Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Off the Shelf: Best Seller (Blu-ray)

by Patrick Bromley
Two solid performances anchor a thriller from a bygone era (era).

1987's Best Seller is a movie that would never get made today. Its content is not transgressive, nor is it particularly specific to the '80s. It is, in many ways, a pretty standard crime thriller. What would prevent anything like it from being made today is the fact that it's a mid-budget thriller with two character actors as the stars. The fact that they're both great character actors doesn't even matter. The time when two actors like James Woods and Brian Dennehy could headline a studio movie has long since passed.
The movie opens in 1972, when Brian Dennehy's Officer Dennis Meechum is working in evidence storage at his precinct. A group of masked criminals break in and kill all the cops save for Dennehy, who is left for dead. He does manage to stab one of the attackers, though, which may or may not come up again later (it may). Cut to 15 years later: Dennehy is now a celebrated detective and a best-selling author whose book about what happened back in '72 has garnered him a great deal of notoriety. Into his life enters a stranger named Cleve (James Woods), who wants Meechum to write a book about his history as a professional killer. Meechum is skeptical, so he and Cleve travel the country gathering "proof" of Cleve's claims. As the two men form a kind of bond through their mistrust, Cleve's real motivations begin to be revealed.

Best Seller's strongest pedigree is that it is written by the great Larry Cohen, a genre legend responsible for everything from It's Alive to God Told Me To to Cellular to the Maniac Cop movies. Cohen excels at high concept trash, usually made more commercial for his for-hire studio projects. Best Seller is less outrageous than a lot of his other work, but maintains a pulpiness that makes it entertaining -- Cohen knows his way around this kind of material. Director John Flynn had previously made Blue Rolling Thunder and would go on to make Out for Justice, Steven Seagal's best movie. There's not a ton of style on display in Best Seller, but he manages to keep things tight and tough, even at 110 minutes. The movie is efficient in the way that many modern thrillers fail to be, usually because they have to be written in such a way so as to attract movie stars.
James Woods and Brian Dennehy aren't exactly movie stars. They're actors. Great actors. And the real reason we watch movies like this is to see two actors we love bounce off one another. Woods' twitchy, wiry nervousness is a perfect compliment to Dennehy's hulking frame -- the latter is the center of gravity around which the former orbits. And orbit Woods does; he's impossible to pin down, fast-talking (because James Woods) and deadly but not simply ice cold. Woods is as good here as he's ever been, which might seem like faint praise simply because he plays similar roles so often. But when a writer or a director finds the right part for Woods -- whether it's Max Renn in Videodrome, Gabriel Caine in Diggstown or Jack Crow in John Carpenter's Vampires, Woods is an unstoppable force. That's the mode in which Best Seller finds him.

Is Best Seller a movie that demands to be part of your DVD or Blu-ray collection? Probably not. I'm glad it's being released (and looks really good in HD) because I'm in favor of everything being available, but this is more a movie you should make it a point to stop on should you ever happen across it on cable one night. Revisiting it gave me renewed appreciation for Larry Cohen's screenplay and made me nostalgic for a time when actors like Woods and Dennehy were given their own starring vehicles. It's an entertaining, if somewhat disposable, thriller -- one you'll either be happy to remember or pleasantly surprised to discover.
DVD/Blu-ray release date: March 24, 2015
110 minutes/1987/R
1.85:1 (1080p)
DTS HD 2.0 Master Audio (English)
Bonus features: Trailer



Buy Best Seller from Olive Films here

10 comments:

  1. Loved this one. Thanks for the heads up. A must purchase

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    1. Be sure to use our links if you can! Every bit helps.

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    2. I Just bought it through links. :)

      It was slightly more expensive because of international shipping to the UK from Amazon.com compared to Amazon.co.uk but I wanted to support this site

      As a thought would it be possible to ask Amazon to provide links to buy through the site to Amazon.co.uk aswell as Amazon.com and that would be perfect for us in the UK



      Cheers



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  2. I LOVE this flick. Dennehy and (especially) Woods are on fire. Great to see that it's come to Blu.
    (I will use the link when I pick it up, Grand Poobah Bromley -- promise!)

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  3. Surely you mean Rolling Thunder not Blue Thunder??? Plus great film and because of this always loved Woods!

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  4. Sorry i nitpicked, first time posting and i nitpick... What a dick! Ha... Love the site by the way, all the way from good old England!

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    1. Thanks, Richard! No worries -- it was a dumb mistake. I was picturing the right movie and typed the wrong one. Glad to have you!

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  5. On the James Woods high wouldn't it be great to get The Hard Way on Bluray, with Michael J Fox. That's another really good Woods movie

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  6. This movie was just as much fun as I remembered, its one I will put on every so often just to soak it up. It shows a Larry Cohen cityscape that is not here anymore and I really enjoy seeing it again, the people, the cars, the streets, the clothes, I like the music a lot too, great score, Dennehey has some great stand out lines,

    Its a pity we did not get 5.1 sound but that's just a quibble, I like films like this to get the Scream factory treatment with 5.1 and lots of features and extras

    Just a thought, I was watching it thinking it would be a very different but equally enjoyable film if they swapped roles and Woods was the cop and Dennehey the Killer

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  7. Of course I saw this on the big screen in 1987 and owned it on VHS and now on DVD.

    Great movie with great actors from a time when the producing studios Hemdale and Orion Pictures had a incredible run with movies like Salvador, Platoon, At close range, F/X, RoboCop and lots of other fine stuff.
    By the way, most of them were mid-budget pictures with REAL ACTORS in it. Very sad both companies went belly up in the early 90s.

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