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Title: THE HAND Year: 1981 Rating: ***1/2 |
Michael Caine is good in this otherwise mediocre thriller by
first-time director (of a genuine studio film) Oliver Stone that centers on Michael Caine as a comic book artist/writer
who loses his hand in an automobile accident, which is technically the most
riveting scene, after which he rehabilitates while the severed limb is,
or seems to be, crawling around doing his dirty work for him...
Stone’s
best direction occurs during taut conversations between Caine and the
people around him, providing a suspenseful base liken to
stage-influenced British horror films, building character development in
lue of cheap shocks...
However, scenes involving The Hand itself look a bit
cheesy, dated, and sporadic cuts to black and white seem misplaced, contrasting
from our protagonist turned antagonist and revolving side-characters
Annie McEnroe as a tempestuous college student, Bruce McGill as a
temperamental shrink, and Caine’s cheating wife Andrea
Marovicci: his ultimate target in a horror thriller that has moments but somewhat loses its grip halfway through. Although, witnessing Michael Caine slowly
going mad... a role that, according to Stone, took a toll on the actor’s
real life... is worth the ninety minutes.
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Annie McEnroe in Oliver Stone's THE HAND
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Michael Caine in Oliver Stone's THE HAND |
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Michael Caine in Oliver Stone's THE HAND |
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Michael Caine in Oliver Stone's THE HAND |
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