Detective Kyle Bodine falls for Rachel Munro who is trapped in a violent marriage. After shooting her husband, Kyle relucantly agrees to help hide the body, but Kyle's partner is showing an unusual flair for finding clues.
Ed Harris
Kyle Bodine
Madeleine Stowe
Rachel Munro
Charles Dance
Rupert Munro
Patricia Healy
Adele
Benicio del Toro
Lamar Dickey
Tim Powell
Fraker
Pruitt Taylor Vince
Daryl Jeeters
Robb Edward Morris
Officer Pinola
Peggy O'Neal
Miami Desk Clerk
Sandy Martin
Gun Saleswoman
Roger Aaron Brown
Police Captain
Marc Macaulay
CSU Technician
Larry Shuler
Patrolman at Turner's
Paul Darby
CSU Photographer
Theresa Bean
Felicity Turner
Danny Cochran
Blues Band
Buddy Dolan
Sergeant
Robert Burgos
Harlan James
Director
John Bailey
Writer
Roy Carlson
October 22, 2017
7
The porcelain prince and princess.
China Moon is directed by John Bailey and written by Roy Carlson. It stars Ed Harris, Madeleine Stowe, Benicio del Toro, Charles Dance and Patricia Healy. Music is by George Fenton and cinematography by Willy Kurant.
To be kind since China Moon is a very good film in its own right, that is for lovers of film noir and its off shoot neo-noir, it's a film where its only crime is not being as great as previous instalments of noirs classic era and neo. Story treads deliciously familiar ground, where Harris' intrepid cop falls deep for Stowe's sultry babe and before he can say " I would do anything for you", he's in it up to his neck.
In true noir fashion there's a twisty road to be navigated, nothing is as it at first seems, with hidden agendas, shifty shenanigans and emotional turmoil all playing a hand. The police procedural aspect intrigues greatly, with the devilish kicker of Harris investigating himself, while the intricacies of crime investigation - such as bullet science - is not given short shrift.
As a mood piece it scores high, the sweaty Florida settings ripe for Bailey (a cinematographer by trade) to mix a bit of poetic ambiance with misty shimmers, rainy bleakness and colour coded criminality that's not detrimental to true noir essence. Perfs are from the higher end of the scale, and the makers add enough original touches of their own so as to not let this become a pointless retread.
Closing superbly with a double whammy finale, China Moon is one that film noir lovers should sample. 7/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$15,000,000.00
Revenue:
$3,038,499.00