Tightrope | |
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Directed by | Richard Tuggle Clint Eastwood (uncredited) |
Written by | Richard Tuggle |
Produced by | Fritz Manes Clint Eastwood |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Bruce Surtees |
Edited by | Joel Cox |
Music by | Lennie Niehaus |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date |
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Running time | 115 minutes |
Language | English |
Box office | $48.1 million |
Tightrope is a 1984 American neo-noir psychological mystery crime action thriller film directed and written by Richard Tuggle and produced by and starring Clint Eastwood.
A young woman walking home from her birthday party is stalked by a man. A police officer offers to escort her to her front door. The policeman, however, is actually the stalker.
The next day, divorced New Orleans police detective Wes Block, along with his daughters Penny and Amanda, takes in a stray dog, adding to the several strays they have already taken in. As the family prepares to go to a Saints game, Block is summoned to a crime scene, forcing him to break his plans with his daughters.
The young woman was strangled in her bed. The killer left no fingerprints, but waited in her apartment until midnight to kill her, even pausing to make himself coffee. At the brothel where the woman worked, Block interviews a prostitute with whom she would perform group sex. The prostitute seduces Block, loosening his necktie, which he accidentally leaves behind.
The murderer rapes his victims, and has been leaving behind forensic evidence, including a residue of glass fragments and barley. Beryl Thibodeaux, who runs a rape prevention program, advises Block on the case. The second victim is also a sex worker, and is strangled in a jacuzzi. Block interviews one of her co-workers while the two prepare to have sex. He handcuffs the woman to the bed.
While enquiring about the victims at another brothel, Block has sex with a prostitute. The hidden killer watches the two. The next morning, Block is called to the scene of a third victim, which turns out to be the prostitute he was with the night before. Under the guise of working on the case, Block flirts with Thibodeaux, and the two spend the rest of the day together.
The killer taunts Block by sending a doll with a note, which directs him to another brothel. Once there, a dominatrix informs Block that someone hired her to be whipped by Block. She is then supposed to send Block to a gay bar. At the bar, he meets up with a man who was hired by the killer to have sex with Block. Block instructs the man to pick up his pay as scheduled and follows him, hoping to catch the killer. However, Block is too late, and the man is killed.
The killer kidnaps the second victim's co-worker, and dumps her body in a public fountain. He drapes Block's abandoned necktie on a nearby statue. Block and Thibodeaux go out on a second date, escorting his children, while secretly observed by the killer. While later in bed, Block shies away from intimacy with Thibodeaux, and then has a nightmare that he attacks her in the guise of the killer.
One of the victim's clothes has money in it, which the police trace to the payroll of a brewery. The money has the same glass and barley residue on it that has been cropping up at all the crime scenes. While Block invstigates in the brewery, the killer watches him. That night, the killer breaks into Block's home, killing the nanny and some of Block's pets, and handcuffing and gagging Amanda. Block is nearly strangled in a struggle after arriving and is only saved when one of his dogs repeatedly bites the killer. Block fires two shots at the killer as he escapes. The killer later watches from concealment as the police investigate the scene.
While going through news clippings, Block comes across the name of a cop, Leander Rolfe, whom he arrested for raping two girls. Rolfe had been paroled and was working at the brewery. Block and his team stake out Rolfe's apartment, but Rolfe has gone to attack Thibodeaux at her home (slaying the cops guarding her). Realizing what is going on, Block races to Thibodeaux's home, and disturbs Rolfe's attempt to strangle her. Block chases Rolfe through a cemetery and into a rail yard. In the ensuing battle, they end up in the path of an oncoming train; Block moves out of the way in time, while Rolfe is run over and killed. Block accepts Beryl's touch after saying that everything will be okay.
Tightrope was filmed in New Orleans in the fall of 1983. [1] While Tuggle retained the director's credit, Eastwood allegedly directed much of the movie himself after finding Tuggle worked too slowly. [2]
The film was released in United States theaters in August 1984. [1] It eventually grossed $48 million at the United States box office. [3] In its opening weekend Tightrope was number 1, taking in $9,156,545, an average $5,965 per theater. [4]
Tightrope received mostly positive reviews from critics. It has an 86% "freshness" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, out of 14 reviews. [5] Roger Ebert praised the film for taking chances by exploring the idea of a hard-nosed cop learning to respect a woman. He cites the film as "a lot more ambitious" than the Dirty Harry movies. [6] Ebert's colleague Gene Siskel also praised the film during their on-air review of the film on At the Movies , crediting the performance of the villain, the relationship between Eastwood and Geneviève Bujold, and Eastwood doing "a terrific job risking his star charisma playing a louse" and also "taking us inside to see what it's really like to abuse women". [7] Janet Maslin concluded that the film "isn't quite top-level Eastwood, but it's close." [8] David Denby stated that as an actor Eastwood "gave his most complex and forceful performance to date." [2]
The Hillside Strangler, later the Hillside Stranglers, is the media epithet for one, later discovered to be two, American serial killers who terrorized Los Angeles, California, between October 1977 and February 1978, with the nicknames originating from the fact that many of the victims' bodies were discovered in the hills surrounding the city.
Kenneth Alessio Bianchi is an American serial killer, kidnapper, and rapist. He is known for the Hillside Strangler murders committed with his cousin Angelo Buono Jr. in Los Angeles, California, as well as for murdering two more women in Washington by himself. Bianchi is currently serving a sentence of life imprisonment in Washington State Penitentiary for these crimes. Bianchi was also at one time a suspect in the Alphabet murders, three unsolved murders in his home city of Rochester, New York, from 1971 to 1973. He is up for parole in 2025.
Geneviève Bujold is a Canadian actress. For her portrayal of Anne Boleyn in the period drama film Anne of the Thousand Days (1969), Bujold received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. Her other film credits include The Trojan Women (1971), Earthquake (1974), Obsession (1976), Coma (1978), Murder by Decree (1979), Tightrope (1984), Choose Me (1984), Dead Ringers (1988), The House of Yes (1997), and Still Mine (2012).
Prostitution in Germany is legal, as are other aspects of the sex industry, including brothels, advertisement, and job offers through HR companies. Full-service sex work is widespread and regulated by the German government, which levies taxes on it. In 2016, the government adopted a new law, the Prostitutes Protection Act, in an effort to improve the legal situation of sex workers, while also now enacting a legal requirement for registration of prostitution activity and banning prostitution which involves no use of condoms. The social stigmatization of sex work persists and many workers continue to lead a double life. Human rights organizations consider the resulting common exploitation of women from Eastern and Southeastern Europe to be the main problem associated with the profession.
John Reginald Halliday Christie was an English serial killer and serial rapist active during the 1940s and early 1950s. He murdered at least eight people—including his wife Ethel—by strangling them inside his flat at 10 Rillington Place, Notting Hill, London. The bodies of three of his victims were found in a wallpaper-covered kitchen alcove soon after he had moved out of Rillington Place during March 1953. The remains of two more victims were discovered in the garden, and his wife's body was found beneath the floorboards in the front room. Christie was arrested and convicted of his wife's murder, for which he was hanged.
William Lester Suff, also known as The Riverside Prostitute Killer and The Lake Elsinore Killer, is an American serial killer.
Maury Troy Travis was an American serial killer. Travis was named in a federal criminal complaint for the murders of two women. At the time of the murders, he was a hotel waiter, and on parole for a 1989 robbery. While Travis claimed in a letter to have murdered 17 women, some authorities were doubtful; others thought he may have murdered up to 20 women. He died by suicide by hanging in custody in St. Louis County, Missouri, after being arrested for murder.
Saeed Hanaei or Said Hanai was an Iranian serial killer, arrested in 2001 for the murders of at least 16 women in Mashhad. Hanaei was referred to as the "Spider Killer" for the way he lured his victims, mainly prostitutes, back to his home before strangling them. His arrest caused controversy in Iran at the time, with some religious extremists expressing support for his self-described fight against "moral corruption". He was executed by hanging on April 8, 2002.
Richard Francis Cottingham is an American serial killer who was convicted in New York of six murders committed between 1972 and 1980 and convicted in New Jersey of twelve murders committed between 1967 and 1978. He was nicknamed by media as the Torso Killer and the Times Square Ripper, since some of the murders he was convicted of included mutilation.
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Lorenzo Jerome Gilyard Jr., known as The Kansas City Strangler, is an American serial killer. A former trash-company supervisor, Gilyard is believed to have raped and murdered at least 13 women and girls from 1977 to 1993. He was convicted of six counts of first-degree murder on March 16, 2007.
Volker Eckert was a German serial killer, who killed at least six women in East Germany, France and Spain, between 1974 and 2006. Eckert confessed to only six murders, five of whom were sex workers, but is believed to have killed at least nine women, and is also accused of committing additional murders of women in several European countries including Italy and the Czech Republic, but investigations were closed after Eckert committed suicide during his criminal proceedings on 2 July 2007.
Steven Gerald James Wright is an English serial killer, also known as the Suffolk Strangler. He is currently serving life imprisonment for the murder of five women who worked in Ipswich, Suffolk. The killings took place during the final months of 2006 and Wright was found guilty in February 2008 and given a whole life order.
Benjamin Thomas Atkins , also known as The Woodward Corridor Killer, was an American serial killer and rapist who murdered, tortured, and raped 11 women in Highland Park and Detroit, Michigan, during a period of eight months between December 1991 and August 1992. He was apprehended after being arrested for rape charges and soon after he confessed to the murders. He was ultimately found guilty and given several life sentences in April 1994. He died from AIDS in 1997.
10 Rillington Place is a 1971 British crime film directed by Richard Fleischer and starring Richard Attenborough, Judy Geeson, John Hurt and Pat Heywood. It was adapted by Clive Exton from the 1961 nonfiction book Ten Rillington Place by Ludovic Kennedy and produced by Leslie Linder and Martin Ransohoff.
Simon Killer is a 2012 film directed by Antonio Campos with a screenplay by Campos from a story by Campos, Brady Corbet and Mati Diop. The film revolves around a young American man named Simon who is visiting Paris and his relationship with a Middle Eastern prostitute and a French woman he meets on the metro. It is a character study centering on Simon's sociopathic tendencies and their effects on the people that come into his life.
This is a list of sex workers who were murdered in the United Kingdom.
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Samuel Little was an American serial killer of women who was convicted of eight murders and confessed to committing 93 murders between 1970 and 2005. The Federal Bureau of Investigation's Violent Criminal Apprehension Program has confirmed his involvement in at least 60 murders, the largest number of confirmed victims for any serial killer in American history. Little provided sketches for twenty-six of his victims although not all have been linked to known murders.
Dr. No is the nickname given to a suspected American serial killer thought to be responsible for the murders of at least nine women and girls in Ohio, between 1981 and 1990. As victims, Dr. No primarily chose prostitutes working in parking lots and truck stops located alongside Interstate 71. There are suspicions that he committed three similar killings in New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania, between 1986 and 1988.
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