a death. Unfortunately when the death occurred, Gale, Martin, and Amy each claim to have seen something different. After the incident, the survivors take off across the Nevada desert toward the California border and their different viewpoints on what happened are chronicled via flashback.

Soundtrack

The film's score was composed by Wild Colonials guitarist, Shark.

The score piece "Route 15 4:30AM" from the film appeared on the Wild Colonials film music compilation, Reel Life, Vol. 1.

Critical reception

In his review, film critic Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times praised the film, writing "...this taut psychological drama packs one surprise after another. Storytelling with a camera seems to come naturally for Waxman, who matches an easy visual flair with an equally effective way with actors and dialogue... Waxman has chosen well his cameraman Steven Finestone, endlessly resourceful and dynamic yet fluid, and his composer Shark, whose spare, mood-setting score is superior to many in far more expensive movies."[1]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Thomas . Kevin . 1996-10-18 . 'Man in Vegas': A Dramatic Surprise . 2023-03-16 . Los Angeles Times . en-US.