The Grifters

Seduction. Betrayal. Murder. Who’s conning who?

6.5
19901h 50m

A small-time conman has his loyalties torn between his estranged mother and his new girlfriend, both of whom are high-stakes grifters with their own angles to play.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: ‘A Gut Feeling’

‘A Gut Feeling’

Thumbnail for video: Train Tricks

Train Tricks

Thumbnail for video: ‘I Am in School’

‘I Am in School’

Thumbnail for video: The Oranges

The Oranges

Thumbnail for video: Eating Alone

Eating Alone

Thumbnail for video: The Grifters (1990) Official Trailer - John Cusack, Annette Bening Movie HD

The Grifters (1990) Official Trailer - John Cusack, Annette Bening Movie HD

Cast

Photo of Anjelica Huston

Anjelica Huston

Lilly Dillon

Photo of John Cusack

John Cusack

Roy Dillon

Photo of Annette Bening

Annette Bening

Myra Langtry

Photo of Jan Munroe

Jan Munroe

Guy in bar

Photo of Jimmy Noonan

Jimmy Noonan

Bartender

Photo of Pat Hingle

Pat Hingle

Bobo Justus

Photo of Paul Adelstein

Paul Adelstein

Sailor - Young Paul

Photo of Jeremy Piven

Jeremy Piven

Sailor - Freshman

Photo of Gregory Sporleder

Gregory Sporleder

Sailor - Spooney

Photo of Jon Gries

Jon Gries

Drunk's Friend

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Reviews

J

John Chard

9/10

My son is going to be all right. If not, I'll have you killed.

The Grifters is directed by Stephen Frears and adapted to screenplay by Donald E. Westlake from the novel of the same name written by Jim Thompson. It stars Anjelica Huston, John Cusack and Annette Bening. Music is by Elmer Bernstein and cinematography by Oliver Stapleton.

“The best reason I can think of is that you scare the hell out of me. I have seen women like you before, baby. You're double-tough and you are sharp as a razor, and you get what you want or else; but you don't make it work forever. Sooner or later the lightning hits, and I'm not gonna be around when it hits you”

1990 was a grand year for neo-noir, of the dozen + titles that came out that year, The Grifters sits atop of the pile. A superlative film noir that boasts class on the page and on both sides of the camera. Set in modern day Los Angeles, the story follows three cynical and sly con artists through a psychological fog of bluff, double bluff, pain, misery, manipulations and shattering developments. That the trio consists of a boyfriend, girlfriend and an estranged mother only darkens the seamy waters still further.

Los Angeles positively bristles with a smouldering atmosphere thanks to the work of Frears, Bernstein and Stapleton. Sexual tension is ripe, Westlake’s adaptation doing justice to Thompson’s novel, while the three leads – and Pat Hingle in super support – are on fire, bringing complex characters vividly to life as they trawl through the devilishly labyrinthine plot, adding biting humour and shallow savagery into the bargain.

A top draw neo-noir that doesn’t cut corners or pull its punches, from the split screen opening salvo to the pitch black finale, The Grifters delivers high quality for neo-noir fans. 9/10

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