8MM

  • USA 8 Millimeter (working title) (more)
Trailer

VOD (1)

Plots(1)

Nicholas Cage plays Tom Welles, a straight-laced surveillance specialist. His innocent, naive world begins to unravel when he is hired by the widow of an industrialist to investigate what she has shockingly discovered in her late husband's safe. It appears to be a snuff film of a young girl being murdered. In order to discover the truth, he must enter the city's seedy underworld, guided by porn-store clerk Max California (Joaquin Phoenix). (official distributor synopsis)

(more)

Videos (1)

Trailer

Reviews (12)

gudaulin 

all reviews of this user

English The attribute 8 MM deserves above all is EFFECTIVE. The story from the porn industry is appropriately brutal and repulsive in its subject matter, with a range of twisted characters from the gallery and the decadent environment of high society. The film is energetic and attractive due to the positive hero played decently by Nicolas Cage, complemented by a diligent improved sidekick, and several very skillfully crafted scenes. Overall, it has a depressing tone, which led to exceptionally great commercial success and acclaim from movie fans. It's not Joel Schumacher's best film, but it ranks among the better ones in its genre. Overall impression: 70%. ()

TheEvilTwin 

all reviews of this user

English Depravity of the highest calibre and at the same time perhaps the best quality filmmaking I have seen in months. What Joel Schumacher touches, he gets right, and here it's the same. Nicolas Cage and Joaquin Phoenix are the main duo of guys investigating the authenticity of hardcore snuff porn from the underworld, but their curiosity will take them so deep that they'll have to fight for their lives. The tension is palpable from the first minutes, the setting of the degenerate porn underground is depicted so raw, disgusting and authentic that it makes you sick, and this whole detective ride of the main duo is so incredibly suspenseful and gripping that I devoured every scene to the fullest and sweated all over my pillow. There's violence, an amazing musical score and visual depiction of some of the atrocities (although I could have done with more here), and when you add in the great performances that manage to remain in your memory after a long time, I can't help but give it a full score. A chilling must-see old-school thriller that is definitely not seen every day on the cinematic landscape. ()

Ads

POMO 

all reviews of this user

English Joel Schumacher psychologically brutalizes us and the resulting effect is excellent. However, it would have been even better with a more elaborate screenplay with more questions and unexpected twists. Even so, this is a formalistically excellent inducement to depression with brilliant performances by everyone involved. Mentally unstable viewers should avoid 8 MM! ()

lamps 

all reviews of this user

English Everything bad is good for something. Joel Schumacher knew this well when, after the colossal failure of his big-budget Batman films, he turned his attention to more modest, psychologically solid projects in the late 90s, crowned by this famous depressing thriller. The plot, however simple, powerfully draws the viewer into the sordid world of perverted pornography, underpinned primarily by the perspective of the shocked main character, portrayed more than convincingly by Nicolas Cage still in his golden era. The pacing is perhaps a little too brisk given the seriousness of the premise and the psychological ambitions, the production design could occasionally push the envelope in terms of darkness and violence, and there are a few cheesy motifs (Cage finds immediately a diary that the police have been searching for in vain for God knows how long), but the atmosphere is nonetheless suffocating from the opening moments to the last shot, and the terrific actors (especially Phoenix and Stormare) raise the authenticity and sense of revulsion to highly satisfying heights. The ending admittedly dissolves that authenticity in favour of action satisfaction (this is the most significant difference from Se7en, also by Andrew Kevin Walker), but fortunately it doesn’t feel overstuffed and the filmmakers surprise with ideas that you simply won't see anywhere else (Cage's phone call and request for permission)... Definitely one of the most interesting and ultimately best thrillers of the nineties; where are those golden times… ()

EvilPhoEniX 

all reviews of this user

English Great Thriller!! I'm very puzzled by the poor rating on IMDB (only 6.4), because this film is excellent in all respects. Nicolas Cage was still in form, an excellent script concerning a very dark plot, a look into the underworld of porn (snuff!) and great twists. Perfect in every way, can't fault it. 95% ()

Gallery (31)