The Soft Kill
Private investigator and former police detective Jack Ramsey is enjoying an affair with the local district attorney's wife, but no longer, after she is strangled soon after he has departed following a session of amorous activity.
Cast
Michael Harris
Jack Ramsey
Brion James
Ben McCarthy
Carrie-Anne Moss
Jane Tanner
Matt McCoy
Vinnie Lupino
Corbin Bernsen
Martin Lewis
Kim Morgan Greene
Kimberly Lewis
Johnny Medina
Manny Ortega
Annie James
Allison Tanner
Ted Hayden
Mr. Feriolo
Gloria Hayes
Officer Miranda
Maxine James
Forensic Technician
Louise Lewis
Bag Lady
Alain Silver
Field Technician
Judith Ziehn
Widow
Robert Hoover
Cab Driver
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Comments
7 Comments
Former cop Jack Ramsey wants to move to Oregon, but there's a problem. Evidence has been found that makes him a suspect in the murder of gossip columnist Kimberly Lewis. His former partner Ben McCarthy, who visits his wife's grave frequently, is the lead detective on the case. Kimberly's sister Jane wants to hire Ramsey to find evidence that the killer is actually Martin (possible romance here?). Jane has a feeling it is, but she can't prove it. Ramsey and McCarthy work together to find out who committed the crime, and Ramsey gets in even more trouble as more evidence points to him. Ramsey also spends quite a bit of time with Jane. A number of people are identified as possible suspects, and we are deceived plenty of times as to who is doing the framing, and who is trying to blackmail whom and why. This is just as any good mystery should be, though there's nothing that great about it. Brion James gave quite a performance, considering this is just an average movie. Later, he got to demonstrate a wide range of skills. We think he is tough and strong and not particularly nice, but there is more to him. I don't know what Brion James is supposed to look like, but unless the character was supposed to resemble something out of sci-fi or horror, that was one hideous makeup job. I suppose the chemistry between Ramsey and McCarthy was supposed to be an attraction, but I didn't think there was much to that. Ramsey and Jane, on the other hand, made a more interesting team. Jane was the guardian for Allison, who was adorable and almost made the movie worth seeing. This movie is not for kids, in spite of Allison's presence. The first recognizable image is that of Kimberly topless in bed (on TV, certain body parts were blurry). The male leads seemed to like using the f-word a lot (at least I think that's what it was). There is some violence but not a great deal, though Allison is in danger at least once. I've seen better mysteries. This one wasn't too bad.
This is a very contrived and predictable thriller, and without giving too much away, lets say the obvious bad guy isnt the special guest star, and you can spot the bad guy right away. And no, the lead isnt Brion james, nor Corbin Bernsen, who is prominetly billed in the box, but Michael Harris (aka MK Harris) who is weak as a leading man. But for all the die hard Carrie Ann Moss fans from MATRIX, you can see not only an early performance of her, but to see her topless in a sex scene! I believe its her first and only * scene! but thats about it, and her scene isnt much compared to former TV star Kim Morgan Greene, who goes full frontal in the beginning of the film.
Private investigator and former police detective Jack Ramsey (Michael Harris) is enjoying an affair with the local district attorney's wife, but when she is strangled not long after he has departed following a session of amorous activity, Ramsey is pegged as the primary suspect due to "clues" obviously planted at the murder scene in order to incriminate him, and additionally because of a zealous detective (Matt McCoy) who has personal reasons for disliking the former policeman. As Ramsey tries to clear his name, the sister (Carrie-Anne Moss) of the deceased shows up, and soon she and Jack begin their own affair that is complicated by subsequent homicides and by Jack's former police partner, performed by Brion James, ostensibly, despite private devils, the sole individual Ramsey can trust as additional evidence mounts against him despite entry of other suspects. Harris, a charismatic player who has created excellent roles, can do but little with a script that defeats as well the rest of the cast, hindered by a wandering plot that is clichéd and predictable from the film's opening while, despite helpful cutting, there remains an obligatory slow motion love scene, as well as embarrassing emoting from McCoy, Moss and James that is made unduly prominent because of faltering direction.
When one of easily aroused officer Michael Harris (as Jack Ramsey)'s sexual conquests turns up strangled, he becomes a prime suspect. It's apparent (to viewers) that Mr. Harris is being framed, as the killings continue. Harris' police pal Brion James (as Ben McCarthy), who recovers from hangovers exceptionally well, is an odd ball; perhaps, he is involved? Victim's sister Carrie-Anne Moss (as Jane Tanner), who can be roughed-up before sex (with Harris, anyway), has a secret; perhaps, she is involved? Or, is it someone else? The killer's identity is almost as explicit as the sex. Whatever those dopers paid Johnny Medina (as Manny Ortega) wasn't enough. *** The Soft Kill (1994) Eli Cohen ~ Michael Harris, Brion James, Carrie-Anne Moss
