Jagged Edge
Jagged Edge

Jagged Edge (1985)

6.3 ? Oct 04, 1985 1h 48m

Overview

After a wealthy heiress is murdered in her beach house, her devastated husband becomes the prime suspect. He hires a lawyer who hasn’t taken a criminal case in years, and as they work together, a complicated romance develops amidst the trial.

Genres

Thriller

Release Date

October 04, 1985

Rating

6.3 /10

Runtime

1h 48m

Official Trailer from YouTube

Glenn Close

Glenn Close

Teddy Barnes

Jeff Bridges

Jeff Bridges

Jack Forrester

Peter Coyote

Peter Coyote

Thomas Krasny

Lance Henriksen

Lance Henriksen

Frank Martin

Robert Loggia

Robert Loggia

Sam Ransom

Michael Dorn

Michael Dorn

Dan Hislan

Maria Mayenzet

Maria Mayenzet

Page Forrester

William Allen Young

William Allen Young

Greg Arnold

Ben Hammer

Ben Hammer

Dr. Goldman

James Karen

James Karen

Andrew Hardesty

Al Ruscio

Al Ruscio

Carl Siegal

Bruce French

Bruce French

Richard Duffin

Brandon Call

Brandon Call

David Barnes

Phyllis Applegate

Phyllis Applegate

Mrs. Stiles

Guy Boyd

Guy Boyd

Matthew Barnes

Dave Austin

Policeman

Sanford Jensen

Scott Talbot

Woody Eney

Austin Lofton

James Winkler

Ted Fitzpatrick

Christina Hutter

Jenny Barnes

John Chard avatar

John Chard

7.0/10

Jun 07, 2014

Sharp film, serrated ending. Teddy Barnes is a conflicted lawyer, still reeling from the dubious methods of a colleague, she takes on the defence of Jack Forrester, who is accused of murdering his wife with a jagged edged knife. Gradually falling for Jack's seductive powers, Teddy falls in love with the man she now has to defend, her problems it seems, are about to become far far worse. Jagged Edge, directed by Richard Marquand, starring Glenn Close (Teddy), Jeff Bridges (Jack), Robert Loggia (Sam Ransom) and Peter Coyote (Thomas Krasny), is bringing nothing new to the table of a much replicated genre. It does however boast brilliant acting, a tremendous screenplay (Joe Eszterhas) and a production value that demands it be viewed with less than cynical eyes. That it is written by Eszterhas is obvious when looking at the structure of the picture, death, sex, troubled romance, greed and that old devil called obsession (Basic Instinct anyone?), yet aided by a competent director and an exemplary cast, Jagged Edge shines brighter than most other films of its ilk. It looks a little frayed (not jagged) around the edges now, but that is purely because of the advent of time and the ream of thrillers using this format that have followed this piece. If one (such as I) can transport oneself back to the 80s and view Jagged Edge on its original terms, then its easy to recognise just what a well put together picture it is. Close and Bridges are superb, whilst Robert Loggia steals the picture from under their noses, his interplay with Close is a particular highlight. In spite of some less than great twists and unsubtle scapegoat placings, Jagged Edge succeeds because you are there at the finale, and because its held you in its grip all along, you (hopefully) have invested yourself with these characters, you simply just have to know, for better or worse! The ending was cause for much discussion back in the day, and viewing it now it still feels like a moment of cheek mixed in with some form of clarity, but rest assured it works well, as does, funnily enough, the whole film. No world beater here, but highly accomplished and worth the time of any thriller obsessed movie fan. 7/10

Read full review

Comments

Please login to post comments

FWAnime

Premium Anime Streaming

Watch thousands of anime episodes with premium quality and no ads!

Visit Now
s