To Die For Movie Review
To Die For Review
"To Die For" Overview

Rating: R
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Gus Van SantProducer : Laura Ziskin
Screenwiter : Buck Henry
Starring : Nicole Kidman,Matt Dillon
Gus Van Sant's new, much-hyped farce/thriller is finally here, and with it
arrives the director's best feature and Nicole Kidman's strongest performance.
To Die For, the tale of Suzanne Stone (Kidman), a sexy newswoman wannabe who'll
do anything to get on television, is entertaining and funny, but pulls its
punches by never taking the farce of its story far enough.
Told in half-flashback, half-mockumentary style, the film traces the events
leading up to the murder of the Suzanne's husband, Larry (Matt Dillon). We see
Suzanne trying to get ahead in the media world, carving out a career for
herself at a low budget cable station. We also see large stretches of Suzanne
creating a meaningless documentary about modern teenagers, wherein three kids
(including drugged-out zombie Jimmy, played by an unwatchable Joaquin Phoenix)
are interviewed ad nauseam. All the while, key relatives try to get to the
bottom of the mystery: who killed Larry, and why?
Unfortunately, the answer to that question is almost painfully obvious from the
movie's first frame. As far as the term "thriller" is concerned, To Die For is
completely off base. On a comic level, though, the film is worthwhile. Buck
Henry's smart script and ear for humor is responsible for this, creating a
"nice" story that usually amuses and overcomes the one-dimensional drama.
In the end, I was hoping for a whole lot more, given all the buzz around the
film. With a farce like this, you really have to take the lunacy almost to
absurdity, but Suzanne never even gets out of Little Hope (get it?), New
Hampshire. Where is Suzanne in Hollywood? Where is The Trial of the Century?
Well, I guess those scenes were cut out in earlier drafts.... The result is a
less than satisfying ending that left me saying, "That's it?"
That was it.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





