Malice (1993 film)

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Malice
Malice.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Harold Becker
Screenplay by Aaron Sorkin
Scott Frank
Story byAaron Sorkin
Jonas McCord
Produced byHarold Becker
Charles Mulvehill
Rachel Pfeffer
Starring
Cinematography Gordon Willis
Edited by David Bretherton
Music by Jerry Goldsmith
Production
companies
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date
  • October 1, 1993 (1993-10-01)
Running time
107 minutes [1]
Countries
LanguageEnglish
Budget$20 million
Box office$61 million [4]

Malice is a 1993 crime thriller film produced and directed by Harold Becker, and written by Aaron Sorkin and Scott Frank, from a story by Jonas McCord. It stars Nicole Kidman and Bill Pullman as a newlywed couple whose lives are upturned after they rent part of their home to a cavalier surgeon played by Alec Baldwin. The cast also features Anne Bancroft, George C. Scott, Bebe Neuwirth, Peter Gallagher, and Tobin Bell. The film is an international co-production between the United States and Canada.

Contents

Malice had its world premiere in Los Angeles on September 29, 1993, and was released by Columbia Pictures on October 1. It received mixed reviews from critics but was a box office success, grossing $61 million worldwide on a budget of $20 million. It proved successful in the video rental market, becoming one of the top 20 rented films in the United States for 1994. [5]

Plot

In a Massachusetts town, newlyweds Andy and Tracy Safian are having sex when they notice the young boy next door at his window, seemingly watching them. Andy is an associate dean at a women's college. When a student on campus is wounded by a serial rapist, Dr. Jed Hill, a newly arrived surgeon at the local hospital, operates and saves her life. Meeting Jed, Andy realizes that they attended high school together. Money is tight, so Andy invites Jed, who is looking for an apartment, to rent the third floor of their Victorian home to finance new plumbing.

Andy finds the body of one of his students, murdered by the rapist. Interviewing Andy as a possible suspect, Police detective Dana Harris requests a semen sample. While leaving the station, Andy learns that Tracy was hospitalized for severe abdominal pain and Jed is operating on her. While removing one of her ovaries, ruptured due to a cyst, Jed discovers Tracy is pregnant, but the surgery causes the fetus to abort. Another doctor notices that Tracy's other ovary is torsed and appears necrotic. Jed advises Andy to agree to the removal of Tracy's second ovary, rather than risk her life. Andy painfully agrees, since Tracy will become infertile. Overruling the protests of other doctors that the other ovary might still be healthy, Jed removes it. After the surgery, the removed ovary is found to be healthy. Blaming Andy for giving his consent, Tracy leaves him and sues Jed for malpractice.

During a deposition in which Jed is accused of having a God complex, he declares himself above reproach as a surgeon, asserting "I am God" before storming out. Tracy's lawyer reveals that Jed was drinking the night of the operation. Fearful of negative publicity from a civil trial, the hospital and Jed's insurance company settle with Tracy for $20 million.

Andy discovers that the rapist is Earl, a handyman at the college. After a struggle, Andy subdues Earl, who is arrested. In the aftermath, Dana informs Andy that his semen sample indicates he is sterile, thus he was not the father of Tracy's aborted child. When Andy accuses Tracy's lawyer, Dennis Riley, of having impregnated Tracy, Riley asserts his innocence but refuses to break attorney–client privilege. Riley suggests, however, that Tracy's mother—who supposedly died 12 years previously—can answer his questions, advising Andy to take a bottle of Scotch to her.

Andy tracks down Tracy's mother, a resentful alcoholic who reveals Tracy as a lifelong con artist. Previously, Tracy had an affair with a wealthy man, who paid for her to have an abortion. Tracy began her career as a con woman by keeping the money and having the abortion at a clinic. Tracy next took up with a "Dr. Lilienfield". Following up these leads, Andy learns that "Lilienfield" is Jed. Jed and Tracy set Andy up so Jed could move into the house, injecting her with pergonal, which causes ovarian cysts upon overdose. Confronting Tracy, Andy demands half the settlement money. Pointedly, he tells her that his will directs the police to their 10-year-old next-door neighbor as a witness to her and Jed's crimes.

Tracy asks Jed to murder the boy, but Jed refuses, telling Tracy to give Andy what he wants so they can leave the country. During a quarrel, Jed blames Tracy's greed for exposing Andy's infertility by getting pregnant to increase the settlement, and Tracy murders Jed. She then slips into the neighbor's house and attempts to suffocate the boy, only to find a dummy in his place. Enraged, Tracy attacks Andy after he walks in on her. Struggling, they fall down a stair landing from the second floor, but survive. Detective Harris appears and arrests Tracy, revealing a sting operation to catch her in the act of attempted murder. As Tracy is led away in handcuffs, the boy and his mother return home, and Tracy notices that he is blind.

Cast

Production

Malice had been in development at Castle Rock Entertainment since the company's founding in 1987 under the working title of Damages. [1] Castle Rock eventually began readying Damages for production in 1989. [1] Jonas McCord pitched an idea he'd come up with after hearing a rumor around Beverly Hills about a woman and a surgeon who had conspired to defraud an insurance company by having the surgeon operate on her and mess up the procedure in a non-threatening way that would allow her to sue for $40 million and then split the money afterwards. [6] Castle Rock bought McCord's pitch and worked on the script for a time, but after being unsatisfied with McCord's work Castle Rock fired him and began looking for a new writer. [6]

Castle Rock attempted to hire William Goldman to draft a new script as he'd written the studio's The Princess Bride and Misery . As he was busy, Goldman instead suggested hired a young new writer whom he would mentor—Aaron Sorkin. [6] Sorkin contributed two drafts of the script before he had to work on the film adaptation of his play A Few Good Men . [1] In November 1991, it was reported that Scott Frank was contributing to Damages, with many of the thriller elements in the final film attributed to Frank. [7] [1] Following completion of A Few Good Men, Sorkin returned to provide rewrites which were instrumental in getting Alec Baldwin to agree to star. [1] In April 1992, it was reported that Nicole Kidman had joined the cast. [8] In July, Bill Pullman joined the cast. [9]

Sorkin expressed his disappointment with the film in 2017, saying, "Early on in my career, I wrote a movie that I'm not very proud of at all, it just turned into a mess." He recounted how Harold Becker asked Sorkin to write a "steamy" sex scene between Baldwin and Kidman's characters, which he refused: "I said, 'Are you out of your mind?' First of all, I just did a movie with her husband [ Tom Cruise]. And second of all, no, I'm not going to write down what I'd like to see Nicole do and then hand the pages out to the crew and Nicole." [10] The scene was eventually created and filmed without the help of Sorkin.

In order to avoid confusion with the 1992 film Damage , the title Damages was dropped. Bodily Harm was briefly considered, before Malice was settled upon. [1] Principal photography occured on location in Boston, Amherst, Holyoke, and Northampton in Massachusetts. [1] Smith College was the setting used for the women's college. [1] Michael Hirsh and Patrick Loubert, co-founders of Canadian animation studio Nelvana, worked as executive producers on the film. [11]

Release

Malice had its world premiere in Los Angeles on September 29, 1993, [12] and opened on 1,431 screens in the U.S. two days later, and grossed $9,232,650 during its opening weekend, ranking number 1 at the US box office. It eventually grossed a total of $46,405,336 in the U.S. and Canada and $15.2 million internationally for a worldwide total of $61.6 million, [13] [4]

Critical reception

On Rotten Tomatoes Malice has a 57% approval rating based on 30 reviews. [14] On Metacritic it has a score of 52% based on reviews from 17 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". [15] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale. [16]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times began his two-star review calling Malice "one of the busiest movies I've ever seen, a film jampacked with characters and incidents and blind alleys and red herrings. Offhand, this is the only movie I can recall in which an entire subplot about a serial killer is thrown in simply for atmosphere." Bemoaning the incoherent plot, Ebert added, "after the movie is over and you try to think through those secrets, you get into really deep molasses". [17]

Peter Travers of Rolling Stone observed: "Goaded on by writer Aaron Sorkin, who could run a red-herring factory, the actors work to keep you guessing long after you've caught on. No one shows any shame about going over the top, especially Anne Bancroft in an Oscar-begging cameo as Tracy's mother. Perhaps director Harold Becker thought flashy acting could distract us from the gaping plot holes. Becker gets so intent on confusing us, he forgets to give us characters to care about . . . It's got suspense but no staying power." [18] Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote: "No matter how wild the plot reversals, there's always a slightly madder one to come." [19]

Timothy M. Gray of Variety said: "The immaculately crafted Malice is a virtual scrapbook of elements borrowed from other suspense pix, but no less enjoyable for being so familiar. [It] should tickle audiences who want to be entertained without being challenged . . . After listless performances in such pics as Days of Thunder and Far and Away , Aussie Kidman, who here uses a flawless American accent, proves her strengths as an actress, and Baldwin mixes menace, sex and humor in another terrific performance." [20]

In 2024, Far Out magazine named Jed one of the "10 most accurate movie psychopaths according to the FBI". [21]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Malice". AFI Catalog of Feature Films .
  2. "Malice". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on October 13, 2017. Retrieved 16 September 2022.
  3. "Malice (1993)". Kinorium. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  4. 1 2 "Top 100 grossers worldwide, '93-94". Variety . October 17, 1994. p. M-56.
  5. "Top Video Rentals" (PDF). Billboard . January 7, 1995. p. 65.
  6. 1 2 3 Farley, Jordan (January 2018). "My Life in Pictures Aaron Sorkin". Total Film . Retrieved April 29, 2023.
  7. Van Gelder, Lawrence (November 1, 1991). "At the Movies". The New York Times . New York City. Archived from the original on May 25, 2015.
  8. "Connery grounded by illness". Variety . April 27, 1992. Archived from the original on January 23, 2014. Retrieved November 19, 2025.
  9. "Stone looking to shoot in 'Nam". Variety . July 23, 1992. Archived from the original on October 23, 2021. Retrieved November 19, 2025.
  10. Sharf, Zack (9 November 2017). "Aaron Sorkin Was Pushed to Write a 'Steamy' Sexy Scene for Nicole Kidman in 'Malice' and Refused". IndieWire.
  11. Adilman, Sid (October 6, 1993). "Toronto producers share movie gravy". Toronto Star . Torstar Corporation. p. D.2. Archived from the original on November 3, 2012. Retrieved August 15, 2010.
  12. "World Premiere of "Malice" – September 29, 1993". Getty Images. Retrieved February 28, 2018.
  13. "Box office information for Malice". Box Office Mojo . Retrieved August 15, 2010.
  14. "Malice (1993)". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  15. "Malice". Metacritic . Retrieved 2021-03-01.
  16. "MALICE (1993) B+". CinemaScore . Archived from the original on 2018-12-20.
  17. Ebert, Roger (October 1, 1993). "Malice". Chicago Sun-Times . Retrieved February 2, 2021.
  18. Travers, Peter (October 1, 1993). "Malice". Rolling Stone . Retrieved August 25, 2022.
  19. Canby, Vincent (1 October 1993). "Reviews/ Film; An Idyll Shattered By Rape and Murder". The New York Times .
  20. Gray, Tim (September 24, 1993). "Review: Malice". Variety. Retrieved February 28, 2018.
  21. "The FBI reveal the 10 most accurate movie psychopaths". faroutmagazine.co.uk. 2024-11-21. Retrieved 2025-03-08.

Works cited