The Grifters
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Stephen Frears
Anjelica Huston
John Cusack
Annette Bening
Gailard Sartain
Sy Richardson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
A small-time con man tries to avoid getting involved in big-time crime.
Director
Stephen Frears
Cast
Anjelica Huston
John Cusack
Annette Bening
Gailard Sartain
Sy Richardson
John Drew Barrymore
Trisha King
Billy Ray Sharkey
Juliet Landau
Michael Laskin
Lou Hancock
Jeremy Piven
Pat Hingle
Paul Adelstein
John Gillespe
Henry Jones
Robert J Weems
Sandy Baron
Jon Gries
Xander Berkeley
Jeff Perry
Robert Greenfield
Teresa Gilmore
Bradley Pierce
J.t. Walsh
Steve Buscemi
Noelle Harling
Jason Ronard
Michael Greene
Ron Campbell
Frances Bay
Gregory Sporleder
Richard Holden
Jack Mcgee
Ashton Bezamat
Jimmy Noonan
Jan Munroe
Eddie Jones
Elizabeth Ann Feeley
Stephen Tobolowsky
Ivette Soler
Charles Napier
David Sinaiko
Micole Mercurio
Crew
Kimberly Adams-galligan
Mick Audsley
Paige Augustine
James Babineaux
Beth Bernstein
Elmer Bernstein
Mark Bridges
Stephen Buck
Joe Camp
Bill Cancienne
Joseph T Conway
Cydney Cornell
Kathleen Courtney
Mary Cybulski
Mark Shane Davis
Richard Davis
Barbara De Fina
Michael Diagle
Marina Drasnin
Jack English
Julie Fainer
Douglas Fox
Dennis Gassner
Claire Gaul
John Gillespe
John Gillespe
Joseph E Griffith
Nancy Haigh
Nancy Haigh
Suzanne Hanover
Robert A Harris
Julie Hewett
Richard Hornung
Jody Hummer
Gary Jensen
Brian Jochum
Shannon Kane
A. Welch Lambeth
Tinker Linville
Jay Louis
Marco Mazzei
Leslie Mcdonald
John Moore
Peter Nunnery
Jim Painten
Bill Palutti
Scott Plauche
Carla Poole
Cynthia Quan
Peggy Rajski
Tiffany Rosen
Martin Scorsese
Chris Snyder
Oliver Stapleton
Oliver Stapleton
John Sutton
Juliet Taylor
Vickie Thomas
Jim Thompson
Brain Ulsberg
Frank Viviano
Greg Wardell
Jory Weitz
Llewellyn Wells
Donald Westlake
Ian C Wright
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Actress
Best Adapted Screenplay
Best Director
Best Supporting Actress
Articles
Elmer Bernstein (1922-2004)
Elmer Bernstein, who was not related to Leonard Bernstein, was born on August 4, 1922, in New York City. He displayed a talent in music at a very young age, and was given a scholarship to study piano at Juilliard when he was only 12. He entered New York University in 1939, where he majored in music education. After graduating in 1942, he joined the Army Air Corps, where he remained throughout World War II, mostly working on scores for propaganda films. It was around this time he became interested in film scoring when he went to see William Dieterle's The Devil and Daniel Webster (1941), a film whose score was composed by Bernard Herrmann, a man Bernstein idolized as the ideal film composer.
Bernstein, who originally intended to be a concert pianist and gave several performances in New York after being discharged from military service, decided to relocate to Hollywood in 1950. He did his first score for the football film Saturday's Hero (1950), and then proved his worth with his trenchant, moody music for the Joan Crawford vehicle Sudden Fear (1952). Rumors of his "communist" leanings came to surface at this time, and, feeling the effects of the blacklist, he found himself scoring such cheesy fare as Robot Monster; Cat Women of the Moon (both 1953); and Miss Robin Caruso (1954).
Despite his politics, Otto Preminger hired him to do the music for The Man With the Golden Arm, (1955) in which Frank Sinatra played a heroin-addicted jazz musician. Fittingly, Bernstein used some memorable jazz motifs for the film and his fine scoring put him back on the map. It prompted the attention of Cecil B. De Mille, who had Bernstein replace the ailing Victor Young on The Ten Commandments (1956). His thundering, heavily orchestrated score perfectly suite the bombastic epic, and he promptly earned his first Oscar® nod for music.
After The Ten Commandments (1956), Bernstein continued to distinguish himself in a row of fine films: The Rainmaker (1956), Sweet Smell of Success (1957), Some Came Running (1958), The Magnificent Seven (a most memorable galloping march, 1960); To Kill a Mockingbird (unique in its use of single piano notes and haunting use of a flute, 1962); Hud (1963); earned a deserved Academy Award for the delightful, "flapper" music for the Julie Andrews period comedy Thoroughly Modern Mille (1967), and True Grit (1969).
His career faltered by the '80s though, as he did some routine Bill Murray comedies: Meatballs (1980) and Stripes (1981). But then director John Landis had Bernstein write the sumptuous score for his comedy Trading Places (1983), and Bernstein soon found himself back in the game. He then graced the silver screen for a few more years composing some terrific pieces for such popular commercial hits as My Left Foot (1989), A River Runs Through It (1992) and The Age of Innocence (1993). Far From Heaven, his final feature film score, received an Oscar® nomination for Best Score in 2002. He is survived by his wife, Eve; sons Peter and Gregory; daughters Emilie and Elizabeth; and five grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Elmer Bernstein (1922-2004)
The Grifters (Collector's Series)
Roy Dillon (John Cusack) is a small potatoes con artist who has woman problems. Roy's new girlfriend Myra Langtry (Annette Bening) is a looker who uses her curvy, geometric body for her own crooked angles. Meanwhile, Roy's long-lost mother Lilly Dillon (Angelica Huston), a professional con-artist whose modus operandi is fixing odds at the horse track, shows up unexpected and throws Roy into a Freudian-tinged tizzy.
Adapted from Jim Thompson's novel, The Grifters is helped out immeasurably by an Oscar-nominated screenplay by veteran scribe Donald E. Westlake (Point Blank, The Outfit, Clockers). Ironically, Westlake, known for his hardboiled narratives, originally turned down the assignment, thinking the story "too gloomy." Nevertheless, Westlake has a firm grasp on what makes Thompson characters tick. He observes in one of the DVD's documentaries that Jim Thompson's characters "all go to hell." But Thompson's are more than just characters who make mistakes. They are Greek tragedians of the underclass. Throughout production, director Stephen Frears would check with Westlake to make sure they were lending the story enough of the "proper Sophoclean element." Like Oedipus and his brood, Roy, Lilly, and Myra are caught in an inexorable narrative that will end with Fate sticking out a foot to trip them into a web of death. The bleak root of Thompson's world-view is unearthed in one of the DVD's documentaries, "The Jim Thompson Story."
Like most modern neo-noir films, The Grifters draws upon the legacy of L.A.-based classical film noir. The opening credits are laid over sepiatoned pictures of hotels, landmarks, and other artifacts of old Los Angeles, locales you might spot in The Big Sleep (1946), Double Indemnity (1944), and even Chinatown (1974). The film's conclusion draws a thematic parallel to another classic film noir; one of the doomed characters descends in an old hotel elevator, a metaphoric descent into Hell, which stands as a nod to the final shot of Mary Astor meeting her comeuppance in The Maltese Falcon (1941). The characters speak in Thompson's 1950s vernacular, while the production design can't quite make up its mind from what decade it's quoting; Lilly drives a 70s-era Cadillac, while dressed in 50s-style clothes. It's cinematic schizophrenia at its best.
The Grifters DVD includes a standard making-of documentary, divided up into short chapters that delve into the pre-production, casting, shooting, and the production design, courtesy of interviews of Westlake, Cusack, Huston and Frears, who also do the honors for the DVD's commentary track. To purchase The Grifters: Special Edition, visit TCM Shopping.
by Scott McGee
The Grifters (Collector's Series)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Limited Release in United States December 5, 1990
Released in United States Winter December 5, 1990
Re-released in United States January 18, 1991
Released in United States on Video June 5, 1991
Released in United States September 1990
Released in United States November 1990
Released in United States January 1991
Released in United States 1998
Shown at Toronto Festival of Festivals September 6-15, 1990.
Shown at London Film Festival November 8-25, 1990.
Shown at Cinequest 1998: The San Jose Film Festival January 29 - February 4, 1998.
Marks first feature shot in US by director Stephen Frears.
Completed shooting December 15, 1989.
Began shooting October 23, 1989.
First film to be produced by Martin Scorsese's production company.
Actress Juliet Landau is the daughter of Martin Landau and Barbara Bain.
Wide re-release in USA January 25, 1991.
Limited Release in United States December 5, 1990 (New York City and Los Angeles)
Released in United States Winter December 5, 1990
Re-released in United States January 18, 1991 (Los Angeles)
Released in United States September 1990 (Shown at Toronto Festival of Festivals September 6-15, 1990.)
Released in United States November 1990 (Shown at London Film Festival November 8-25, 1990.)
Released in United States January 1991 (Shown at Sundance Film Festival Park City, Utah January 17-27, 1991.)
Released in United States 1998 (Shown at Cinequest 1998: The San Jose Film Festival January 29 - February 4, 1998.)
Released in United States on Video June 5, 1991