The Long Kiss Goodnight Movie Review
The Long Kiss Goodnight Review

"The Long Kiss Goodnight" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Renny HarlinProducer : Renny Harlin,Stephanie Austin,Shane Black
Screenwiter : Shane Black
Starring Geena Davis, Samuel L Jackson, Patrick Malahide, Criag Bierko, Brian Cox, David Morse
The much-publicized ballyhoo over The Long Kiss Goodnight relates largely to
the $4 million paid for Shane Black's script. The question everyone is asking
is, was it worth it?
Well, yes and no. Opening weekend is sure to bring in moviegoers in droves
enthralled by the sight of Geena Davis with a blonde dye-job, but more
discriminating viewers will probably be put-off by the plot holes,
inconsistencies, and downright silliness of the film. I mean, how many times
can you outrun an explosion in one film, anyway?
The Long Kiss Goodnight starts with one hell of an idea -- suburban
schoolteacher Samantha (Davis) has had amnesia for eight years, and when an
escaped convict tries to kill her after he sees her on television, the truth of
her past is slowly revealed. Along with private eye Mitch (Samuel L. Jackson),
Samantha discovers the reality of her life -- she is a cold-blooded assassin in
the employ of the CIA under deep cover, by the name of Charly.
Things go from bad to worse when everyone apparently wants the resurfaced and
now out-of-date Charly out of the picture, and it becomes a game of cat and
mouse with Charly's new goal becoming... well, we never really figure that out,
but it involves killing a lot of people, and blowing up a lot of stuff.
Jackson is hilarious here in another Pulp-y Jules-esque comic relief role, and
Davis has the action-star makings of another Sigourney Weaver. And while the
film on the whole is one exciting slam-bang actioner (directed by slam-bang
director and Mr. Geena Davis, Renny Harlin), it's the glaring bits of
incongruity that constantly bother the viewer. The conveniently placed props
-- thin ice where it's needed, always a gun handy, kerosene in a child's doll
(I still haven't figured that one out) -- and Harlin's insistence in pointing
these out well in advance so we won't be scratching our heads when they
inevitably enter the picture -- all of this gives the movie the feeling of a
methodically-planned operation, executed with the skill of... well, a killer
like Charly.
The Long Kiss Goodnight has other problems, most notably a poor editing job,
needed explanatory sequences obviously excised from the film, and a
disconcerting similarity of Charly at the end of the film to MacGyver, but
what's the point of worrying? In the end, you're likely to remember little but
a lot of guns, explosions, and Geena's lovely hair.
Not your everyday "Charly" girl.
|
Review by Christopher Null
|






