The Usual Suspects
The Usual Suspects | |
---|---|
Directed by | Bryan Singer |
Written by | Christopher McQuarrie |
Produced by | Kenneth Kokin Michael McDonnell Bryan Singer |
Starring | Gabriel Byrne Chazz Palminteri Kevin Spacey Stephen Baldwin Kevin Pollak Benicio del Toro Giancarlo Esposito Pete Postlethwaite Dan Hedaya Suzy Amis |
Cinematography | Newton Thomas Sigel |
Edited by | John Ottman |
Music by | John Ottman |
Distributed by | United Kingdom: PolyGram Filmed Entertainment United States: Gramercy Pictures Worldwide: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release dates | United States: January 1995 (premiere at Sundance) United States: August 16, 1995 (wide) United Kingdom: August 25, 1995 Australia: October 19, 1995 |
Running time | 106 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $6,000,000 |
Box office | $23,272,306 (U.S.) |
The Usual Suspects is a 1995 American neo-noir film written by Christopher McQuarrie and directed by Bryan Singer. The film tells the story of Roger "Verbal" Kint (Kevin Spacey), a small-time con man who is the subject of a police interrogation. He tells his interrogator, U.S. Customs Agent David Kujan (Chazz Palminteri), a convoluted story about events leading to a massacre and massive fire that have just taken place on a ship docked at the Port of Los Angeles in San Pedro Bay. Using flashback and narration, Kint's story becomes increasingly complex as he tries to explain why he and his partners-in-crime were on the boat.
The film, shot on a $6 million budget, originally began as a title taken from a column in Spy magazine called "The Usual Suspects," after one of Claude Rains's most memorable lines in Casablanca. Singer thought that it would be a good title for a film, the poster for which he and McQuarrie had developed as the first visual idea.
The Usual Suspects was shown out of competition at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival,[1] and then initially released in few theaters. It received favorable reviews, and was eventually given a wider release. McQuarrie won an Academy Award for the screenplay and Spacey won the Best Supporting Actor award for his performance.
Plot
On the deck of a ship in San Pedro, California, a faceless figure identified as "Keyser" speaks with an injured man called Keaton (Gabriel Byrne). The two talk briefly, then Keyser appears to shoot Keaton before setting the ship ablaze. The next day, FBI Agent Jack Baer (Giancarlo Esposito) and U.S. Customs special agent Dave Kujan (Chazz Palminteri) arrive in San Pedro separately to investigate what happened on the boat. There appear to be only two survivors: Roger "Verbal" Kint (Kevin Spacey), a con artist with cerebral palsy, and a hospitalized Hungarian criminal. Baer interrogates the Hungarian, who claims that Keyser Söze, a Turkish criminal mastermind with a nearly mythical reputation, was in the harbor "killing many men." The Hungarian begins to describe Söze while a translator interprets and a police sketch artist draws a rendering of Söze's face. Meanwhile, Verbal has testified at length about the incident in exchange for near-total immunity. Police Sergeant Jeffrey Rabin (Dan Hedaya) comments that Verbal must have powerful protection to get such a favourable deal, and that high-ranking officials including the governor have made inquiries on Verbal's behalf. After making his statement to the district attorney and while waiting to post bail on a relatively minor weapons charge, Verbal is placed in Rabin's cluttered office where Kujan requests to hear the story again, from the beginning. Verbal's tale starts six weeks earlier in New York City:
Five criminals are brought together in a police lineup: Dean Keaton (Gabriel Byrne), a corrupt former police officer who has apparently given up his life of crime; Michael McManus (Stephen Baldwin), a short-tempered professional thief; Fred Fenster (Benicio del Toro), McManus' partner who speaks in mangled English; Todd Hockney (Kevin Pollak), a hijacker who forms an instant rivalry with McManus; and Verbal himself.
While in holding, McManus convinces the others to join forces to commit a robbery targeting corrupt NYPD police officers who escort smugglers to their destinations around the city. After the successful robbery, the quintet travel to Los Angeles to sell their loot to McManus' fence, "Redfoot" (Peter Greene). Redfoot talks them into another job: robbing a purported jewel dealer. Instead of jewels or money, as they were told he was holding, the dealer was carrying heroin. An angry confrontation between the thieves and Redfoot reveals that the job came from a lawyer named Kobayashi (Pete Postlethwaite). The thieves later meet with Kobayashi, who claims to work for Keyser Söze and blackmails them into attacking a ship at San Pedro harbor. Kobayashi describes the boat as smuggling $91 million worth of cocaine, to be purchased by rivals of Söze. The thieves are to destroy the drugs and, if they choose to wait until the buyers arrive, can split the cash as they choose.
In the present, Verbal tells Kujan the story of Keyser Söze as he apparently heard it from Keaton and the others. Verbal's flashback describes Söze as a "small-time" Turkish criminal being harassed by a rival Hungarian gang in Turkey who, rather than see his family used as hostages by the Hungarians, killed them himself, then went on a murderous vendetta against the Hungarians and "the rest of the mob. He kills their kids, he kills their wives, he kills their parents and their parents' friends. He burns down the houses they live in and the stores they work in, he kills people that owe them money. And like that... he's gone." Afterward, he apparently disappears, never doing business in person again. With time, Söze's story takes on mythic stature within the criminal community. Kujan, previously unfamiliar with Söze, asks Baer about him. Baer admits no direct knowledge, but has heard rumors for years about Söze insulating himself behind layers of minions who don't know who they are working for.
Verbal also describes Fenster's attempt to run away, ending with him being killed by Kobayashi. The remaining thieves kidnap Kobayashi, intending to kill him if he does not leave them alone. Uncowed, Kobayashi reveals that Edie Finneran (Suzy Amis), Keaton's lawyer and girlfriend, is in his office (believing she was hired for legal services), and threatens to kill her, as well as kill or maim other loved ones of the thieves should they refuse the job.
On the night of the cocaine deal, the sellers — a group of Argentine mobsters — are on the dock, as are the buyers — a group of Hungarian mobsters. Keaton tells Verbal to stay back, and to take the money to Edie if the plan goes awry so she can pursue Kobayashi "her way" and to convey Keaton's regret that he couldn't go straight, as she wanted him to. Verbal reluctantly agrees, and watches the boat from a distance, in hiding, as Keaton, McManus and Hockney attack the men at the pier, killing most of them. Keaton and McManus board the ship to find the drugs while Hockney goes after a van carrying the cash, and is fatally shot after he finds it. Keaton and McManus discover there is no cocaine on the boat, while a closely-guarded Argentine passenger is shot twice in the head by an unseen assailant. McManus is killed with a knife to the back of his neck, and Keaton, turning away to leave, is shot down by a man with a gold lighter. The mysterious figure appears to speak briefly with Keaton before apparently shooting him (the scene which began the film in medias res).
In the present, with Verbal's story finished, Kujan reveals what he has deduced, with the aide of Baer: the boat hijacking was not about cocaine, but rather to ensure that one man aboard the ship — the Argentine passenger, one of the few individuals alive who could positively identify Söze — is killed. After Söze presumably killed the man, he eliminated everyone else on the ship and set it ablaze; Kujan also reveals that Edie has been murdered. He has concluded that Keaton was Keyser Söze. Kujan's ongoing investigation of Keaton is what initially involved him in the case, and Kujan is convinced that Keaton has faked his death (as he had briefly done some years earlier to escape another investigation) and deliberately left Verbal as a witness.
Under Kujan's aggressive questioning, Verbal tearfully admits that the whole affair, from the beginning, was Keaton's idea, but he flatly refuses to testify further. His bail having been posted, Verbal retrieves his personal effects from the property officer as Kujan, relaxing in Rabin's office, notices that details and names from Verbal's story are culled from various objects around the room, including Rabin's crowded bulletin board and the "Kobayashi" logo on the bottom of Kujan's coffee cup. Kujan realizes that most (if not all) of Verbal's story was made up on the spot and chases after him, running past a fax machine as it receives the police artist's impression of Keyser Söze's face; the drawing resembles Verbal Kint.
Meanwhile, Verbal walks away from the police station, dropping his feigned cerebral palsy. He gets into a waiting car driven by "Mr. Kobayashi", pulling away just as Kujan comes outside, searching in vain. The final moment of the film is a repetition of Verbal's earlier statement about Söze: "And like that... he's gone."
Cast
- Gabriel Byrne as Dean Keaton: Kevin Spacey met Byrne at a party and asked him to do the film. He read the screenplay and turned it down, thinking that the filmmakers could not pull it off. Byrne met screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie and Singer and was impressed by the latter's vision for the film. However, Byrne was also dealing with some personal problems at the time and backed out for 24 hours until the filmmakers agreed to shoot the film in Los Angeles, where the actor lived, and make it in five weeks.[2]
- Kevin Spacey as Roger "Verbal" Kint/Keyser Söze: Singer and McQuarrie sent the screenplay for the film to the actor without telling him which role was written for him. Spacey called Singer and told that he was interested in the roles of Keaton and Kujan but was also intrigued by Kint who, as it turned out, was the role McQuarrie wrote with the actor in mind.[2]
- Chazz Palminteri as U.S. Customs Special Agent Dave Kujan: Singer had always wanted the actor for the film but he was always unavailable. The role was offered to Christopher Walken and Robert De Niro, both of whom turned it down. The filmmakers even had Al Pacino come in and read for the part but he decided not to do it because he was playing a cop in Heat. Palminteri became available, but only for a week. When he signed on, this persuaded the film's financial backers to support the film fully because he was a sufficiently high-profile star, thanks to the recent release of A Bronx Tale and Bullets Over Broadway.[2]
- Stephen Baldwin as Michael McManus: The actor was tired of doing independent films where his expectations were not met; when he met with director Bryan Singer, he went into a 15-minute tirade telling him what it was like to work with him. After Baldwin was finished, Singer told him exactly what he expected and wanted, which impressed the actor.[2]
- Kevin Pollak as Todd Hockney: He met with Singer about doing the film, but when he heard that two other actors were auditioning for the role, he came back, auditioned, and got it.[2]
- Benicio del Toro as Fred Fenster: Spacey suggested Del Toro for the role. The character was originally written with a Harry Dean Stanton-type actor in mind. Del Toro met with Singer and the film's casting director and told them that he did not want to audition because he did not feel comfortable doing them.[2]
- Pete Postlethwaite as Mr. Kobayashi, Söze's right-hand man.
- Suzy Amis as Edie Finneran, an influential criminal lawyer and Keaton's girlfriend.
- Giancarlo Esposito as FBI Special Agent Jack Baer, investigating the boat explosion on the pier.
- Dan Hedaya as Sergeant Jeffrey "Jeff" Rabin, assists in Dave Kujan's interrogation of Roger "Verbal" Kint.
- Peter Greene (uncredited) as Redfoot the Fence: He not only sets up a job for the five criminals in Los Angeles but also puts them in touch with Kobayashi; it is left ambiguous whether he actually exists, or is merely a part of Verbal's elaborate lie.
Production
Origins
Bryan Singer met Kevin Spacey at a party after a screening of the young filmmaker's first film, Public Access at the 1993 Sundance Film Festival.[3] Spacey had been encouraged by a number of people he knew who had seen it[2] and was so impressed that he told Singer and McQuarrie that he wanted to be in whatever film they did next. Singer read a column in Spy magazine called "The Usual Suspects" after Claude Rains's line in Casablanca. Singer thought that it would be a good title for a film.[4] When asked what their next film was about by a reporter at Sundance, McQuarrie replied, "I guess it's about a bunch of criminals who meet in a police line-up,"[4] which, incidentally, was the first visual idea that he and Singer came up for the poster: "five guys who meet in a line-up," Singer remembers.[5] The director also envisioned a tagline for the poster, "All of you can go to Hell."[2] Singer then asked the question, "What would possibly bring these five felons together in one line-up?"[6] McQuarrie revamped an idea from one of his own unpublished screenplays — the story of a man who murders his own family and walks away, disappearing from view. The writer mixed this with the idea of a team of criminals.[4]
The character of Söze himself is based on the real-life accounts of John List, a New Jersey accountant who murdered his entire family in 1971 and then disappeared for almost two decades, assuming a new identity before he was ultimately apprehended.[7] McQuarrie based the name of Keyser Söze on a boss named Keyser Sume that he had at a Los Angeles law practice he worked for[8] but decided to change the last name because he thought that his former boss would object to how it was used. He found the word söze in his roommate's English-to-Turkish dictionary, which translates as "talk too much."[2] All of the characters' names are taken from staff members of the law firm at the time of his employment.[2] McQuarrie had also worked for a detective agency, and this influenced the depiction of criminals and law enforcement officials in the script.[9]
Singer described the film as Double Indemnity meets Rashomon, and said that it was made "so you can go back and see all sorts of things you didn't realize were there the first time. You can get it a second time in a way you never could have the first time around."[10] He also compared the film's structure to Citizen Kane (which also contained an interrogator and a subject who is telling a story) and the criminal caper The Anderson Tapes.[6]
Pre-production
McQuarrie wrote nine drafts of his screenplay over the course of five months, sometimes at 14-hour stretches, until Singer felt that it was ready to shop around to the studios. None was interested, except for a European financing company.[11] McQuarrie and Singer had a difficult time getting the film made because of the non-linear story, the large amount of dialogue, and the lack of cast attached to the project. Financiers wanted established stars, and offers for the small role of Redfoot (the L.A. fence who hooks up the five protagonists with Söze) went out to Christopher Walken, Tommy Lee Jones, Jeff Bridges, Charlie Sheen, James Spader, Al Pacino, and Johnny Cash.[8] However, the European money allowed the film's producers to make offers to actors and assemble a cast. They were only able to offer the actors well below their usual pay, but they agreed because of the quality of McQuarrie's script and the chance to work with each other.[5] However, the money fell through, and Singer used the script and the cast to attract Polygram to pick up the film negative.[11]
In casting, Singer took the television pilot approach: "You pick people not for what they are, but what you imagine they can turn into."[6] To research his role, Spacey met doctors and experts on cerebral palsy and talked with Singer about how it would fit dramatically in the film. They decided that it would only affect one side of his body.[2] According to Byrne, the cast bonded quickly during rehearsals.[3] Del Toro worked with his friend Alan Shaterian to develop Fenster's distinctive, almost unintelligible speech patterns.[12] According to the actor, the source of his character's unusual speech patterns came from the realization that "the purpose of my character was to die."[2] Del Toro talked to Singer and told him, "It really doesn't matter what I say so I can go really far out with this and really make it uncomprehensible."[2]
Principal photography
The budget was set at $5.5 million and the film was shot in 35 days[11] in Los Angeles, San Pedro, and New York City.[10] Spacey said that they shot the interrogation scenes with Palminteri over a span of five to six days.[13] These scenes were also shot before the rest of the film.[2] The police line-up scene ran into scheduling conflicts because the actors kept blowing their lines. Screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie would feed the actors questions off-camera and they improvised their lines. When Stephen Baldwin gave his answer, he made the other actors break character.[2] Byrne remembers that they were often laughing between takes and "when they said, 'Action!', we'd barely be able to keep it together."[3] Spacey also said that the hardest part was not laughing through takes, with Baldwin and Pollack being the worst culprits.[13] Their goal was to get the usually serious Byrne to crack up.[13] They spent all morning trying to film the scene unsuccessfully. At lunch, a frustrated Singer chewed out the five actors and when they resumed, the cast continued to laugh through each take.[2] Byrne remembers, "Finally, Bryan just used one of the takes where we couldn't stay serious."[3] Singer and editor John Ottman used a combination of takes and kept the humor in to show the characters bonding with one another.[2]
While Del Toro told Singer how he was going to portray his character, he did not tell his cast members and in their first scene together none of them understood what the actor was saying. Byrne confronted Singer and the director told him that for the lock-up scene, "If you don't understand what he's saying maybe it's time we let the audience know that they don't need to know what he's saying."[2] This led to the inclusion of Kevin Pollak's improvised line, "What did you say?"
The stolen emeralds were real gemstones on loan for the movie.[7]
Singer spent an 18-hour day shooting the underground parking garage robbery.[2] According to Byrne, by the next day Singer still did not have all of the footage that he wanted, and refused to stop filming in spite of the bonding company's threat to shut down the production.[2]
In the scene in which the crew meets Redfoot after the botched drug deal, Redfoot flicks his cigarette at McManus' face. The scene was originally to have the Redfoot character flick the cigarette at Baldwin's chest, but the actor missed and hit Baldwin's face by accident. Baldwin's reaction in the film is real.[7]
Despite enclosed practical locations and a short shooting schedule, the film's cinematographer Newton Thomas Sigel, "developed a way of shooting dialogue scenes with a combination of slow, creeping zooms and dolly moves that ended in tight close-ups," to add subtle energy to scenes.[14] "This style combined dolly movement with "imperceptible zooms" so that you’d always have a sense of motion in a limited space."[15]
Post-production
During the editing phase, Singer thought that they had completed the film two weeks early but woke up one morning and realized that they needed that time to put together a sequence that convinced the audience that Dean Keaton was Söze and then do the same for Verbal Kint because the film did not have "the punch that Chris had written so beautifully."[2] According to Ottman, he assembled the footage as a montage but it still did not work until he added an overlapping voiceover montage featuring key dialogue from several characters and have it relate to the images.[2] Early on, executives at Gramercy had problems pronouncing the name Keyser Söze and were worried that audiences would have the same problem. The studio decided to promote the character's name and two weeks before the film debuted in theaters, "Who is Keyser Söze?" posters appeared at bus stops and TV spots told people how to say the character's name.[16]
Singer wanted the music to the boat heist to resemble Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1. The ending's music was based on a K.D. Lang song.[17]
Release
Gramercy Pictures ran a pre-release promotion and advertising campaign before The Usual Suspects opened in the summer of 1995. Word of mouth marketing was used to advertise the film, and buses and billboards were plastered with the simple question, "Who is Keyser Soze?"[18]
The film was shown out of competition at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival and was well-received by audiences and critics.[19] The film was then given an exclusive run in Los Angeles, where it took a combined USD $83,513, and New York City, where it made $132,294 on three screens in its opening weekend.[20] The film was then released in 42 theaters where it proceeded to earn $645,363 on its opening weekend. It averaged a strong $4,181 per screen at 517 theaters and the following week added 300 play dates.[11] It eventually made $23.3 million in North America.[21]
Reception
Critical
The Usual Suspects was well-received by most critics and it has an 89% rating at Rotten Tomatoes and a 77 metascore on Metacritic. While embraced by most viewers and critics, The Usual Suspects was the subject of harsh derision by some. Roger Ebert, in a review for the Chicago Sun-Times, gave the film one-and-a-half stars out of four.[22] He also includes the movie in his "most hated films" list.[23] USA Today gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four, calling it, "one of the most densely plotted mysteries in memory - though paradoxically, four-fifths of it is way too easy to predict."[24] However, Rolling Stone Magazine praised Spacey, saying his "balls-out brilliant performance is Oscar bait all the way."[25] Hal Hinson, in his review for the Washington Post wrote, "Ultimately, The Usual Suspects may be too clever for its own good. The twist at the end is a corker, but crucial questions remain unanswered. What's interesting, though, is how little this intrudes on our enjoyment. After the movie you're still trying to connect the dots and make it all fit - and these days, how often can we say that?"[26] In her review for the New York Times, Janet Maslin praised the performances of the cast: "Mr. Singer has assembled a fine ensemble cast of actors who can parry such lines, and whose performances mesh effortlessly despite their exaggerated differences in demeanor....Without the violence or obvious bravado of Reservoir Dogs, these performers still create strong and fascinatingly ambiguous characters."[27] The Independent praised the film's ending: "The film's coup de grace is as elegant as it is unexpected. The whole movie plays back in your mind in perfect clarity - and turns out to be a completely different movie to the one you've been watching (rather better, in fact)."[28]
Nominations and awards
Christopher McQuarrie and Kevin Spacey were nominated for Academy Awards for Best Original Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor, respectively.[29] They both won and in his acceptance speech, Spacey memorably said, "Well, whoever Keyser Söze is, I can tell you he's gonna get gloriously drunk tonight."[30] McQuarrie also won the Best Original Screenplay award at the 1996 British Academy Film Awards.[31] The film was nominated for three Independent Spirit Awards—Best Supporting Actor for Benicio del Toro, Best Screenplay for Christopher McQuarrie, and Newton Thomas Sigel for Best Cinematography.[32] Both Del Toro and McQuarrie won in their categories.[33]
The Usual Suspects was screened at the 1995 Seattle International Film Festival where Bryan Singer was awarded Best Director and Kevin Spacey won for Actor.[34] The Boston Society of Film Critics gave Spacey the Best Supporting Actor award for his work on the film.[35] Spacey went on to win this award with the New York Film Critics Circle and the National Board of Review which also gave the film an ensemble acting award to the cast.[36]
Legacy
On June 17, 2008, the American Film Institute revealed its "Ten Top Ten"—the best ten films in ten "classic" American film genres—after polling over 1,500 people from the creative community. The Usual Suspects was acknowledged as the tenth best mystery film.[37] Verbal Kint was voted the #48 villain in the AFI's "AFI's 100 Years... 100 Heroes and Villains" in June 2003. Entertainment Weekly cited the film as one of the "13 must-see heist movies".[38] Empire magazine ranked Keyser Söze #69 in their "The 100 Greatest Movie Characters" poll.[39]
References
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: The Usual Suspects". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-09-08.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Burnett, Robert Meyer (2002). "Round Up: Deposing The Usual Suspects". The Usual Suspects Special Edition DVD. MGM.
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(help) - ^ a b c d Ryan, James (17 August 1995). "The Usual Suspects Puts Together Unusual Cast". BPI Entertainment News Wire.
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(help) - ^ a b c Larsen, Ernest (2005). "The Usual Suspects". British Film Institute.
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(help) - ^ a b Hartl, John (13 August 1995). ""Surprises and No Holes" in Director's Prize-Winning Mystery". Seattle Times.
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(help) - ^ a b c Lacey, Liam (21 September 1995). "Bryan Singer's Film Fever". Globe and Mail.
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(help) - ^ a b c The Usual Suspects DVD commentary featuring Bryan Singer and Christopher McQuarrie, [2000]. Retrieved on 27 September 2002.
- ^ a b Nashawaty, Chris (3 February 2006). "Starring Lineup". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2008-07-06.
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(help) - ^ Francis, Patrick (1 December 1998). "Bryan Singer, Confidence Man". Moviemaker. Retrieved 2009-02-13.
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(help) - ^ a b Wells, Jeffrey (31 August 1995). "Young Duo Makes Big Splash". The Times Union.
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(help) - ^ a b c d "Suspects Found It Tough to Round Up Financing". Hollywood Reporter. 13 September 1995.
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(help) - ^ Hernandez, Barbara E (5 September 1995). "What's in a name? Benicio Del Toro knows". Boston Globe.
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(help) - ^ a b c Parks, Louis B (19 August 1995). "Everyone's Suspect". Houston Chronicle.
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(help) - ^ Williams, David (2000). "Unusual Suspects". American Cinematographer. 81 (7). American Society of Cinematographers.
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ignored (help) - ^ Gray, Simon (2006). "Hero Shots". American Cinematographer. 87 (7). American Society of Cinematographers.
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ignored (help) - ^ Gordinier, Jeff (29 September 1995). "Keyser on a Roll". Entertainment Weekly.
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(help) - ^ Koppl, Rudy. "VALKYRIE - The Destruction of Madness". Music from the Movies. Retrieved 2008-12-27.
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(help) - ^ Fried, John (1996). "The Usual Suspects". Cineaste. 22 (2). New York City: Cineaste Publishers, Inc. ISSN 0009-7004.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Auteurs bloat or float bulk of Cannes fest crop". Variety. 9 June 1995.
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(help) - ^ Evans, Greg (22 April 1995). "Suspects heists exclu B.O.; Brothers in pursuit". Variety.
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(help) - ^ "The Usual Suspects". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-06-17.
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(help) - ^ Ebert, Roger (18 August 1995). "The Usual Suspects". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2007-09-27.
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(help) - ^ Ebert, Roger (11 August 2005). "Ebert's Most Hated". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
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(help) - ^ Clark, Mike (18 August 1995). "Usual Suspects, usual thriller". USA Today.
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(help) - ^ Travers, Peter (1995). "The Usual Suspects". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2007-09-27.
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(help) - ^ Hinson, Hal (18 August 1995). "Usual Suspects, Unusual Suspense". Washington Post.
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(help) - ^ Maslin, Janet (16 August 1995). "Putting Guys Like That in a Room Together". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
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(help) - ^ Curtis, Quentin (27 August 1995). "The thrill of The Usual Suspects is that it re-mythologises the crime movie". The Independent.
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(help) - ^ "The nominees". USA Today. 14 February 1996.
- ^ Grimes, William (26 March 1996). "Gibson Best Director for Braveheart, Best Film". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
- ^ Boehm, Erich (29 April 1996 - 5 May 1996). "Costume dramas win bulk of BAFTA awards". Variety.
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(help) - ^ Klady, Leonard (15 January 1996 - 21 January 1996). "Vegas Tops Indie Spirit Noms". Variety.
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(help) - ^ "Film Independent's Spirit Awards" (PDF). Film Independent. Retrieved 2008-06-17.
- ^ Levy, Emanuel (19 June 1996 - 25 June 1996). "Kingdom takes top Seattle Film Fest prize". Variety.
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(help) - ^ Carr, Jay (18 December 1995). "Hub critics pick Sense and Sensibility". Boston Globe.
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(help) - ^ Evans, Greg (18 December 1995 – 31 December 1996). "Crix picks praise Sense, Vegas". Variety.
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(help)CS1 maint: date format (link) - ^ "AFI's 10 Top 10". American Film Institute. 2008-06-17. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
- ^ Ramisetti, Kirthana (March 6, 2008). "Pros and Cons". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
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(help) - ^ "The 100 Greatest Movie Characters". Empire. Retrieved 2008-12-02.
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Further reading
- Christopher McQuarrie (2001). The Usual Suspects. Faber & Faber. ISBN 0571203256.
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External links
- 1995 films
- Neo-noir
- Films featuring a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award winning performance
- Films whose writer won the Best Original Screenplay Academy Award
- Edgar Award winning works
- Heist films
- 1990s crime films
- American crime thriller films
- Fiction with unreliable narrators
- Films directed by Bryan Singer