Basic Instinct
| Basic Instinct | |
|---|---|
| US movie poster of Basic Instinct | |
| Directed by | Paul Verhoeven |
| Produced by | Mario Kassar Alan Marshall |
| Written by | Joe Eszterhas |
| Starring | Michael Douglas Sharon Stone George Dzundza Jeanne Tripplehorn |
| Music by | Jerry Goldsmith |
| Distributed by | TriStar Pictures |
| Release date(s) | March 20, 1992 (USA) |
| Running time | 123 minutes |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $49,000,000 (estimated) |
| Followed by | Basic Instinct 2 |
| IMDb profile | |
Basic Instinct (released March 20, 1992) is an American erotic mystery film directed by Paul Verhoeven and written by Joe Eszterhas. It stars Sharon Stone, Michael Douglas, Jeanne Tripplehorn and George Dzundza.
The film was highly successful upon release, becoming one of the highest grossing films of 1992, and due to its major success, has been spoofed countless times in television and film. As of 2006, the film has grossed $353 million worldwide.
Contents |
Plot Summary
Set in San Francisco, Michael Douglas plays a detective investigating the novelist Catherine Tramell (played by Sharon Stone) on suspicion of murder.
Cast
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Sharon Stone | Catherine Tramell |
| Michael Douglas | Det. Nick Curran |
| Jeanne Tripplehorn | Dr. Beth Garner |
| George Dzundza | Gus Moran |
| Denis Arndt | Lt. Philip Walker |
| Leilani Sarelle | Roxy |
Background
Reception and Controversy
The film was nominated for 2 Academy Awards and 2 Golden Globes. Jerry Goldsmith, the composer, was nominated for both awards for his original score. Frank Urioste was nominated for an Academy Award for his film editing skills and Sharon Stone was nominated for a Golden Globe as Best Actress. Goldsmith was also nominated for a Golden Palm award at Cannes for his score.
Portrayal of homosexuals
The film was controversial due to its overt sexuality and graphic violence—a characteristic found in many of Verhoeven's movies—and was protested by gay rights activists who felt that the film followed a pattern of negative depiction of gay and lesbian people in the film industry. Members of the lesbian and bisexual activist group LABIA protested against the film on its opening night. The group GLAAD released a statement protesting the film's stereotypical and homophobic portrayal of gays and lesbians. A April 29, 1991 Los Angeles Times article documents activists' protests, and the book Family Values: Two Moms and Their Son by Phyllis Burke (New York: Random House, 1993. ISBN 0-679-42188-2) covers the protests over several chapters. The film also received criticism from those who feel it portrays bisexuals as insatiable, untrustworthy, and homicidal (in the film, Tramell is an openly bisexual woman). Outspoken lesbian writer Camille Paglia, however, has not only defended Basic Instinct, but called it her "favorite film", even providing an audio commentary track on the DVD release. Naomi Wolf has also defended the film.
NC-17 rating
The film was nearly assigned an NC-17 rating by the MPAA; this was again because of the nudity, overt sexuality and graphic violence. One scene in particular was cited as the reason for the rating. At one point in the film, Sharon Stone's character is interrogated by a panel of police officers, all of them male. During the scene, Stone uncrosses and then re-crosses her legs. The camera angle allowed the audience to briefly get a glimpse up Stone's skirt, which showed that she was not wearing any underwear. The lighting setup allowed the audience to get a reasonably clear view of Stone's genitalia.The movie was eventually edited to receive an "R" rating for its U.S. release with other sex scenes in the film also edited to reduce the level of explicitness. In the end, 42 seconds were cut to earn the film its R rating. The unedited version was released in the rest of the world. Years later, the "Unrated" edition of the film was released in VHS and Laserdisc, then later on DVD in the U.S., with the removed images restored.
Trivia
- The screenplay sold for $3 million, the highest bid for a spec screenplay at the time.
- The up-skirt leg-crossing shot was copied directly from the 1965 Avengers episode titled "Two's a crowd".
- Kim Basinger (Douglas's choice), Ellen Barkin, Geena Davis, and Julia Roberts were all considered for the role of Catherine Tramell.
- Sharon Stone, still a relative unknown until the success of this movie, was paid $500,000 for her role as Catherine Tramell. Stone was later paid $13.6 million for Basic Instinct 2.
- Paul Verhoeven met Stone on the set of Total Recall, where she played a two-faced wife.
- The unidentified blonde in the opening scenes of the movie is actually Sharon Stone and not a body double or another actress. She was identified by name by Verhoeven in the audio commentary track of the DVD.
- The infamous sex scene took a week to shoot. No body doubles were used and the scene was done "au naturel".
- Verhoeven initially fought for a lesbian love scene to be added to the script over the objection of Joe Eszterhas, who thought such a scene would be gratuitous. Verhoeven eventually agreed with Eszterhas and apologized to him for forcing the issue.
- Gary Goldman replaced Joe Eszterhas as writer, however, after 5 months of rewrites, Verhoeven went back to the original script.
- According to initial storyboards of the love scene between Nick and Catherine in Catherine's apartment, the scene would have been even longer and more explicit than the version finally shot and included in the movie. The stars and director thought the sexual acrobatics were too long and extreme to be believed and the scene was scaled back to the existing version.
- The design of the club setting was inspired by the Limelight club in New York with its church like interior.
- Douglas reportedly complained that the "Catherine" character got too many good lines; that he was the star, yet she outsmarts him in almost every scene. He also stated, "All the focus was on Sharon, although I was in almost every scene"
- Douglas drove up the steps on Kearney street four nights by himself in preparation for the car chase scene. When residents complained, $25,000 was donated to their community center.
- The construction site where Roxy's car is wrecked is the site of the current Moscone center in San Francisco.
- The unrated laserdisc edition released by Pioneer has a different commentary track from Paul Verhoeven than the unrated DVD released by Artisan/Lions Gate, due to licensing issues.
- Sharon Stone's costumes were designed to contrast Jeanne Tripplehorn's. Stone's costumes are always light and cream-colored, while Tripplehorn's are dark brown and black.
- Ezsterhas and Verhoeven later collaborated on Showgirls.
- Jerry Goldsmith composed the score. He tried out three main themes before finding one that worked. For inspiration Verhoeven had Goldsmith listen to the Vertigo theme.
Spoofs & references
- The interrogation scene is parodied in The Simpsons episode #2F20, "Who Shot Mr. Burns? Part Two." The Springfield Police Department was asking Groundskeeper Willy if he shot Charles Montgomery Burns, or knew anything about the case. After he told them no, he uncrosses and re-crosses his legs. Unfortunately, the police see his groin area due to the fact he is wearing his kilt. One of the officers then cocks and points his gun at Willy and warns him that's his final warning about that.
- In 2005, World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) made a commercial for Wrestlemania 21 that parodied the famous interrogation scene. It featured Stacy Keibler, Chris Benoit, Chris Jericho, and Jason Reso (Christian). In the commercial, Keibler is being interrogated by the men and revealing her upcoming and past fights with perceived innuendo.
- WWE spoofed the Basic Instinct interview in 2001 also on January 14th edition of "Heat." Commentator Michael Cole interviewed Trish Stratus regarding her relationship with owner Vince McMahon. Stratus avoided answering the questions, and appeared to be coming onto Cole with perceived innuendo also. Stratus also wore all white, as did Stone.
- In an episode of The Nanny Fran Fine is interrogated, and is dressed in the same clothes and has the same hair style that Sharon Stone wore in the famous interrogation scene.
- The National Lampoon film Loaded Weapon 1 contains a similar interrogation scene. As Kathy Ireland uncrosses and re-crosses her legs, she is replaced by a beaver with the caption "Gratuitous Beaver Shot".
- The 1994 French comedy La Cité de la Peur also features a spoof of the interrogation scene.
- In the 'Miss Galaxy' episode of Tripping the Rift, Babette and T'nuk both did the interrogation scene for the talent show portion of the Miss Galaxy contest.
- In an episode of The O.C., Julie Cooper is on a date with Dr. Neil Roberts, dressed identically to Sharon Stone in the famous interrogation scene. She also crosses and uncrosses her legs, however the camera is placed high enough to conceal her genitalia.
- Bill Hicks discusses the film in his 1997 album, Arizona Bay. During this segment Hicks calls the movie a "piece of shit", but comically admits to watching it numerous times. He also mentions the cut lesbian sex scene, which was cut, according to Bill, because, "the test audience was turned off by it. Boy, is my finger not on the pulse of America...that was the only reason I went to that piece-of-shit film."
- Sharon Stone reprised the role of Catherine for a very brief cameo in the movie Last Action Hero. She is seen in the same outfit from the interrogation scene and lighting a cigarette as she passes Jack Slater and Danny on their way into LAPD headquarters.
- On an episode of Rove Live, a spoof video was made advertising Basic Instinct 2. In a comical take on the age of Sharon Stone in the sequel, she has been replaced by an old woman.
- The infamous interrogation scene was imitated by Beyonce in her video, Ring the Alarm.
- The plot and title of the spoof comedy film Fatal Instinct (1993), is a direct parody of Basic Instinct.
Sequel
After many years of false starts and legal battles, in April 2005 production began in London, England on a sequel to Basic Instinct, (Basic Instinct 2). None of the original cast and crew returned except for Sharon Stone and Mario Kassar. This film was released on March 31, 2006, to critical disdain.
External links
| Films directed by Paul Verhoeven |
|---|
| Business Is Business • Turkish Delight • Katie Tippel • Soldier of Orange • All Things Pass • Spetters The Fourth Man • Flesh & Blood • RoboCop • Total Recall • Basic Instinct • Showgirls • Starship Troopers Hollow Man • Black Book • Kneeling on a Bed of Violets |
Categories
1992 films | Bisexuality-related films | Carolco films | Crime films | Cult films | Drama films | Films directed by Paul Verhoeven | LGBT-related films | Mystery films | Thriller films | TriStar films

