Mike's Murder Explained

Mike's Murder
Caption:Theatrical release poster
Director:James Bridges
Producer:James Bridges
Screenplay:James Bridges
Music:John Barry
Joe Jackson
Cinematography:Reynaldo Villalobos
Editing:Dede Allen
Studio:The Ladd Company
Distributor:Warner Bros.
Runtime:109 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$6.3 million[1]
Gross:$1 million

Mike's Murder is a 1984 American neo-noir[2] mystery film written and directed by James Bridges and starring Debra Winger, Mark Keyloun and Paul Winfield.

Plot

In Los Angeles, bank teller Betty Parrish (Debra Winger) has a one-night stand with a young tennis instructor named Mike Chuhutsky (Mark Keyloun), but then has only random contact with him over the course of the next two years.

Mike is a drug dealer. One day she sees him on the street and gives him a ride. He tells her he is being chased for encroaching on another criminal's territory. Later, a friend of his calls to tell her that Mike is dead, brutally murdered.

Betty cannot let go of him without understanding him better and tries to find out more. It leads to her discovering Mike's hidden side, including a disturbed acquaintance of his named Pete (Darrell Larson) and a record producer named Philip (Paul Winfield) who apparently was involved with Mike in a gay relationship. Betty's life is placed in peril by the story's end.

Cast

Production

Warner Brothers reportedly was unhappy about the project because of its premise of the drug-fixated underpinnings of the L.A. entertainment world and refused to release it until Bridges made some cuts and changes.[3]

The film originally was edited so that the events played chronologically backwards and featured a score by singer Joe Jackson. Bridges' original edit was poorly received by test audiences, and Warner Bros. forced him to re-edit it so the story unfolded in a more conventional way. Jackson's score was replaced by a new John Barry score. However, most of Jackson's songs remain in the film.

Bridges wrote the film for Winger, having worked with her on Urban Cowboy. Her performance in Mike's Murder led the critic Pauline Kael to describe Winger as "a major reason to go on seeing movies in the 1980s".[4]

DVD release

Warner Bros. Digital Distribution released Mike's Murder on 4 August 2009, as part of the Warner Archive Collection series.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: AFI|Catalog. Catalog.afi.com. 15 November 2021.
  2. [Alain Silver|Silver, Alain]
  3. [Pauline Kael]
  4. [Pauline Kael]