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CrimeDramaMysteryThriller

Jennifer Eight

- Is anyone there?

John Berlin, a big-city cop from LA moves to a small-town police force and immediately finds himself investigating a murder. Using theories rejected by his colleagues, Berlin meets a young blind woman named Helena, whom he is attracted to. Meanwhile, a serial killer is on the loose—and only John knows it.

Release Date : 1992-11-06

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Paramount Pictures

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles : Jennifer 8

Cast

Andy García

Character Name : Sgt. John Berlin

Original Name : Andy García

Gender : Male

Lance Henriksen

Character Name : Sgt. Freddy Ross

Original Name : Lance Henriksen

Gender : Male

Uma Thurman

Character Name : Helena Robertson

Original Name : Uma Thurman

Gender : Female

Graham Beckel

Character Name : John Taylor

Original Name : Graham Beckel

Gender : Male

Kathy Baker

Character Name : Margie Ross

Original Name : Kathy Baker

Gender : Female

Kevin Conway

Character Name : Chief Citrine

Original Name : Kevin Conway

Gender : Male

John Malkovich

Character Name : Agent St. Anne

Original Name : John Malkovich

Gender : Male

Perry Lang

Character Name : Travis

Original Name : Perry Lang

Gender : Male

Nicholas Love

Character Name : Bisley

Original Name : Nicholas Love

Gender : Male

Michael O'Neill

Character Name : Serato

Original Name : Michael O'Neill

Gender : Male

Paul Bates

Character Name : Venables

Original Name : Paul Bates

Gender : Male

Bob Gunton

Character Name : Goodridge

Original Name : Bob Gunton

Gender : Male

Lenny Von Dohlen

Character Name : Michael Blattis

Original Name : Lenny Von Dohlen

Gender : Male

Debbon Ayer

Character Name : Amanda

Original Name : Debbon Ayer

Gender : Female

Eddie Korbich

Character Name : Myopic Janitor

Original Name : Eddie Korbich

Gender : Male

Stephen Piemonte II

Character Name : Trimble

Original Name : Stephen Piemonte II

Gender : Male

Ken Camroux-Taylor

Character Name : Pathologist

Original Name : Ken Camroux-Taylor

Gender : Male

Carol Schneider

Character Name : Ann

Original Name : Carol Schneider

Gender : Female

Deborah Spector

Character Name : Emerson

Original Name : Deborah Spector

Gender : Male

Frank Birney

Character Name : Expert

Original Name : Frank Birney

Gender : Male

Mike Winlaw

Character Name : Male Reporter

Original Name : Mike Winlaw

Gender : Male

Jeffrey Josephson

Character Name : Popeye

Original Name : Jeffrey Josephson

Gender : Male

Thomas J. Hageboeck

Character Name : Max

Original Name : Thomas J. Hageboeck

Gender : Male

Jaylene Hamilton

Character Name : Woman Reporter

Original Name : Jaylene Hamilton

Gender : Female

Joe Drago

Character Name : St. Anne's Assistant

Original Name : Joe Drago

Gender : Male

Jonas Quastel

Character Name : Lab Technician

Original Name : Jonas Quastel

Gender : Male

Charles Eaton

Character Name : Airplane Pilot

Original Name : Charles Eaton

Gender : Male

Bryan Larkin

Character Name : Bobby Ross (misspelled as "Bobby Rose" in end credits)

Original Name : Bryan Larkin

Gender : Male

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

The blind leading the blind. Jennifer 8 is written and directed by Bruce Robinson. It stars Andy Garcia, Uma Thurman, John Malkovich, Lance Henriksen, Kathy Baker and Graham Beckel. Music is by Christopher Young and cinematography by Conrad Hall. The small town of Eureka and John Berlin (Garcia) is the new cop in the precinct. When a severed hand is found at the local dump it leads Berlin to believe a serial killer is at work. One who has a penchant for blind girls. The problems quickly mounted up for Jennifer 8, it flopped big in America and went straight to home format release in the UK. Problems back stage got so bad that Bruce Robinson quit Hollywood and never made another film for 19 years! In spite of these facts, it’s not the monstrosity it was originally painted as back on its “limited” release. It’s a frustrating film in many ways because it promises so much. There’s bags of moody atmospherics wrung out by Conrad Hall’s superb photography, where he filters most things via minimal lighting. Much of the play unfolds in ominous surroundings, where dialogue exchanges are either hushed or laced with harried fervour, and the writing is actually quite smart as it blends psycho thriller staples with strong characterisations that are in turn boosted by committed acting performances. Yet these things can’t compensate for the too long run time, a rushed ending and some awkward tonal shifts that often take you out of the required mood. The rushed ending is particularly galling, after asking the audience to stay with the pic for two hours, it’s not unreasonable to expect a good long and dramatic finale, sadly that’s not the case. Fans of neo-noir type visuals have some interest here, as does anyone who likes the type of serial killer movies that dominated the late 80s and early 90s before Fincher’s Seven raised the bar. 6/10

Y

yimora

@yimora

2021-06-23

The revie written by John Card is totally trash. This is not a "frustrating" film in any way and doesn't have a "rushed" ending neither. The ending lasts something like 20 minutes. This movie is worth more than just 6 points.

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2022-09-08

Andy Garcia could never really be described as versatile, and he goes quite a way to prove it here in this rather unremarkable crime drama. He is "Berlin", a recently divorced LA cop who is just about burnt out. Luckily, his pal "Freddy" (Lance Henriksen) offers him a less stressful job in his rural force which he leaps at. Once there, though, he alights on a rather curious case that involved the murder of local blind girls. Despite considerable effort, the police could make little progress and the case had gone cold, but he risks putting noses out of joint as he tries to get to the bottom of things. His best ally soon turns out to be "Helena" (Uma Thurman) whose flatmate was the final - thus far - victim. The pair bond instantly but when an unexpected tragedy unfolds, "Berlin" finds himself the subject of an investigation and, bailed, the two and "Margie" (Kathy Baker) must discover the truth before... It's not a bad story, and the blind angle allows Bruce Robinson to develop a few more of the sensory perspectives to the usual serial killer drama - with Thurman quite engaging. The rest of the acting talent here is pretty weak, though, as is the writing - lots and lots of it. If it had lost maybe half an hour, the tightened narrative would probably have worked more efficiently - but at over two hours it is all just far too slow a burn, and what efforts are made to generate a sense of menace are undermined by a really bland score and some rather ordinary visuals. A television movie that passes the time, but more fodder than fun.

C

Charles Tatum

@CharlesTatum

2023-06-09

Good movie, great ending. Thurman and Garcia work well together, and the surprise ending is one even jaded old me did not expect. I recommend this to everyone who thinks the serial killer genre has been played out.