D.O.A. (1988)
Director: Rocky Morton, Annabel Jankel
Movie review
From Time Out Film Guide
A remake of the 1950 film noir, presumably attracted by the lure of that implacable opening in which the hero staggers into the precinct house to report a murder: his own. Morton and Jankel's version likes that enough to re-stage it in black and white, and to issue the hero, boozy, disillusioned Eng Lit prof Dexter Cornell (Quaid), with a bellyful of slow-acting poison which gives him a day or so to find his murderer. Aided by adoring student Sydney (Ryan), to whom he attaches himself (literally) with superglue, Cornell batters against an impenetrable nighttown of red herrings. After a welter of murders, suicides, adulteries, buried birthrights, and a struggle with a tar-pit, Cornell learns the real meaning of publish or die on the campus. Borrowings apart, the plot is a muddle, and further confused by the Max Headroom team's mania for angle shots and distortions. Quaid is miles better than his material.Author: BC
Cast & crew
Director: Rocky Morton, Annabel Jankel
Producer: Ian Sander, Laura Ziskin
Cast: Dennis Quaid, Meg Ryan, Charlotte Rampling, Daniel Stern, Jane Kaczmarek, Christopher Neame, Robin Johnson, Rob Knepper full cast
Genre(s): Thrillers
Duration: 97 mins
Most popular on this site
Features
Old-school house
Even in the age of the multiplex, a few old movie theaters continue to thrive in NYC.
Keeping the faith
Hope abounds in Spike Lee’s latest—as it does in the director himself.
Going the distance
TONY toughs out the Toronto International Film Festival, blow by blow.
Race you to the top
Tyler Perry doesn’t need critics—and may not need new audiences.
Spanish intuition
Scarlett Johansson and Rebecca Hall flirt away an Iberian summer in Vicky Cristina Barcelona.
To air is human
Man on Wire, a new doc about a surreal Manhattan morning, aims high.





What do you think?
Post your review now