Reversal of Fortune

1990 blacker-than-black comedy

Rating: 16/20

Plot: Claus von Bulow has been convicted of the attempted murder of his extremely rich but troubled wife. He hires lawyer Alan Dershowitz and his team of dwarves to take his case.

Blink and you'll miss that this is supposed to be comedic. Things certainly started slowly enough. The murder-mystery aspect bored me, I wasn't caring for Jeremy Irons at all, and the whole thing had the look and feel of a television movie. But as soon as Ron Silver found his way into the story, things picked up. His character added a jolt that for whatever reason made everything about this movie a little better. What I really like about Reversal of Fortune, and what must have been kind of unique, is that it's not one of those courtroom dramas where the actors all get a chance to lawyer or judge it up and scream courtroom cliches. Instead, the focus is on the much-more-interesting research that goes into a case like this. We get the minutia, and it's fun to watch all the tiny little pieces coming together. I also liked the moral dilemma that Dershowitz was up against, and every time we got to see him play basketball, it was comedy gold, or at least comedy pudding. Jeremy Irons' cold apathy eventually grew on me, becoming just the right amounts of pretentious and chilling. Irons almost becomes pitch perfect, creating a character that you'll despise enough to want to throw the book at (maybe literally throw books at him) but at the same time think he just might be innocent. The writing's really witty, so Irons gets lots juicy dialogue into which to sink his teeth. I really liked the line where he explains his apathy by saying he doesn't wear his heart on his sleeve. I also got used to the story's structure, an at-first-off-putting disjointed series of scrambled flashbacks that becomes a puzzle where you have too many pieces and not nearly enough table.

Another quality Cory recommendation.

4 comments:

cory said...

The greatest double-feature I have ever seen was this paired with "Goodfellas", back when a matinee cost three bucks. I liked your review, though for me the mood, style and mystery were fascinating from the opening credits. Irons and Close are amazingly good. A 19.

Replacement: "49 Up"

Shane said...

'49 Up' is an English documentary with interviews of children with diverse backgrounds?

cory said...

Exactly. They started with a group of 7 year-olds in the mid 60's and have gone back every 7 years. You don't have to see the early ones to enjoy this. I think you'll find it pretty interesting.

Barry said...

Interesting that I liked this movie, for exactly the opposite reasons that Shane liked this movie.

Jeremy Irons is incredible in this. Its when he is on camera that the movie picks up steam. Any scene with Ron Silver or the obnoxious legal aid team is jarring and makes me hate them with a mild passion. ESPECIALLY the badly choreographed basketball scenes.


Claus Von Bulow. What a great villain....or is he?


Oh and Glen Close gives one of her better, more well rounded performances of her career.


An 18 for me. Punk Harvard lawyers are my least form of almost human life, so it loses two points for that.