Killing Zoe | | Cast : | Eric Stoltz, Julie Delpy | | Director : | Roger Avary | | Studio : | Artisan Entertainment | | Format : | Color, Widescreen, Dolby | | Released Date : | September , 1994 | | DVD Released Date : | April 24, 2001 | | Language : | English (Dubbed), English (Original Language) | | Audience Rating : | R (Restricted) | | | BUY THIS DVD FROM AMAZON | Customer Reviews
| Rating |  | | Date | July 26, 2005 | | Summary | Right up there with "Dune" | Content
 | My most recent ex-wife refused to watch this because her daughter's name matched 50% of the title (no...not Killing). When I finally did get to see the thing, I was...let down. It had, after all, been highly recommended by friends. Gosh: drugs, violence, a bit of skin, and ... Dixieland? Except for the Dixieland, I've seen it-seen it-seen it. And so have you.
Personally, the only memorable moments involved an expired kitty cat and a brief exchange over the wisdom of doing a line of heroin in a crowded night-spot (Q:What about all these people? A:"Let zem geet zair own").There are better ways to pass the time. |
| Rating |      | | Date | May 06, 2005 | | Summary | One of the Best | Content
 | The Dark Side of putting customer reviews on Amazon: some guy wanted to give this a negative star, calling it predictable. If you can predict the story after 5 minutes, you must be psychic. It's a tremendously exciting, very dark and hilarious tale with exceptional performances by Anglade (just brilliant), Stoltz and the extraordinarily attractive Julie Delpy; watch her remove her bra, it's a very pleasant surprise. The gang of criminals are great, each individual an original, if boneheaded, character; the drugs are extremely realistic. It's witty, sexy, exciting, original and darkly amusing (if that's enough critical banalities)...but it's true. Must applaud the music - buy the soundtrack, it's extraordinary. Loved the scene where Eric and Julie are going at it in the hotel room while the original Nosferatu plays soundlessly on the room tv; no doubt heralding the imminent arrival of the one-man wrecking crew Anglade. |
| Rating |    | | Date | March 21, 2005 | | Summary | "That's Captain America, baby." | Content
 | Have you ever been somewhere and thought to yourself, this would be a great location for a film (happens to me all the time, and yet no movies have come my way)? That's what happened to producer Lawrence Bender as he was scouting locations for the 1992 Quentin Tarantino film Reservoir Dogs. He was offered the use of a bank in L.A., it didn't fit within the script, but he was able to find a story that utilized the location, and thus begat Killing Zoe (1994). In this case the script had already been written, and it just happened that most of the story takes place within a bank, so it was a match, for better or worse. Written and directed by Roger Avary (The Rules of Attraction), the film stars Eric Stoltz (The Wild Life), Julie Delpy (An American Werewolf in Paris), and Jean-Hugues Anglade (Taking Lives). Also appearing is Bruce Ramsay (Alive), Kario Salem (Nomads), Salvator Xuereb (The Doom Generation), and Gary Kemp (The Krays).
The film begins as Zed, played by Stoltz, looking much like a scruffy poster boy for the Grunge movement, arrives in Paris and hails a cab to take him to a hotel. During the cab ride, the driver offers to set Zed up with some female companionship, to which a comely woman named Zoe (Delpy) show up a few hours later. After some brief formalities (we learn she doesn't do `weird' stuff), the two further the cause for Franco-American relations, to which we learn she's just doing it for the money (duh) to pay for school. Soon Zed's French friend Eric (Anglade) arrives, and he quickly and unceremoniously ejects Zoe from the room (sans her clothes). Seems Zed has arrived in Paris at Eric's bequest, as Zed is a safecracker, and Eric has a job lined up, to take place on Bastille Day (similar to our 4th of July...look it up). Zed meets with the rest of Eric's crew (I wasn't impressed), and the gang goes out on the town for a dose of the three D's, drinking, drugs (there's a lot of `riding the snake' involved), and Dixieland music...seriously. I don't know about you, but if I'm going to pull a major bank heist, the last thing I'm going to do is go out the night before and get stoned to the gills (Zed puking in a dirty urinal being the highlight here...remember that kids, drugs is bad). Anyway, the next day arrives, and the gang hits the bank...and their well-oiled plans quickly go down the drain (much the same as Zed's breakfast, lunch, and dinner the night before). All kinds of complications develop, from uncooperative bank employees to less than capable members within Eric's group. Did I also mention that Zoe works at the bank (talk about your moonlighting)? Well, things continue to deteriorate (the police show up, and they seem to care little for the hostages) as we witness the importance of careful planning and being picky when choosing associates for such an undertaking.
In some aspects, I felt like this film was almost a pale comparison to Sidney Lumet's Dog Day Afternoon (1975) starring Al Pacino (see it, it's a great film). There were a few things that detracted from this film, some major, some minor. First of all, how stupid do you have to be to go on a drunken drug binge (scenes that took way too much time) the night before you're planning to pull a major robbery (I think it was presented as some sort of `bonding' sequence)? Did I mention this before? It's worth bringing up again...and an experienced safecracker (Zed) would have never agreed to perform a job with such short notice and so little planning...talk about stupidity...and what was with that dumb, American stereotype in the bank? Here's some guy blathering on and on about he's an American and all kinds of simplistic, stereotypical American BS, presented only so that we can see him get blown away. What kind of moron would have stood up and did what he did, amidst a group of heavily armed, trigger happy, obviously unstable bank robbers? An American one, obviously... I did feel the script was decent, even strong at some points, and there's plenty of action, but more often it seemed like the violence was there only for the sake of having it there...the random shooting of the various bank employees and patrons (actually, we don't get to see a lot of people get shot, as a good deal of the violence happens off screen) seemed a bit gratuitous (a Quentin Tarantino film with gratuitous violence? Gee, that's a shocker...). I appreciated some of the comic elements throughout the film, like when Zed, who was mainly working on the vault doors, and is unaware that the police have since gotten involved, discover such in the elevator as him and another have liberated the booty and are bringing it to the ground floor. The film was set in Paris, with the opening and closing scenes featuring Paris locations, but the rest of the film was shot in L.A., the bulk taking place in the bank and its underground vault area, which was painted an awful, garish, red. The film is filled with lots of flashy spectacle, so-so acting, two-dimensional characters, guns, guns, and more guns, and lots of blood. Some scenes to watch for...Delpy gets nekkid...this happens shortly after the beginning, and is worth it, as she's an attractive woman. Also watch for a cameo by Ron Jeremy aka A Man Called Horse, as an unfortunate bank employee.
The widescreen anamorphic (1.85:1) picture on this DVD looks very good, and the Dolby Digital 2.0 audio is clear most of the time, but could have been better...special features include cast and crew bios, productions notes, and a theatrical trailer.
Cookieman108
By the way, if I learned anything from this film, it's that Frenchmen, especially those involved in criminal activities, respect you more if you smell like you've just been with a woman, if you know what I mean...
I bought this as an Artisan Entertainment 2-pack, along with the film The Way of the Gun (2000) from Amazon. Separately, Killing Zoe is listed as $13.48, The Way of the Gun is $9.98, and the two pack cost $17.98, so you do the math.
|
| Rating |     | | Date | February 18, 2005 | | Summary | Well, I liked it. | Content
 | Read some bad reviews below. I just saw this movie for the first time and I actually thought it was good. I thought it was slow at first, but the whole bank robbing sequence was great, I thought. So, yeah, a bit too much exposition, but pays off in the end I thought. I thought Eric was one of the coolest villains I have seen in a while. Reminded me of Gary Oldman in 'Leon'. So whatever. I liked it. |
| Rating |     | | Date | January 30, 2005 | | Summary | Killing Zoe Great, yet One Question | Content
 | I thouroughly enjoyed this film mainly because it is itensly raw or even 'pulp'. Hmmm I wonder why. For taking place in France (though it was filmed in Cali.) on Bastille Day and the never-boring heist genre I definately recommend it. I have ONE question though. Whats on the cover in his hand. In the movie he walks towards the screen and flicks something and it makes a small explosion. Is it a cigarette or is it a heroine-related hallucinations. It's as if Avary, Stoltz, Bender, and Tarantino are throwing a riddle in our faces. It reminds me of whats in the suitcase in Pulp Fiction. All-in-all, a great film. |
|