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Publications
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W White of the Eye (1987)
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White of the Eye (1987)

£0.00


Country: GB
Technical: col 110m
Director: Donald Cammell
Cast: David Keith, Cathy Moriarty, Art Evans, Alan Rosenberg

Synopsis:

A Tucson hi-fi technician dealing in state-of-the-art installations is also a serial killer. His wife finds out but cannot stop loving him.

Review:

Cammell's typically arresting, quirky take on the 80s genre par excellence surpasses most of its ilk by concentrating on character. Aerial shots of Arizona and bouts of Mahler smack of pretentiousness but do have some justification (the lead character, it is suggested, is part Indian, given to hunting rituals, and he likes classical music); much of the dialogue is indistinct, however.

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Country: GB
Technical: col 110m
Director: Donald Cammell
Cast: David Keith, Cathy Moriarty, Art Evans, Alan Rosenberg

Synopsis:

A Tucson hi-fi technician dealing in state-of-the-art installations is also a serial killer. His wife finds out but cannot stop loving him.

Review:

Cammell's typically arresting, quirky take on the 80s genre par excellence surpasses most of its ilk by concentrating on character. Aerial shots of Arizona and bouts of Mahler smack of pretentiousness but do have some justification (the lead character, it is suggested, is part Indian, given to hunting rituals, and he likes classical music); much of the dialogue is indistinct, however.


Country: GB
Technical: col 110m
Director: Donald Cammell
Cast: David Keith, Cathy Moriarty, Art Evans, Alan Rosenberg

Synopsis:

A Tucson hi-fi technician dealing in state-of-the-art installations is also a serial killer. His wife finds out but cannot stop loving him.

Review:

Cammell's typically arresting, quirky take on the 80s genre par excellence surpasses most of its ilk by concentrating on character. Aerial shots of Arizona and bouts of Mahler smack of pretentiousness but do have some justification (the lead character, it is suggested, is part Indian, given to hunting rituals, and he likes classical music); much of the dialogue is indistinct, however.

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