The Black Dahlia (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Black Dahlia

Promotional Poster
Directed by Brian De Palma
Produced by Art Linson
Rudy Cohen
Moshe Diamant
Written by Novel:
James Ellroy
Screenplay:
Josh Friedman
Starring Josh Hartnett
Aaron Eckhart
Scarlett Johansson
Hilary Swank
Mia Kirshner
Rose McGowan
Music by Mark Isham
Cinematography Vilmos Zsigmond
Editing by Bill Pankow
Distributed by Universal Studios (USA only)
Paramount Pictures (Latin America)
Release date(s) 15 September 2006 (USA)
Running time 122 min.
Language English
Budget $40 million (reported)
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

The Black Dahlia is a 2006 film directed by Brian De Palma. It is based on the novel of the same name by James Ellroy, which was based on the murder of Elizabeth Short. The Black Dahlia had its world premiere as the opening film at the 63rd Venice Film Festival on August 30. The film's wide release was on 15 September 2006.

Contents

[edit] Background

The Black Dahlia shooting on location in Hollywood, June 2005. Black Angel is on the marquee.
The Black Dahlia shooting on location in Hollywood, June 2005. Black Angel is on the marquee.

The movie was originally in pre-production with David Fincher attached as director and Mark Wahlberg attached to play Lee Blanchard. Wahlberg was forced to drop out due to scheduling conflicts with the planned filming of The Brazilian Job. Fincher originally envisioned "a five-hour, $80-million mini-series with movie stars."[1]

When De Palma became director, he replaced Wahlberg with Aaron Eckhart shortly before shooting began in April 2005.[2]

This film was shot in Los Angeles, California and in Pernik, Bulgaria, at an estimated cost of $50 million. Filming took place largely in Bulgaria, no doubt as a cost-saving measure and because of producer Boaz Davidson's ties to production facilities in the country. Only a handful of exterior scenes were filmed in Los Angeles.

James Horner was originally on board the project to score the film's music but in February, 2006 it was reported that Mark Isham had replaced him.[2]

[edit] Synopsis

The film follows two detectives in 1940s Los Angeles as they investigate the murder of Elizabeth Short (Mia Kirshner), nicknamed by the press as the Black Dahlia. In a subplot, the two detectives, Dwight "Bucky" Bleichert (Josh Hartnett) and Lee Blanchard (Aaron Eckhart), are caught in a love triangle with Kay Lake (Scarlett Johansson). Blanchard and Bleichert become obsessed with the murder and it gradually consumes their lives, plunged into the depths of an urban underworld rife with pornography, femmes fatales, corrupt police and depraved criminals, a graphic and bloody trail to the solution of the Black Dahlia's murder.

[edit] Cast

Actor Role
Josh Hartnett Ofcr. Dwight 'Bucky' Bleichert
Aaron Eckhart Sgt. Leonard 'Lee' Blanchard
Scarlett Johansson Katherine 'Kay' Lake
Hilary Swank Madeleine Linscott
Rachel Miner Martha Linscott
Mia Kirshner Elizabeth Ann Short/The Black Dahlia
Mike Starr Russ Millard
William Finley Georgie Tilden
Fiona Shaw Ramona Linscott

[edit] Differences between the novel and film

  • In the novel, Bleichert loses the fight to Blanchard legitimately despite having arranged with gamblers to throw the match in exchange for cash with which to place his senile father in a nursing home. In the film, he appears to actually take the dive by dropping his defenses in the corner, allowing Blanchard to deliver the ferocious knockout combination.
  • The romance between Bleichert and Lake is dramatically streamlined in the film; in the novel, they are married and eventually separated during the time that the case comes to a resolution.
  • In the novel, Bleichert succumbs more explicitly to an obsession with the Dahlia that previously Blanchard had exhibited. This is understated in the film, though suggested in several scenes. At one point in the novel, Bleichert hires a prostitute and has her dress up as the Black Dahlia; this scene is absent from the film.
  • In the film, the Sprague family is renamed Linscott.
  • A subplot involving Fritz Vogel (who appears as a bit character in the film) and his son Johnny Vogel (absent from the film) is entirely excised. The corresponding subplot involving the false confessors and Bleichert's brief suspicion of Johnny Vogel as the Dahlia killer is missing as well.
  • Due in part to the removal of the Vogel subplot, Bleichert's relationship with police captain Russ Millard is diminished in the film. In the novel, Millard assists Bucky during the resolution of the case toward the end; in the film, Millard never appears during this period.
  • In the novel, Blanchard's confrontation with Bobby DeWitt occurs in Mexico, while in the film, it occurs in Los Angeles. The culmination of this conflict is discovered later by Bleichert when he tracks Lee's movements to Mexico. In the film, Bleichert is present for this incident, which occurs in Los Angeles. Georgie Tilden (who wanted to kill Lee) and Lee fall over the railing and die.
  • In the novel, Bleichert's recognition of the significance of The Man Who Laughs painting occurs because the painting is located at a neighbor's house, Jane Chalmers, who is not present in the film. In the film, the painting is in the Linscott residence. As such, the manner in which Bleichert deduces the identity of the killer is markedly different in the film.
  • In the novel, Bleichert confronts and kills Georgie Tilden at the murder site, but never directly confronts him in the film.
  • In the film, Ramona Linscott commits suicide; she does not in the novel.
  • In the novel, the incident between Bleichert and Ramona occurs when they are alone together; the film combines this confrontation with Bleichert's questioning of Emmett and Madeleine.
  • In the novel, Bleichert arrests Madeleine; in the film, he kills her.

[edit] Reaction

A location shot for the movie The Black Dahlia, showing a rainmaking rig, a sprinkler system used to create the appearance of rain on the set -- a commonly employed practical effect.
A location shot for the movie The Black Dahlia, showing a rainmaking rig, a sprinkler system used to create the appearance of rain on the set -- a commonly employed practical effect.

Highly anticipated by many, the film was panned by critics. At Rottentomatoes.com, the film scored a rotten rating of 35 percent. Many described it as over the top and found the last half-hour in particular to be excruciating. Some found it preposterous that the character played by Hilary Swank would be accepted universally by other characters as a dead ringer for the Black Dahlia. A number of reviewers, including on the Internet Movie Database, suggested that the film was not meant to be serious, but rather was an elaborate parody of the noir/crime genre. The accuracy of this hypothesis is questionable. The film made 12 million dollars after its opening weekend, but was widely considered a box-office flop.[citation needed]

The film was nominated for an Academy Award for its cinematography. It lost to Pan's Labyrinth.

[edit] Box Office

The film opened Friday, 15 September 2006, in 2,226 theaters. It came in second place over its opening weekend (losing out to Gridiron Gang), with an estimated $10 million gross box office. As of 26 October 2006, after six weeks in theaters, it has domestically grossed $22,545,080.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "2 men, 1 obsession: the quest for justice"
  2. ^ a b Trivia for The Black Dahlia
  3. ^ The Black Dahlia (2006)

[edit] External links