Plots(1)

Unambitious yacht salesman and gigolo Richard Bone (Jeff Bridges) skates on his good looks and avoids all responsibility. His best friend Alex Cutter (John Heard) returned from Vietnam with his body ruined, but his mind sharpened and attuned to the injustices and politics that led to his predicament. After Bone witnesses a shadowy figure dump a young woman's body in the trash, he fingers local oil magnate J.J. Cord (Stephen Elliot) as the killer. As Bone backs away from this accusation, Cutter charges forward on a crusade to make Cord pay not only for this murder, but for all the other crimes fat cats like him have routinely gotten away with. Cutter's long-suffering wife Mo (Lisa Eichhorn), struggles to keep her own head above the surface, while steering the two men toward saner waters. (Radiance Films)

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Reviews (3)

gudaulin 

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English It is not worth looking at Passer's film as a usual film from the crime genre. The crime is pushed into the background and traditional investigation of the perpetrator does not play a crucial role in the film. It is rather a starting point for the development of a psychological drama about coming to terms with the consequences of the Vietnam War and the critical atmosphere of the 70s in the USA. The main driver of events is not the main character Bone, but his disabled friend Cutter, who exchanges the stagnation of survival for an effort to catch the suspect of the crime, who is a local rich man. This level could work, but I had problems accepting both male characters - neither of them was sympathetic to me, despite both actors doing a decent job. The core problem is in the screenplay and when you don't cheer for the film's protagonist, it is difficult to do something about it. Overall impression: 60%. ()

NinadeL 

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English Although I'm not particularly fond of Jeff Bridges (outside of The Fabulous Baker Boys) or John Heard, I have to admit that, forgetting the shards Passer left behind in Czechoslovakia, his exile work is probably most reminiscent of Miloš Forman's rebirth. While Forman went within himself, assimilated, and made it to the Oscars, he never suppressed his own perception of the world. Passer, on the other hand, assimilated and fortunately put the New Wave cries completely behind him, and his films in exile can be considered films, not the various attempts and experiments of most of his migrant contemporaries and their family members. ()

kaylin 

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English Ivan Passer has not been a director that I have been significantly following, but I have to say that after the movie "Cutter's Way", I might find some time to pay a little more attention to him. It's a bit of a detective movie, a bit of an action spectacle, but it still has a social depth to it. That's what I liked about the film. ()