King of the Hill (film)

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King of the Hill
Directed by Steven Soderbergh
Produced by Albert Berger
John Hardy
Barbara Maltby
Ron Yerxa
Written by A. E. Hotchner, Steven Soderbergh (screenplay)
Starring Jesse Bradford
Jeroen Krabbé
Spalding Gray
Adrien Brody
Elizabeth McGovern
Joe Chrest
Music by Jeffrey Kimball
Cinematography Elliot Davis
Editing by Steven Soderbergh
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) August 20, 1993
Running time 109 min.
Country Flag of the United States USA
Language English
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

King of the Hill is a 1993 film, Steven Soderbergh's third feature film, and the second he directed from his own screenplay following his 1989 Palme d'Or-winning effort sex, lies, and videotape.

Based on the Depression-era bildungsroman memoir of writer A.E. Hotchner, it follows the story of two brothers struggling to survive on their own in a fleabag hotel in St. Louis while their mother is committed to a sanatorium with tuberculosis and their father, a German immigrant and traveling salesman, is off on long trips from which they can't be certain he will return.

The film is distinctive in part because the antagonists who drive much of the plot are relatively mild by cinematic standards. The two primary ones — a cop on his beat and a hotel porter — share the characteristic of taking joy and pride in sadistically enforcing the property rights of the rich against the poor. The actual rich, with the exception of some schoolmates, are not a direct part of the boys' lives; rather, from their perspective, it is the uniformed caste set just above them that generates much of their misery. As such, the film is an unusual commentary on social relations among the underclasses, all the more so within that subgenre since it contains relatively little physical violence (though it does contain some blood.)

Jesse Bradford, who was 14 at the film's release, is the protagonist. Many actors in the supporting cast have had many other prominent roles, including Jeroen Krabbé, Lisa Eichhorn, Karen Allen, Spalding Gray, Elizabeth McGovern, Amber Benson, Remak Ramsay, Katherine Heigl and Adrien Brody. The film also contains the first screen roles of Joe Chrest as the porter and Lauryn Hill, who appears in a small part as an elevator operator.

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