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Sliver (film)

1993 film by Phillip Noyce


Summary

1993 film by Phillip Noyce

FieldValue
nameSliver
imageSliver poster.jpg
captionTheatrical release poster
directorPhillip Noyce
screenplayJoe Eszterhas
based_on
producerRobert Evans
starring{{plainlist
musicHoward Shore
cinematographyVilmos Zsigmond
editing{{Plainlist
distributorParamount Pictures
released
runtime107 minutes
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
budget$40 million
gross$123.9 million
  • Sharon Stone
  • William Baldwin
  • Tom Berenger
  • Martin Landau
  • Richard Francis-Bruce
  • William Hoy

Sliver is a 1993 American erotic thriller film starring Sharon Stone, William Baldwin, and Tom Berenger. It is based on the Ira Levin novel of the same name about the mysterious occurrences in a privately owned New York high-rise sliver building. Phillip Noyce directed the film, from a screenplay by Joe Eszterhas. Because of a major battle with the MPAA (which originally gave the film an NC-17 rating), the filmmakers were forced to make extensive reshoots before release which necessitated changing the killer's identity.

The film was released theatrically on May 21, 1993, by Paramount Pictures. It topped the U.S. box office despite underperforming and was a huge hit in the international market. Sliver, like many erotic thrillers of the time, found greater success in the home video market, and was the 8th most rented film in the United States for 1994.

Plot

Carly Norris, a beautiful book editor and divorcee in her mid-30s, moves into the exclusive New York City sliver building "113". She meets other tenants including Zeke, a video game designer; Jack, a novelist; Vida, a fashion model who moonlights as a call girl; and Gus, a professor of videography at New York University. They tell Carly that she bears a striking resemblance to Naomi Singer, the previous tenant of her apartment who fell to her death from her balcony.

After running into Zeke numerous times, Carly invites him to her housewarming party. Soon afterwards, they begin a sexual relationship. Meanwhile, Jack starts stalking Carly and warning her about Zeke who he says is "sick". He also points out that Zeke's deceased mother, a soap opera actress named Thea Manning, bears a resemblance to Carly. As Jack's behavior becomes more erratic, Gus dies in the shower under suspicious circumstances and Vida is murdered, with police suspicion falling on Jack for her death after Carly discovers him in the stairwell with her corpse.

Zeke reveals to Carly that he is the owner of 113, which he bought with his inheritance from his wealthy father. As owner of 113, Zeke has installed a comprehensive video surveillance system throughout the building, allowing him to spy on all of the tenants from his own secret surveillance room. Through deduction and eventually one of Zeke's secret recordings, Carly learns that Jack killed Naomi in a crime of passion.

Jack was jealous of Zeke, who had sexual relations with both Naomi and Vida. Jack attacks Carly in her own apartment, and she accidentally shoots him dead. Angry at Zeke for withholding evidence in Naomi's murder, and jealous of his liaisons with Naomi and Vida, Carly destroys Zeke's surveillance room, tells him to "get a life", then leaves.

Cast

  • Sharon Stone as Carly Norris
  • William Baldwin as Zeke Hawkins
  • Tom Berenger as Jack Landsford
  • Polly Walker as Vida Warren
  • Colleen Camp as Judy Marks
  • Amanda Foreman as Samantha Moore
  • Martin Landau as Alex Parsons
  • Nicholas Pryor as Peter Farrell
  • C. C. H. Pounder as Lieutenant Victoria Hendrix
  • Nina Foch as Evelyn McEvoy
  • Keene Curtis as Gus Hale
  • Anne Betancourt as Jackie Kinsella
  • Tony Peck as Martin Kinsella
  • Allison Mackie as Naomi Singer
  • Jim Beaver as Detective Ira
  • Jose Rey as Detective Corelli
  • Victor Brandt as Detective McCracken
  • Ryan Cutrona as Detective Ennis
  • Robert Miano as Detective Howard
  • Steve Eastin as Detective Phillip
  • Sandy Gutman as Ted Weisberger
  • Radu Gavor as Dmitri
  • Matthew Faison as Mr. Ballinger
  • Robin Groves as Mrs. Ballinger
  • Marnette Patterson as Joanie Ballinger
  • Sid McCoy as Mr. Anderson
  • Wendy Cutler as Ms. Colson
  • Melvyn Kinder as Dr. Palme
  • Gilbert Rosales as Rodriguez, The Janitor

Production

Location

In the film, the tall and narrow sliver building is located at 113 East 38th Street in Manhattan, placing it at 38th Street and Park Avenue. The actual building used in the film is known as Morgan Court, located at 211 Madison Avenue New York, one block west and two blocks south of the fictional address. The building has since become a condominium development. It was built in 1985 and has 32 floors. While the movie made use of the building's courtyard, the lobby was a Los Angeles film set.

Original ending

In the film's original ending Zeke, instead of Jack, turns out to be the killer. After the police assume Jack to be the murderer Carly and Zeke burn the videotapes. Soon afterwards they wed atop the Sliver building. On their honeymoon they fly a helicopter over a Hawaiian volcano where Carly reveals that she knows he is the killer. She tells him she still has the tape of him murdering Gus in the shower and that "it's safe", implying she is willing to cover up his crimes and that she has found the excitement missing from her previous marriage. With their seatbelts off and Carly videotaping the scenery Zeke lowers the aircraft into the volcano as they both laugh gleefully. The scene then cuts to Zeke's surveillance room where the televisions display nothing but static. The end credits roll and leave the audience to decide whether they survive. The shooting of the final scene resulted in the crashing of the helicopter. After an investigation the pilot's certificate was temporarily suspended. Preview audiences disliked the idea of Carly turning immoral, so the ending was re-written and re-shot, to the one used in the final release.

Allegations about Robert Evans's behavior

In her 2021 memoir The Beauty of Living Twice, Stone stated—without naming names—that a producer had once told her to sleep with a costar in a film.

In 2024, being interviewed for The Louis Theroux Podcast, Stone revealed the producer to be Robert Evans and specified that his suggestion had occurred during the production of Sliver. She recounted that Evans had wanted Stone and Baldwin to have sex, saying "then [they'd] have chemistry" and that doing so would "save the movie"; she refused. Baldwin later attacked these allegations on social media, asking rhetorically if Stone still had "a crush on me." At least one entertainment blog criticized Baldwin's comments as "a disgusting misogynistic rant", and noted that Janice Dickinson, whom Baldwin had claimed said Stone had expressed interest in him, had denied his claims.

Release and reception

The film premiered on May 19, 1993, at Mann National Theatre in Westwood Village, Los Angeles. It was released two days later, on May 21, and received negative reviews from critics. Review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 21% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 29 reviews, with an average rating of 3.9/10. The site's critics consensus reads "Sliver is an absurd erotic thriller with technobabble and posits prime Sharon Stone as a professional book nerd." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 38 out of 100 based on 21 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".

The main criticisms were that the film provided little in the way of compelling thriller elements, the script diluted the plot of the novel, the characters were underdeveloped, and the actors were not on form. Critics argued that compared to Sharon Stone's role as a femme fatale in Basic Instinct the year prior, her portrayal in Sliver as a passive character who has to be "lured into sexual intrigue" is unconvincing. The Austin Chronicle stated, "There's no suspense, no drama, no tension, no logic. It makes you appreciate all the craft that went into Basic Instinct".

Criticism was also directed at the handling of the recurring themes of voyeurism and surveillance. Peter Rainer of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "There’s no emotional pull to the neo-Gothic world in 'Sliver,' where people connect up by video monitor and computer with occasional forays in the flesh. It’s no news that we like to watch. But first you must give us something worth watching." Lastly, many critics also singled out the editing and ending, calling the latter hasty and unconvincing. Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film a grade of "C−" on a scale from A+ to F.

MPAA ratings issues

Director Phillip Noyce claimed he had to make 110 edits to the film in order to avoid an NC-17 rating by removing the display of male frontal nudity.

Box office

The film debuted at No. 1 at the box office making $12.1 million in 2,093 theaters. By the second week the box office taking dropped to No. 6. Sliver eventually grossed $36.3 million domestically and $87.6 million internationally to a total of $123.9 million worldwide.

Home media

When originally released on VHS, the film was released in both its theatrical R-rated version and an unrated version which restored the cuts made by the MPAA. In March 2006, to coincide with the theatrical release of Basic Instinct 2, which starred Stone, Sliver was released on DVD. Only the unrated cut was made commercially available, but the R-rated cut was distributed for rental. Although the film was theatrically shown in the 2.35 aspect ratio, the DVD features a matted, 2.10 aspect ratio transfer. In 2013, the R-rated cut was released on Blu-ray, sourced from the same 2.10 aspect ratio HD master used for the DVD release.

In 2024, Vinegar Syndrome, under license from Paramount, announced an Ultra HD Blu-ray release of the film as part of their annual Black Friday sales event, featuring a new director-supervised 4K restoration of the unrated version presented in its original 2.35 theatrical aspect ratio. The alternative scenes from the R-rated cut are also included as a bonus.

Accolades

AwardCategorySubjectResult
Golden Raspberry AwardsWorst PictureRobert Evans
Worst DirectorPhillip Noyce
Worst ScreenplayJoe Eszterhas
Worst ActorWilliam Baldwin
Worst ActressSharon Stone
Worst Supporting ActorTom Berenger
Worst Supporting ActressColleen Camp
Stinkers Bad Movie AwardsWorst Picture
Worst ActressSharon Stone
MTV Movie AwardsMost Desirable MaleWilliam Baldwin
Most Desirable FemaleSharon Stone

Soundtrack

Main article: Sliver (soundtrack)

References

References

  1. {{AFI film. 59664
  2. (September 11, 1995). "UIP 25th Anniversary".
  3. Dretzka, Gary. (October 26, 1997). "Beyond 'Sliver'". [[Chicago Tribune]].
  4. Willmore, Alison. (April 8, 2022). "Erotic Thrillers Owe Everything to Home Viewers".
  5. Hunt, Dennis. (November 26, 1993). "National Video Rentals : 'Sliver' Full of Rental Sex Appeal". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  6. (December 29, 1994). "Billboard's year-end ranking of the top video sales and rentals between Dec. 4, 1993 and Nov. 26, 1994".
  7. Hicks, Chris. (May 29, 1993). "WITHOUT 'SLIVER' OF A CLUE, MYSTERY ENDS POORLY". [[Deseret News]].
  8. Dowd, Maureen. (May 30, 1993). "FILM; Bucks and Blondes: Joe Eszterhas Lives The Big Dream". [[The New York Times]].
  9. ["S2 EP8: Sharon Stone discusses facing off with Robert Mugabe, lifting weights with Arnold Schwarzenegger, and her calamitous dating app experiences."](https://traffic.megaphone.fm/GLT6972923520.mp3?updated=1727183140). Apple Podcasts.
  10. Badshah, Nadeem. (March 12, 2024). "Sharon Stone names producer who 'told her to sleep with co-star'".
  11. Sharf, Zach. (March 12, 2024). "Sharon Stone Says 'Sliver' Producer Robert Evans Told Her to Have Sex With Co-Star Because 'Then We'd Have Chemistry' and 'That Would Save the Movie'".
  12. Walsh, Savannah. (March 12, 2024). "William Baldwin Wonders Whether Sharon Stone Still Has "a Crush on Me"".
  13. Parkel, Inga. (March 13, 2024). "Billy Baldwin attacks Sharon Stone's claims that she was pressured to sleep with him".
  14. Walsh, Savannah. (March 12, 2024). "William Baldwin Wonders Whether Sharon Stone Still Has "a Crush on Me"".
  15. Ulatowski, Rachel. (March 14, 2024). "Billy Baldwin Lashes Out at Sharon Stone With a Disgusting Misogynistic Rant".
  16. "Sliver (1993)". [[Fandango Media.
  17. "Sliver Reviews". [[CBS Interactive]].
  18. Maslin, Janet. (1993-05-22). "Review/Film; Peeping Tom's Guide To Modern Voyeurism". The New York Times.
  19. Salisbury, Mark. (2000-01-01). "Sliver".
  20. (1993-01-01). "Sliver".
  21. Baumgarten, Marjorie. (May 28, 1993). "Movie Review: Sliver".
  22. Gleiberman, Owen. (June 4, 1993). "Sliver".
  23. Rainer, Peter. (May 22, 1993). "MOVIE REVIEW : Erotic Thriller 'Sliver' Leaves a Lot to Be Desired". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  24. "Home - Cinemascore".
  25. Cagle, Jess. (May 21, 1993). "The troubled making of ''Sliver''".
  26. Fox, David J.. (May 24, 1993). "Stone Gets a 'Sliver' of Box Office but Not a Runaway". Los Angeles Times.
  27. Fox, David J.. (June 1, 1993). "Sly's Back in Peak Form at Box Office". Los Angeles Times.
  28. "Sliver (1993) - Box Office Mojo". [[Internet Movie Database.
  29. "Sliver (Unrated Edition)".
  30. "Sliver Blu-ray".
  31. "Sliver".
  32. "1993 RAZZIE Nominees & "Winners"".
  33. "Past Winners Database".
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