Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1991


V.I. Warshawski (film)

Buy V.I. Warshawski (film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'V.I. Warshawski' is a 1991 American action-comedy crime film directed by Jeff Kanew and starring Kathleen Turner, Jay O. Sanders, Charles Durning, Lynnie Godfrey, Anne Pitoniak, Geof Prysirr, Angela Goethals, Stephen Meadows, Frederick Coffin, Stephen Root and Wayne Knight.

Plot



Victoria Iphigenia "V.I" Warshawski (Kathleen Turner) is a Chicago-based, freelance, private investigator who lives the part of the hard-boiled detective, but below the surface, she is a softy. One night, while she is drinking at her favorite bar, she meets an ex-Blackhawks hockey player named Boom-Boom Grafalk (Stephen Meadows). The two connect and a romance appears to be in the making, but Warshawski is surprised when Boom-Boom appears at her doorstep later that night with his 13-year-old daughter Kat (Angela Goethals) in tow.

He asks Warshawski if she could watch her, and Warshawski agrees. Later that night, Boom-Boom is killed in a boat explosion, and Kat hires Warshawski to track down her father's killer. In doing so, she befriends the victim's daughter; together they set out to crack the case.

Principal cast



* Kathleen Turner as Victoria Iphigenia "V.I." Warshawski

* Jay O. Sanders as Murray Ryerson

* Charles Durning as Lieutenant Bobby Mallory

* Lynnie Godfrey as Sal

* Anne Pitoniak as Lotty

* Geof Prysirr as Ron Whartley

* Robert Clotworthy as Philip Pugh

* Angela Goethals as Katherine "Kat" Grafalk, Bernard's Daughter

* Nancy Paul as Paige Wilson-Grafalk

* Stephen Meadows as Bernard "Boom-Boom" Grafalk

* Frederick Coffin as Horton Grafalk

* Charles McCaughan as Trumble Grafalk

* John Fujioka as Sumitora

* John Beasley as Ernie

* Stephen Root as Mickey

* Wayne Knight as Earl "Bonehead" Smeissen

* Lee Arenberg as "Flesh"

* Mike Hagerty as "Babe"

* Tom Allard as Eddie "Big Eddie"

* Herb Muller as Contreras

* Everett Smith as McGraw

* Gene Hartline as Thug

Production



Writing

The film was based on a series of books by Sara Paretsky. Screenwriters Edward Taylor, David Aaron Cohen, and Nick Thiel adapted only one of Sara Paretsky's novels, 'Deadlock', for the script for this movie, which took at least one liberty with the story. Whereas Paretsky had written the novel as a serious mystery, the screenwriters took an almost comedic approach. Paretsky was especially angry over the original script that had the independent female detective subordinate to a male counterpart for fear that a female character could not hold the lead role.

The film's plot is very different from that of 'Deadlock'. In the book the ex-Blackhawks player Boom-Boom was the protagonist detective's cousin and lifelong companion, rather than a chance-met stranger; he had no daughter; and "Grafalk" was the family name of another character altogether, a devious shipping magnate who had a major role in the book but was dropped from the film.

Casting

Initially, the producers wanted to set the film in Baltimore and cast either Amy Madigan, Bette Midler or Jane Fonda as Warshawski. Kathleen Turner reprised her character V.I. Warshawski in a series of radio plays on BBC Radio 4, the radio version of 'Deadlock' itself being broadcast in 1993.

Filming

Principal production began in Chicago in November 1990. Scenes were filmed at Wrigley Field, Chicago; Green Mill Cocktail Lounge - 4802 N. Broadway Avenue, Chicago, (used as the Golden Glow Cocktail Lounge); San Pedro, California, Long Beach, California; Fire Station 23 - 225 E. 5th Street, Los Angeles, and Warner Bros Studios. Completed shooting February 27, 1991.

Reception



Janet Maslin of 'The New York Times' had mixed thoughts about the film but commended the acting: "It's too bad that 'V.I. Warshawski' is itself a lot less glamorous than Ms. Turner's performance, since the character could easily be the centerpiece of a more appealing film...'V.I. Warshawski' has a breezy style and a serviceable, even surprising detective plot. And it has Ms. Turner, who makes the most of V.I. Warshawski's sardonic humor."

Roger Ebert of 'The Chicago Sun-Times' gave the film 3 out of 4 stars and praised Turner's performance: "Kathleen Turner fits the character more closely than I would have imagined. Her laugh seems aged by whiskey, her smile is brave in the face of trouble, she kisses guys as if she'll never see them again, and she's usually right."

The movie debuted poorly at the box office. On Rotten Tomatoes, it holds a rating of 21% based on 28 reviews.

Home media



The film was released on VHS on November 13, 1991; it was released on Laserdisc (4:3 ratio) the following year and on DVD on June 4, 2002 (in a 1.85:1 ratio). It was released on Blu-ray in May 2011.

References




Buy V.I. Warshawski (film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1991



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1107275928.