Jade Movie Review
Jade Review
"Jade" Overview

Rating: R
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : William FriedkinProducer : Robert Evans,Craig Baumgarten,Gary Adelson
Screenwiter : Joe Eszterhas
Starring : David Caruso,Linda Fiorentino,Chazz Palminteri
A few short weeks ago I posed the question, "What is Joe Eszterhas going to do
next (after Showgirls)?" Well, this is it, and it ain't Disneyland: Jade, a
horrid little thriller about a whole bunch of obsessive-compulsive crazies,
some of whom may be murderers.
Actually, I wish it was that simple. Perennial bad-girl Linda Fiorentino plays
Trina Gavin, a sultry psychologist with a questionable past. Chazz Palminteri
is her sicko attorney husband Matt, and David Caruso plays assistant D.A. David
Corelli, who is assigned to look into the murder of a wealthy art collector to
whom everyone seems to be linked...especially Trina.
What follows is a convoluted delving into a prostitution ring, one backstabbing
after another, some raunchy sex, and a whole slew of sick obsessions, each of
which seems to outdo the last one. You realize pretty quickly that no one is
innocent in Jade, and it soon becomes clear that the identity of the real
killer is unimportant--all of these people should be locked up.
A bunch of annoying characters combined with a bad script conspire to give us a
thriller that isn't particularly thrilling. Except for one awesome car chase
through the hilly streets of San Francisco and through a parade in Chinatown,
there's very little to redeem this feature. Director William Friedkin
previously won a slew of awards for directing The French Connection, and seems
to have found his calling in car chases. Unfortunately, Connection was made in
1971, and while Friedkin's direction still has style, it ain't what it used to
be.
It's really a shame that a cast of genuinely great actors would get together
and star in such a poor film. Palminteri looks simply ragged in Jade,
obviously not happy to be there. Even supermodel Angie Everhart, in her motion
picture debut, is wasted--spending her entire screen time being chased and
beaten up.
It's funny. That's how I felt.
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Review by Christopher Null
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