River's Edge Movie Review
River's Edge Review
"River's Edge" Overview

Rating: R
1986
Cast and Crew
Director : Tim HunterProducer : Sarah Pillsbury,Midge Sanford
Screenwiter : Neal Jimenez
Starring : Crispin Glover,Keanu Reeves,Ione Skye,Daniel Roebuck,Dennis Hopper,Joshua John Miller,Roxana Zal
Long before Laura Palmer's body was discovered wrapped in plastic, poor Jamie
was strangled to death aside a lonely river, her unrepentant killer John (a
creepy Daniel Roebuck, the guy who played Jay Leno in The Late Shift) taking it
upon himself to prove to his friends what he's done. He's not giddy about it,
he just wants acknowledgement and, somehow, understanding.
A gripping study of teen ambivalence and the utter lack of angst, River's Edge
is a creepy, powerful, and underseen picture that features some virtuoso
performances (notably Crispin Glover's Layne, who organizes an ill-conceived
campaign to get John out of town). Featuring some of the most inventive and
believable dialogue, the locals (including Keanu Reeves and Ione Skye as the
only kids even remotely bothered by the death of their friend) are at a loss
for what to do. Atmospheric and numbing, the picture is an obvious precursor
to Twin Peaks, and a better template David Lynch couldn't have found. The
story is loosely based on a real murder, which makes it all the more chilling.
Oddly, both writer Neal Jimenez and director Tim Hunter would go on to
lackluster careers, with Jimenez writing mostly schlock horror scripts (the
last, Hideaway, in 1995) and Hunter directing a lot of TV junk (though he did
ironically work on Twin Peaks).
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Review by Christopher Null
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