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Cape Fear (1991)
In virtuoso director Martin Scorsese's suspenseful
and very violent psychological thriller and remake of the original
J. Lee Thompson's 1962 melodrama with Robert Mitchum - both films
were based upon John D. MacDonald's 1957 novel The
Executioners;
the story told of fierce and remorseless retribution being enacted
upon a public defender who 14 years earlier had made errors during
the trial of an illiterate and brutal rapist (he had suppressed the
victim's sexual history), and now the convicted, unrepentant, released
madman and predatory ex-con went on a mission to orchestrate unbridled,
dark rampage against the defenseless lawyer and his entire family.
There were influences from Alfred Hitchcock in the
film, including various camera angles and techniques (smash cuts and zooms), a
score by Bernard Herrmann reworked from the original film, and an
eerie opening title credits sequence by Hitchcock favorite Saul Bass.
- the visually-moving film opened and closed with
thoughts from the precocious young daughter in the film, Danielle
Bowden (Juliette Lewis), about the Cape Fear incident on the houseboat
(the film's content) that she had written about in a school assignment
titled "My Reminiscence": ("I always thought that for such a lovely
river, the name was mystifying: 'Cape Fear,' when the only thing
to fear on those enchanted summer nights was that the magic would
end, and real life would come crashing in")
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Opening Prologue by Danielle "Dani" Bowden (Juliette
Lewis)
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- the entrance of the main character was ominous,
frightening and chilling - heavily-tattooed, taut-muscled, psychotic
prisoner Max Cady (an over-the-top Robert DeNiro), viewed from
behind, was performing modified push-ups in his small prison cell; his
most prominent tattoo was on his back, depicting a huge black crucifixion
cross with its nails dangling the opposing scales of justice (TRUTH
and JUSTICE); his wall was decorated with pictures of military
figures (including Confederate leader Robert E. Lee), a priestly
martyr, and Joseph Stalin, and other possessions (a well-worn Bible,
a book titled "Eat Right and Stay Fit," a collection of law books,
Friedrich Nietzsche's "The Will to Power," and Jake Manning's "The
Cell Within")
- the vengeful Cady walked
out of the prison after serving 14 years for the violent crime of rape, as dark thunderclouds
gathered in the sky behind him
- Cady arrived in the small
town of New Essex, NC; his sole mission in life was to stalk, frighten,
and threaten family man and corporate lawyer Sam Bowden (Nick Nolte)
and his wife Leigh (Jessica Lange) and 15 year-old daughter Danielle
Sam Bowden (Nick Nolte)
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Leigh (Jessica Lange)
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- the family unknowingly encountered Cady in a movie
theater (showing Problem Child (1990) - a family comedy
starring John Ritter) where the obnoxiously-behaved, crass Max
cackled loudly and inappropriately while smoking a cigar and sitting
in front of the Bowden family, causing them to be annoyed and leave
early; at an ice cream shop afterwards, he anonymously paid for
the Bowdens' order as he ominously sat outside in his vehicle
- Sam played a game of racquetball with his pretty
and attractive law clerk Lori Davis (Illeana Douglas) - they were
flirtatiously involved with each other and were on the verge of
a physical affair behind Leigh's back: ("You know, Lori, another
time, another place. Who knows, you know?")
- shortly later, the menacing Cady directly confronted
Sam in his car, briefly snatched
his car keys, and explained how he had been released and might
be settling down in the Southern town: ("It's
a small town. Everywhere you turn, we're gonna run into each other");
disturbingly, he mumbled as he walked away: "You're gonna learn
about loss"; in the middle of the night, he was viewed in the
light of fireworks as he sat on their home's outer perimeter
wall, disturbing Leigh
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Stalking the Bowden Family and Sam - In His Car
Outside Ice Cream Shop, On the Street Outside Sam's Car, On a Perimeter
Wall Outside the Bowden Home
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- the next morning, without any grounds to arrest
the "creep" Cady for "bugging" his family,
Sam filed a restraining order against him and was awaiting the
hearing in 10 days; he also explained to colleague Tom Broadbent
(Fred Dalton Thompson) about Cady's motivation for the harrassment
- the omission ("burial")
of exculpatory evidence by Bowden that Cady's 16 year-old rape
victim was promiscuous (with at least three lovers in one month),
due to his own justifications and beliefs that Cady was a menacing
serial rapist and deserved the punishment no matter what (and the
fact that he was illiterate)
- while Sam was walking downtown, Max again appeared
(sporting sharp-looking, white-trash leisure
wear or resort clothing) as he drove along
in an open red convertible with white leather seats; Max informed
Sam about how he had lost his family and became estranged from
his young daughter when incarcerated: ("After I went inside,
her Mama told her I was dead. Which, in a way, I was"); Cady
also revealed that he taught himself to read during his 14 years
in prison, and after reading law books had represented himself
for an appeal (and learned of Bowden's neglect of exculpatory evidence)
- and of course, had learned how to avoid being prosecuted: ("Did
you know that after I discharged you, I acted as my own attorney?
Applied several times for an appeal"); as a lawyer himself
and realizing what Cady was implying, Sam responded with the offer
of a bribe of $10,000 in cash to end the "badgering" -
but Cady retorted: ("What shall be my compensation, sir, for
being held down and sodomized by four white guys? Or four black
guys?"); before driving off, Cady implied that money "compensation" would
never be enough for 14 lost years: "I don't think you really,
really understand what we're talkin' about here"
- the next instance of intimidation was news from
his distraught wife Leigh that their dog had been poisoned to death
- but that they hadn't let the dog out; Cady was brought in for questioning
- while sitting next to Lieut. Elgart (Robert Mitchum - in a cameo) behind
a one-way mirror, Sam watched as Cady was brought in for a full-body
strip-search; grotesque full-body tattoos were revealed, including
apocalyptic Bible verses quoted on his body: "Vengeance
Is Mine," "My Time Is At Hand" and "The Lord
Is The Avenger" plus a depiction of a broken red heart next to the name Loretta;
however, Cady couldn't be charged for lack of proof or evidence and
was released, but was fined and warned about further harrassment;
during the investigation, it was learned that during his jail time,
Cady had inherited $30,000 from the proceeds of the sale of his later
mother's farm
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Cady's Full Body Search - Revealing His Vengeful
Body Tattoos
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- during a 4th of July parade, Sam spotted Cady in
the crowd leering at his wife Leigh; after approaching Cady who
made lewd comments: ("Mmm, hot as a firecracker on the 4th of
July. You're damn lucky to have her, boy"), Sam punched Cady but
was pulled away by bystanders who hadn't heard their conversation
- after the parade in a local bar, Cady met up with
Sam's law clerk Lori who was slowly getting drunk after realizing
her mistake in falling for Sam and being in unrequited love with
him; she was upset that Sam ("the rat") had stood her up for a
racquetball play-date; Cady admitted he had just been released
from prison - but then lied about his offense - he had punched
out a Sheriff while marching in a protest against a nuclear power plant
- back in Lori's apartment after flirtations, Cady
playfully handcuffed her hands behind her back, then viciously
bit off a chunk of her right cheek and savagely raped and beat
her - sending her to the hospital with a mauled face and broken
right arm; the next day, Sam visited her in the hospital but she
refused to press charges against Cady - she was too scared or embarrassed
to receive negative publicity and destroy her reputation
- Lieut. Elgart suggested that Sam use his family
as bait to cause Cady to act psychopathically, but instead, rather
than putting his family in danger, Sam hired private
investigator Claude Kersek (Joe Don Baker) to follow Cady around
for a week, write up a report - and possibly prevent any further harrassment
- Leigh found out the identity of Cady's latest rape victim and suspiciously
confronted Sam about his unfaithful behaviors, calling them "sophomoric
infidelties" - she swore at him: "You son of a bitch!" and reminded
him that this wasn't the first instance of Sam's disloyalty (they
had previously uprooted from Atlanta to start over); Sam realized
that Cady was deliberately trying to destroy his home life, and
hoped they could work as a team to defeat him
- meanwhile, Kersek stalked Max, and ordered him to
leave town; Cady responded with a direct threat if he was triggered:
"I could get upset. Things could get outta hand. And then in self-defense,
I could do somethin' to you that you would not like"; also, Cady
drove by the Bowden home and returned the dead dog's collar to
Leigh, claiming he had found it; she recognized him and threatened
to call the police on him; she taunted him and called him 'repulsive':
("I've been waitin' to see your face, but now that I see you, you
are just repulsive"); Kersek reported back to Sam about the difficulty
of ensnaring Cady, and Sam remained cautious about taking the law
into his own hands, or using intimidation
- in the film's most tense and very disturbing, repellent
yet fascinating scene, Cady posed as Danielle's new drama teacher,
and met with her on the set of a play in the school's auditorium;
he proceeded to share a marijuana joint with her and empathized
with her troubled personality and teenaged anxieties, before verbally
and physically seducing the rebellious, naive, and sexually-curious
fifteen-year old daughter Danielle - with her dual
responses of fear and excitement; after clever manipulations, he
politely asked if he could put his arm around her. She giggled
and acted embarrassed by his forwardness, although eventually agreed
("No, I don't mind"); he approached closer, and stroked her face,
and was able to insert his thumb into her mouth and she sucked
on it. Then he cupped her face, cradled her head, and tenderly
kissed her
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Cady With Lawyer Lee Heller (Gregory Peck) Hired
to Serve a Restraining Order on Sam For Having Thugs Beat Him Up
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- in response to Cady's discovered encounter with
Danielle, the desperate Sam ordered Kersek to use physical force
by hiring three thugs (for $1,000) to attack Cady in a parking
lot the next evening; the plan backfired when Cady viciously countered
them, and overpowered and beat all three men - knowing that Sam
was observing the entire time from behind dumpster, and taunting
him: "Counselor? Counselor, is that you? Counselor,
come out, come out, wherever you are! I ain't no white
trash piece of s--t. I'm better than you all! I
can out-learn you. I can out-reach you. I can out-think
you. And I can out-philosophize you. And I'm gonna outlast
you. You think a couple whacks to my good ol' boy guts
is gonna get me down? It's gonna take a hell of a lot more
than that, Counselor, to prove you're better than me!"
- Cady then reversed
the restraining order charges by hiring lawyer Lee Heller (Gregory
Peck) to represent him, claiming that he was the victim (with proof
of Sam's recorded threats and his own injuries); shocked by the reversal,
Sam was threatened with disbarment by the A.B.A. Ethics Committee
in a 2-day law session in Raleigh, NC; (this provided an opportunity
for Sam and Kersek to initiate a plan to lure Cady to break into
the Bowden house and justifiably shoot him dead with the excuse
of self-defense)
- during Sam's faked absence in Raleigh,
in the most brutal and unsettling sequence of the film, Cady outfoxed
everyone by evading trip-wires and alarms by dressing and disguising
himself as the Bowden housekeeper-maid Miss Graciella (Zully Montero)
after murdering her; in the Bowden kitchen, he strangled Sam's
hired PI Claude Kersek from behind with a piano wire garrotte,
and shot him in the head as he struggled (blood showered onto both
of them), and then spoke into his ear: "I learned that in
prison. You like? White trash piece of s--t!"
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Cady's Murder of Bowden's PI Claude Kersek (Joe
Don Baker)
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- the endangered Bowden family fled from town to spend
time on their houseboat on Cape Fear River - not knowing that Cady
was strapped onto the undercarriage of their car!
- during
a dramatic final face-off and climactic conclusion amidst a violent
storm on the rocky boat, Cady choked Sam on the deck until unconscious,
then tied him up; he then proceeded to the kitchen to
sexually threaten Danny and Leigh who cowered before him
after Danielle's attempt to throw boiling water at Cady failed to
stop him; he held up a lit flare that burned bright red as he bragged: "I
spent 14 years in an eight-by-nine cell, surrounded by people who
were less than human. My mission at that time was to become more
than human"; he locked Danny up in the hold while he began to take
advantage of Leigh: ("Ready to be born again, Mrs. Bowden?
A few minutes alone with me, darlin', and you'll be speakin' in
tongues"); when she grabbed for his gun, he cuffed her and dragged
the bound Sam inside to witness what he planned to further do to
the family; Leigh begged for Cady to stop stomping on Sam, and
used the strategy of sympathizing with Cady's pained life ("I've
tried to imagine what it must have been like for you all those
years locked up in jail...I know about losing time, even losing
years. And I know it doesn't compare to jail, but I can understand")
- she then offered herself sexually to Cady in place of her daughter
("I want you to do it just with me, not
with her")
- as Cady lit up a cigar in triumph, Danny again
attempted to stop Cady by setting him on fire - she badly-burned
him with kerosene/lighter fluid,
causing him to jump in the water to extinguish the flames; however,
the badly-burned Cady climbed back onto the boat and after holding
Sam at gunpoint, he began to hold a mock trial against Sam with
the family watching, coercing Sam under pressure to admit to being
guilty for his malfeasance as his lawyer (by neglecting to reveal
the rape victim's promiscuity during Cady's trial 14 years earlier);
Cady felt vindicated and declared punishment: ("Now you will learn
about loss! Loss of freedom! Loss of humanity! Now you and I will
truly be the same"); he also forced the females at gunpoint
to start undressing and kneel on the floor before a threat of rape
- with the heavily-rocking, unmoored houseboat unsteadily
heaving about on the river, Cady lost his balance and fell, as
Leigh and Danny jumped into the water to escape; then Sam and Cady
savagely fought to the death on the crumbling deck; Cady's leg
was handcuffed by Sam to a railing pole, as Sam was jerked
overboard just before the houseboat crashed into a large boulder
- as the boat sank, and Sam nearly-drowned
but surfaced on the riverbank, he attempted to crush Cady with
a large rock, but the boat's remnants floated away out of reach
in the tide; Cady began speaking madly in tongues and singing "On
Jordan's Stormy Banks I Stand"
Sam's Failed Attempt to Crush Cady's Head With a
Boulder
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The Drowning End of Max Cady
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Family Found Safely Ashore
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- Cady was left to drown in the turbulent waters of
the river when the remnants of the boat sank with him attached; Sam
washed his hands in the river water and found his family safe on the shore
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film was bookended with Danielle's final words in her school's writing
assignment (voice-over): "We never spoke about what happened.
At least, not to each other. Fear, I suppose, that to remember his
name, or what he did, would mean letting him into our dreams. And
me, I hardly dream about him anymore. Still, things won't ever be
the way they were before he came. But that's all right. Because if
you hang on to the past, you die a little every day. And for myself,
I know I'd rather live. The End"
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Chilling Entrance Scene of Max Cady (Robert De Niro)
Cady's Release From Prison With Thunderclouds in the Sky
Cady in New Essex, NC Movie Theatre - Disruptive and Oblivious to Other Patrons
Sam Bowden's Flirtatious Relationship With Colleague-Law Clerk Lori Davis
Max Cady's Intimidating and Disturbing Discussion with Sam
About Seeking Revenge
Cady Leering at Sam's Wife Leigh at 4th of July Parade
Cady's Unsettling Assault on Female Law Clerk (Illeana
Douglas)
Lori in Hospital
Private Investigator Claude Kersek (Joe Don Baker)
Max Taunting Leigh Outside the Bowden Home
Cady's Seduction of Bowden Daughter Danielle "Danny" (Juliette
Lewis)
Bowden Observing the Failed Beat-Down of Cady By Three Thugs
Taunting by Cady of Bowden ("Counselor, Come out, come out, wherever
you are!")
Danielle and Leigh Cowering in the Kitchen From Cady Who
Was Holding a Burning Flare
On Houseboat, Leigh Offering Herself to Cady to Save Danielle
Cady Badly-Burned After Being Set Ablaze by Danny
At Gunpoint, Cady Conducted a Mock Trial Against Sam In Front of His
Family
Cady Just Before Submerging Under the Water For the Last Time
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