Alex Winter's FEVER tells the moody, haunting story of an urban-dwelling twenty-something who begins to show signs of physical and mental deterioration when faced with the suffocating pressure of living alone in New York City. Nick Parker (Henry Thomas), a struggling artist, pays the bills by teaching drawing to the elderly. .. Read more
| Starring | Henry Thomas, David O'Hara, Teri Hatcher, Bill Duke |
|---|---|
| Director | Alex Winter |
| Genres | Drama |
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Alex Winter's FEVER tells the moody, haunting story of an urban-dwelling twenty-something who begins to show signs of physical and mental deterioration when faced with the suffocating pressure of living alone in New York City. Nick Parker (Henry Thomas), a struggling artist, pays the bills by teaching drawing to the elderly. Living in a squalid Brooklyn tenement, Nick avoids contact with his family, including his sister Charlotte (Teri Hatcher). When his landlord is discovered murdered one morning, Nick receives a visit from Detective Glass (Bill Duke), whom he is unable to help. Around this time, a mysterious new tenant moves into the upstairs apartment. The man, Will (David O'Hara), disturbs Nick with his matter-of-fact attitude and hidden past. As Nick's health becomes more and more fragile, rendering him pale, frazzled, and disoriented, the realisation that he has once again begun to sleepwalk disturbs him even more, triggering an ultimate understanding that just might destroy him. Winter, working hand in hand with cinematographer Joe DeSalvo (ALL OVER ME, JOHNNY SUEDE), creates a stylish, claustrophobic world that is revealed strictly from Nick's scattered point of view. In maintaining this distorted vision, Winter allows the audience to truly view the story through Nick's muddled eyes, resulting in an eerie, dark thriller.
| Starring | Henry Thomas, David O'Hara, Teri Hatcher, Bill Duke |
|---|---|
| Director | Alex Winter |
| Studio | PARASOL PICTURES RELEASING |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 32 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | English |
| Released | DVD: 03 Oct 2005 Production year: 1999 |
| Format | DVD |
An eerie, insinuating tale of urban dread and mental breakdown
Pure Hitchcockian panic that reverberates like thunder...
If you read the reviews on IMDB this is a quirky, Hitchcockesque 'thriller' that is 'Dark, claustrophobic, and downright creepy'. Dark and claustrophobic it most definitely is but the thriller bit must have passed over my head. I watch a lot of films that leave me scratching my head & wondering what on earth was going on, that's not the problem, the frustrating bit was not caring what was going on and just being glad that it had ended.
It didn't do it for me and won't be to everyone's taste. Oh, and don't be mislead by the fact that it's written and directed by Alex Winter of Bill & Ted fame. I added this to my list after watching another of his films, 'Freaked' (worth a watch if you like odd, dark 'comedies'), but there is no comparison in terms of style or content. All credit to Alex for his versatility though.
Not quite sure how this ended up on my recommendations list. I was bored within minutes. Not good. Probably avoid if you can.