Upon arriving to a small town, a drifter quickly gets into trouble with the local authorities — and the local women — after he robs a bank.
Don Johnson
Harry Madox
Virginia Madsen
Dolly Harshaw
Jennifer Connelly
Gloria Harper
Charles Martin Smith
Lon Gulick
William Sadler
Frank Sutton
Jerry Hardin
George Harshaw
Barry Corbin
Sheriff
Leon Rippy
Deputy Tate
Jack Nance
Julian Ward
Virgil Frye
Deputy Buck
John Hawker
Uncle Mort
Margaret Bowman
Woman at Gas Station
Debra Cole
Irene Davey
Karen Culley
Cowgirl
Cody Haynes
Cowboy
George Haynes
Mr. Haynes
James N. Harrell
Elderly Man (as James Harrell)
Edith Mills
Elderly Woman
Shannon Quinlan
Table Dancer
Roosevelt Williams
Grey Ghost
Director
Dennis Hopper
Novel, Screenplay
Charles Williams
Screenplay
Nona Tyson
April 11, 2016
8
If you fall out of bed again the cockroaches are gonna start talking.
The Hot Spot is directed by Dennis Hopper and adapted to screenplay from the Charles Williams novel, "Hell Hath No Fury", by Nona Tyson and Charles Williams. It stars Don Johnson, Virginia Madsen, Jennifer Connelly, Charles Martin Smith and William Sadler. Music is by Jack Nitzsche and cinematography by Ueli Steiger.
Dennis Hopper loves film noir, he has been in some bona fide classic neo-noirs, whilst also turning his hand to directing that style of film making. The Hot Spot may not be a total success as such, but it is a superb effort that lovers of all things noir can feast upon. Story pitches Johnson as drifter Harry Madox, who lands in a Southern state town, bluffs his way into a car salesman job, plots a robbery, and then finds that two local ladies - of very different qualities - are about to change his life forever...
I found my level and I'm living it.
Hopper turns in a honest and faithful tribute to the first wave of film noir, but armed with the fact this was his era of film making relaxations, he gets to sex things up. Blending noir with erotic thriller conventions allows Hopper to pile on plenty of sizzle, which comes in the form of Madsen, who as Dolly Harshaw gives neo-noir one of its finest femme fatales. Overtly sexual and on the surface a ditz, an easy lay, it's only when this part of noirville shows its hand - in true old school fashion - does the character become memorable still further.
On the flip side is Connelly's more straight laced Gloria Harper, who Madox coverts, yet there's baggage there as well (is she virginal?), baggage which adds more potency and trickery to this smouldering hot spot hot-pot. The girls are great, but so is Johnson, he broods and has a raw masculinity most fitting for this type of role. It's a shame he didn't do more neo-noir because he has the tools for the trade. Hopper brings sweat, sweaty close ups and noirville fans, while the photography and musical accompaniments are superbly compliant to the required atmosphere.
The editing is a let down, so many scenes needed to have the linger factor, but it's not enough to kill this fine slice of noir pie. A sexy guy in over his head, devious machinations from both sexes, robbery, arson, deaths, ignorance and stupidity, The Hot Spot is far from being boring! The deliberate slow burn pacing has alienated the casual "crime/erotic thriller" film fan, but for those who love and know their noir, the fireplace cinders approach is a joy because the pay off delivers all that we hoped. 8/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$1,293,976.00