Review of Dressed to Kill (1980) by Dave Kehr for Chicago Reader — 28 Dec 1988
Originality has never been a high value in the genre-bound aesthetic of filmmaking, but De Palma cheapens what he steals, draining the Hitchcock moves of their content and complexity. He's left with a collection of empty technical tricks—obtrusive and gimmick-crazed, this film has been “directed” within an inch of its life—and he fills in the blanks with an offhand cruelty toward his characters, a supreme contempt for his audience (at one point, we're compared to the drooling voyeurs who inhabit his vision of Bellevue), and a curdled, adolescent vision of sexuality.
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This review of Dressed to Kill (1980) was written by Dave Kehr and published by Chicago Reader on 28 Dec 1988.
Dressed to Kill has generally received positive reviews.
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