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Killing 'em Softly

1982 Canadian film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Killing 'em Softly is a 1982 Canadian thriller film directed by Max Fischer, starring Irene Cara, George Segal, Clark Johnson and Nicholas Campbell.[1] It is most noted for production problems which led to it becoming one of the first Canadian films ever to be released direct to video,[2] and led to a court case over production funding which was not resolved until 1995.[3]

Quick Facts Directed by, Written by ...

Based on Laird Koenig's novel The Neighbor, the film's plot centres on the girlfriend of a murdered man, who falls in love with her boyfriend's killer.[1]

Irene Cara also performs the opening theme song "City Nights".

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Cast

  • George Segal as Jimmy Skinner
  • Irene Cara as Jane Flores
  • Joyce Gordon as Poppy Mellinger
  • Andrew Thomson as Lou Eberhard (credited as Andrew Martin Thompson)
  • Clark Johnson as Michael
  • Barbara Cook as Susan
  • Nicholas Campbell as Clifford
  • Gail Dahms-Bonine as "Cookie" (credited as Gail Dahms)
  • Emidio Michetti as Carlos
  • George E. Zeeman as Arnold
  • Arleigh Peterson as Harold
  • Sheena Larkin as Ms. Adamson, Lawyer
  • Jeffrey Cohen as Collector
  • Irene Kessler as Darlene
  • Charlotte Jones as Mrs. Zbanski
  • Antonia Ray as Fortune Teller
  • Daniel Whitner as Altman
  • Claudette Roche as Waitress (uncredited)
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Production

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The film was originally announced with the working title Neighbor,[3] and was originally slated to star Peter O'Toole in the role that Segal ultimately played.[1] Due to cost overruns, however, producer Claude Léger approached Télé-Métropole and the Dutch firm Mueller International as guarantors for a $3.15 million loan from the Mercantile Bank of Canada.[3] When a dispute emerged over story rights, Mercantile Bank called in the loan, bankrupting Léger.[4] Mercantile Bank then sued Télé-Métropole and Mueller International to recover its costs, and gave the film a minimal theatrical run under the title The Man in 5A,[1] before selling it to Palan Entertainment for $480,000.[3]

In 1989, the Quebec Superior Court ordered Télé-Métropole to pay $4.6 million to the National Bank of Canada, which had by this time acquired the Mercantile Bank.[4] Télé-Métropole appealed the decision to the Quebec Court of Appeal, which upheld the decision in 1995; with compound interest, however, Télé-Métropole was now ordered to pay $8 million.[3]

Screenwriter Leila Basen acknowledged in good humor that she had written what was widely considered "the worst Canadian movie ever made".[5] According to Basen, however, "at least the script for The Man in 5A was good. The problem was that the producers ran out of money. I paid to see the movie at a theatre - and asked for my money back at the end."[5]

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Awards

Campbell received a Genie Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor at the 4th Genie Awards in 1983.[6] Writing for Cinema Canada, critic J. Paul Costabile stated that the nomination had been given "for no discernible reason".[1]

References

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