Bruiser (2000 film): Difference between revisions
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== Plot == |
== Plot == |
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Henry Creedlow ([[Jason Flemyng]]) |
Henry Creedlow ([[Jason Flemyng]]) who works as a creative director for a successful magazine firm lives an unhappy life; his high-strung, contemptuous wife Janine (Nina Garbiras) is indifferent to him which leads to him having fantasies about suicide. Henry drives to a local train station where he meets with his best friend, Jimmy Larson (Andrew Tarbet) to go to work downtown. Apparently, Jimmy has invested some money for Henry, and Henry's return is much lower than he thought. While trying to board the train, an unsettled Henry imagines himself pulling away a pushy lady and struggling with her until he puts her head under the railroad tracks, allowing a passing train to crush her head. Waking up from his fantasy, Henry boards the train with Jimmy. |
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Henry works at a local magazine company called ''Bruiser''. While at the office, everyone is at a conference meeting deciding on which model should be on the magazine's latest issue. The sleazy and reprehensible boss, Milo Styles ([[Peter Stormare]]), mocks Henry's choice in front of him and his co-workers. Later that day, Henry talks with Milo's artist wife Rosie (Leslie Hope), who works as the lead photographer, and there appears to be an attraction between them as she is the only person who is casually nice to Henry. |
Henry works at a local magazine company called ''Bruiser''. While at the office, everyone is at a conference meeting deciding on which model should be on the magazine's latest issue. The sleazy and reprehensible boss, Milo Styles ([[Peter Stormare]]), mocks Henry's choice in front of him and his co-workers. Later that day, Henry talks with Milo's artist wife Rosie (Leslie Hope), who works as the lead photographer, and there appears to be an attraction between them as she is the only person who is casually nice to Henry. |
Revision as of 21:51, 23 September 2021
This article consists almost entirely of a plot summary. (June 2017) |
Bruiser | |
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Directed by | George A. Romero |
Written by | George A. Romero |
Produced by | Ben Barenholtz Peter Grunwald |
Starring | Jason Flemyng Peter Stormare Leslie Hope Tom Atkins |
Narrated by | Laurent Basset |
Cinematography | Adam Swica |
Edited by | Miume Jan Eramo |
Music by | Donald Rubinstein |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Canal+ |
Release date | 13 February 2000 |
Running time | 99 min. |
Country | France |
Languages | English Spanish |
Budget | $5 million[1] |
Bruiser is a 2000 French horror-thriller film written and directed by George A. Romero and starring Jason Flemyng, Peter Stormare and Leslie Hope.[2] Bruiser was filmed in Toronto.
Plot
Henry Creedlow (Jason Flemyng) who works as a creative director for a successful magazine firm lives an unhappy life; his high-strung, contemptuous wife Janine (Nina Garbiras) is indifferent to him which leads to him having fantasies about suicide. Henry drives to a local train station where he meets with his best friend, Jimmy Larson (Andrew Tarbet) to go to work downtown. Apparently, Jimmy has invested some money for Henry, and Henry's return is much lower than he thought. While trying to board the train, an unsettled Henry imagines himself pulling away a pushy lady and struggling with her until he puts her head under the railroad tracks, allowing a passing train to crush her head. Waking up from his fantasy, Henry boards the train with Jimmy.
Henry works at a local magazine company called Bruiser. While at the office, everyone is at a conference meeting deciding on which model should be on the magazine's latest issue. The sleazy and reprehensible boss, Milo Styles (Peter Stormare), mocks Henry's choice in front of him and his co-workers. Later that day, Henry talks with Milo's artist wife Rosie (Leslie Hope), who works as the lead photographer, and there appears to be an attraction between them as she is the only person who is casually nice to Henry.
That Saturday, there is a party for the workers at Milo and Rosie's house. The cynical Janine goes off not wanting to speak to the weak-willed Henry, who is sitting for a plaster mold to be made of his face by Rosie, who also designs masks in her spare time. Rosie finishes the mask and adds it to her "garden of lost souls" in the backyard. She asks Henry to paint a design on the featureless mask, but Henry cannot think of anything to draw. Henry sees Milo and Janine across the pool in a very intimate moment.
While driving home later that evening, Henry confronts Janine about what he saw as her making moves on his boss. Janine hardly seems to care and she tells the distraught Henry that he is so weak-willed and a pushover, she despises living with him and firmly wishes that he were dead. When they arrive home, Henry has another fantasy about Janine pulling the car into the garage, and him getting out and killing her with an axe to her head. Janine gets back into the car and drives off into the night, leaving Henry all alone.
After drinking all night at his house, Henry wakes up the next morning as usual, and is shocked when he sees that his entire face has inexplicably transformed into a white, featureless mask. When Henry tries removing the "mask" he cuts himself. Henry hides when Katie, his once-a-week maid, arrives to clean the house. Henry watches the maid as she fills her purse and bag with silver and other items from his house. When Katie begins taking cash out of Henry's wallet that is left on a counter, Henry reveals himself and confronts his kleptomaniac maid about stealing from him. Henry attacks and beats her to death with the bag filled with stolen silver items. He wraps the body up in plastic and hides again when Janine comes home. Henry overhears a phone conversation in which Janine tells the person on the other line that she is going to leave Henry.
Henry follows his wife to the office which is closed for that Sunday where it is revealed that she and his boss, Milo, are having an affair. But it is Rosie who catches them first by bursting into a conference room and photographing Milo and Janine having sex on the conference table. When Milo chases his wife out of the building where Rosie tells Milo that she intends to leave him, Henry sneaks into the conference room where he reveals his new blank face for his wife. Frightened by Henry's faceless appearance, Janine attacks him, but he wraps an extension cord around her neck and pushes her out a window where she hangs to death.
Milo is distraught over his wife leaving him and of Janine's death. While giving a statement to Detective McCleary (Tom Atkins) who is the first policeman on the scene, Henry eludes the police and goes home. He hides from the cops again when they come to his front door to look for him to deliver the news of his wife's murder. While looking through his business files, he discovers that his friend, Jimmy, has more than likely been taking Henry's money for himself. After making it appear that he possibly killed himself, he disposes of the maid's body by dumping it in a body of water beneath a shipping dock and phones Rosie and tells her not to go out of her house because he overheard the police who think that she might have killed Janine.
That afternoon, Henry visits Jimmy at the tennis club where he points a gun at Jimmy in the deserted locker room and reveals the business account papers which show that Jimmy has been pilfering money out of Henry's bank accounts and mutual funds for two years now. Jimmy tells Henry that it was Janine's idea to steal Henry's money so she could squander it for herself. Jimmy reveals that Janine has been cheating on Henry with him too. Jimmy offers to write Henry a check for the entire amount of $30,000, but Henry politely refuses. Then, Jimmy suddenly breaks character by pulling out a gun from his briefcase and tries to kill Henry. Henry fires back, fatally wounding Jimmy in the chest. With his last breath, Jimmy expresses no guilt or remorse for his betrayal (just like Henry's wife Janine, and the housekeeper Katie). Henry disposes of Jimmy by placing his corpse in the driver's seat of his car and pushes the vehicle into the same body of water he dumped Katie in.
The next day, still in the featureless mask, Henry goes to visit Rosie at her home to tell her what has been up lately. Rosie is also surprised by his white faceless image with some flesh-colored paint that he added on claiming that he has been working on his image. After he leaves, Henry calls 'The Larry Case Show', a popular radio program, and tells the host that he is 'Faceless' and has murdered three people. After listening to some advice by Larry Case, Henry decides that he needs to eradicate all the people from his life who wronged and betrayed him if he is to get his face back.
The following night, Henry goes to attend Milo's Halloween costume party, dressed as Zorro wearing a black cape along with his white mask which he blends in perfectly. Rosie is also there who is being tailed by Detective McCleary, who still thinks that she either killed Janine or had it done. Henry assembles a group of men from the office where they lure Milo to a second floor balcony where Henry tells his mean and ungrateful boss that he has set him up for a "grand finale". With the crowd of partygoers underneath, Milo is raised overhead on wires, as people have doing throughout the party. Henry aims a strong laser at Milo (intended for exploding the heads of confetti-filled dummies), and kills him, while the crowd cheers. As Henry walks away, he removes his black cape costume and hat, and his face suddenly returns to normal. Henry realizes that he has his face back when someone walks by and calls his name out. But he is also spotted by Detective McCleary who moves in to apprehend him. However, Rosie shows up in a Zorro costume with a white mask on and yells at McCleary that she is the killer. Rosie tells Henry that she made a plaster of her own face and it was blank, just like Henry's. Now that his revenge is complete, Henry has his face back and he can start a new life for himself. Henry is then lost in the crowd and McCleary cannot get to him. Henry bids Rosie farewell and escapes into the crowd.
Some years later, a long-haired Henry is now working as an office messenger in another city. Henry passes by an office where an angry and loathsome executive is yelling at several people. After the man screams at the overly curious Henry who walks by, the mean executive tells him to come back to his office for he has a job for him. "Coming sir", says Henry in an angry tone; he turns around... and his blank, anonymous, faceless white mask has returned.
Cast
- Jason Flemyng as Henry Creedlow
- Peter Stormare as Milo Styles
- Leslie Hope as Rosie Newley
- Nina Garbiras as Janine Creedlow
- Andrew Tarbet as Jimmy Larson
- Tom Atkins as Det. McCleary
- Jonathan Higgins as Det. Rakowski
- Jeff Monahan as Tom Burtram
- Marie Cruz as Number 9
- Beatriz Pizano as Katie Saldano
- Tamsin Kelsey as Mariah Breed
- Kelly King as Gloria Kite
- Susanne Sutchy as Colleen
- Balázs Koós as Chester
- Jean Daigle as Faduah
- Chris Gillett as Male executive
- Chantal Quesnel as Rita
- Jennifer Foster as Carol
- Boyd Banks as Jester
- Neil Crone as Boss
- Ted Ludzik as Gas station attendant
- Diana Platts as Reporter
- Kiran Friesen as Lady Godiva
- Murray Oliver as Cameraman
- Peter Mensah as Skinhead
- Neville Edwards as Derelict
- Yan Feldman as Knife
- D'Arcy Smith as Uniform
- Colin Glazer as Police officer
- Monique Osier as Top Hat
- Tina Romero as Cleopatra
- C.J. Fidler as Captive woman
- Ron Webber as Captive man
- Kevin Rushton as Drunk attacker
- Andrew Romero as Little devil
- Jason Winn 'J.B. Destiny' Bareford as Guitarist
- Big Poppa Gator as Bouncer
- Ari Cohen as Caller #1
- David Lyle as Caller #2
- David Harcourt as Rigger
- Ron Van Hart as Football player
- Bryan Renfro as Train station man
- Victoria Fodor as Lady in red
- Melanie as Diogee
- Dr. Chud as The Misfits
- Christine Forrest as Birdcage partygoer
- Michale Graves as The Misfits
- Jerry Only as The Misfits
- Michael Stevens as Party robber
- Doyle Wolfgang von Frankenstein as The Misfits
Soundtrack
The score was composed by Donald Rubinstein and the soundtrack features the horror punk band The Misfits.[3]
Release
The film premiered on 13 February 2000 in Canada and was directly released to DVD in the United States on 9 October 2001.[4]
Reception
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2016) |
Critical reception for Bruiser has been mixed to positive. Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 67%, based on 9 reviews, with a rating average of 6/10.[5]
References
- ^ The George Romero Guide - Bruiser Archived December 4, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Saturday Nightmares: Bruiser (2000)
- ^ Bruiser (2000) directed by George A Romero
- ^ Bruiser - DVD: Film Freak Central Archived May 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Bruiser (2000) - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes.com. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 24 October 2016.