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Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 11/03/2009 Run time: 123 minutes Rating: R
Taking its lead from Jonathan Demme's Oscar-winning pulse-raiser The Silence of the Lambs, Copycat strives for intelligence over gristle and carnage. It's a terse, involving thriller that swings away from the usual cinematic notion of violence as a means to an end by forgoing brawn for brains. Young San Francisco police inspector Ruben Goetz (Dermot Mulroney) is teamed with brilliant force vet, M.J. Monahan (Holly Hunter), a diplomatic, no-nonsense cop who must buck the system in order to find a killer who is copycatting the crimes of history's most notorious serial killers. Ruben would rather shoot to kill than merely wound a suspect; Monahan labors to help him think more diplomatically. Everything changes when crank calls arrive at the station from serial-killer pin-up girl psychiatrist Helen Hudson (Sigourney Weaver). She's been housebound for 13 months, ever since murderer Daryll Lee Cullum (Harry Connick Jr.) nearly made her his next victim because she testified against him in court. Though he's in prison, he's still mentor and muse to every loose cannon walking the streets--one of whom is killing people with a vengeance and hoping to finish the job Cullum began. Cop and doc team up to solve the case in this stylish, plot-driven movie. Though Copycat loses steam in the end, it still makes a point. And it serves as a cautionary tale for people everywhere, tossing in street smart warnings against victimization. The teaming of Hunter and Weaver works well, the short and the tall forging a terrific and frictioned relationship that leads to grudging respect. Establishing an ominous atmosphere reminiscent of his classic British TV miniseries The Singing Detective, director Jon Amiel has an eye for the dark and the unusual and it gives this film an edge that eludes most other mainstream filmmakers. --Paula Nechak
Not Your Everyday CopycatReviewed by Elizabeth Strassman, 2010-01-30
This is not the Hollywood version. While the "popular" version has its moments of drama and a lot of suspense; this movie depicts the killer at his truest sense. (Or killers?) A gory but well-written and adequately acted adaptation of the same title. Certainly worth watching again.
Copycat (Snap Case)Reviewed by Arnita D. Brown, 2010-01-29
Criminal profiler and psychologist Dr Helen Hudson becomes entangled in the deadly mind game of a vicious copycat serial killer Peter Foley. Due to the horrific attack Helen suffered in her past as an agoraphobic she is confined to her apartment. The killer uses this against her in his murderous attempts to become a famous serial killer. Detectives M. J Monahan and Reuben Goetz they have the challenge of trying to capture the killer before he kills again and uses his chance to commit another atrocious murder. "Copycat" is that rare movie that comes along that has the ability to pull you into it. It takes you on a most terrifying journey into the mind of a serial killer and the doctor that understands him. I can't say anything more, except that I love this movie.
2.5 stars out of 4Reviewed by One-Line Film Reviews, 2009-01-16
The Bottom Line:
Copycat earned some plaudits upon its release, but its a basically
straightforward thriller that sits much more comfortably next to
Kiss the Girls than Silence of the Lambs; by way of example, within
20 minutes any attentive viewer should be able to guess which
extraneous character is doomed by the law of character economy.
CopycatReviewed by David W. Nielsen, 2008-12-27
For lovers of police drama, this movie is a must see. Sigourney Weaver and Holly Hunter are superb. Holly Hunters outfits are quite nice.
Sigourney Weaver and Holly Hunter make this an enjoyable and
gruesome excursion into serial killingReviewed by C. O. DeRiemer, 2008-10-03
"Screams of the victim deaden his pain. The act of killing makes
him feel intensely alive. What he feels next is not guilt but
disappointment. It was not as wonderful as he'd hoped. Maybe next
time it will be perfect." --Dr. Helen Hudson speaking on serial
killers.
Copycat is a first-class psychological serial
killer/diller/thriller nearly undone by a conventional
slasher/thriller climax. The end works well enough, but once you've
seen one jump-out-and-scare-us, spray-in-the-face, last-minute-save
cliché you've seen them all. The only difference in the clichés
is how close we get to the blade going in, the skull cap blasting
off, and the last minute twist being irrelevant to the story.
What makes Copycat so superior to the others can be summed up in
two names: Sigourney Weaver and Holly Hunter. Weaver plays Helen
Hudson, an authority on serial killers, in demand for lectures,
consulted by the police, and a smart woman. That all changes when
she is attacked by a serial killer and barely survives. The guy
winds up in prison for life. Hudson winds up a prisoner, too.
Thirteen months later we can see that she's been so traumatized
that she has turned her apartment into a fortress. She's too
frightened to venture outside. She needs liquor to get through the
hours and pills and paper bags to deal with the panic attacks. She
trusts few others. She deals with life through her computer. She's
still an authority on serial killers, but her life has become a
wasteland. (She does have that terrific San Francisco apartment.}
Then she discovers that there is a new killer at work, one who
mimics the style of killing that other serial killers have used.
When she tells the police that recent, horrible murders are being
committed by one madman, that brings us to Holly Hunter, who plays
police inspector M. J. Monahan.
Monahan is quick, smart, feisty, small and, yeah, kinda cute. She's
also tough enough to make big, male cops nervous. She's friendly,
she's liked, she's prickly and no one doubts who's in charge when
she's on a case. Dead bodies don't bother her too much. Monahan is
a pro. Between Hudson's knowledge of serial killers, as wracked out
as she is, and Monahan's gritty persistence, it's not long before
we...then Hunt...then Monahan...realize Hunt has become the target
for the copycat killer's affections. Now we're in the middle of a
stylish, murderous cat-and-mouse game. Monahan, working with the
difficult, isolated Hudson, is determined to capture this man. And
the serial killer is going to go after Hudson, locked away in her
fortress of an apartment.
Copycat gives us every old favorite in the book...darkened
hallways, closed shower curtains, empty bathrooms, cops tricked off
their assignments, ingenious ways to kill...and they still work. In
an added twist, the current killer seems somehow to be able to
communicate to the man who attacked Hunter and who now is in a
secured slammer.
The only real drawback, if one doesn't mind too much the standard
scares at the end, is the movie's length...more than two hours. If
the director had had the energy to lop off 20 minutes the way the
serial killer lops off lives, the movie, in my view, would have
been even better. Even so, Copycat is a fine, intelligent movie
made special by Hunter and Weaver, and with effective performances
by Will Patton, Dermot Mulroney and a really unpleasant Harry
Connick, Jr. The score is low-key and evocative. There's even a
song by Sting and Andy Summers that the killer seems particularly
fond of:
It's murder by numbers, one, two, three
It's as easy to learn as your a b c
Murder by numbers, one, two, three
It's as easy to learn as your a b c
Now if you have a taste for this experience
And you're flushed with your very first success
Then you must try a twosome or a threesome
And you'll find your conscience bothers you much less
Because it's murder by numbers, one, two, three
It's as easy to learn as your a b c.
The DVD looks very good. There's a "making of" extra and a
commentary by the director.