Dressed to Kill

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Dressed to Kill

original film poster
Directed by Brian de Palma
Produced by George Litto
Written by Brian de Palma
Starring Michael Caine
Angie Dickinson
Nancy Allen
Music by Pino Donaggio
Cinematography Ralf D. Bode
Editing by Gerard B. Greenberg
Distributed by Filmways
Release date(s) June 23, 1980
Running time 105 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $6,500,000 (estimated)
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Dressed to Kill is a 1980 horror film written and directed by Brian de Palma. It starred Michael Caine, Angie Dickinson and Nancy Allen. The original music score is composed by Pino Donaggio. The film is marketed with the tagline "Brian de Palma, master of the macabre, invites you to a showing of the latest fashion... in murder."

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The movie makes several overt references to Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho, and the plot contains many striking similarities.

Kate Miller (Angie Dickinson) is a sexually frustrated housewife and mother who is in therapy with New York City psychiatrist Dr. Robert Elliott (Michael Caine). During an appointment with Dr. Elliott, Kate attempts to seduce him, at which point Elliott rejects her advances. Later that day, Kate goes to an art gallery and has an unexpected flirtation with a mysterious stranger. Kate and the stranger "stalk" each other through the museum until they finally wind up outside, where Kate joins him in a taxi cab. They immediately begin to have sex right there in the cab, and their experience continues at his apartment. Later, Kate awakens and discreetly leaves while the man is asleep, but not before she rifles through some of his papers and discovers that he has a venereal disease. Mortified, Kate leaves the apartment and gets in the elevator, but on the way down she realizes that she's left her wedding ring on the stranger's nightstand. She rides back up to retreive it, but the elevator doors open on the figure of a large, imposing blonde woman in dark sunglasses wielding a straight razor. She violently slashes Kate to death in the elevator.

Blonde prostitute Liz Blake (Nancy Allen) happens upon the body and catches a glimpse of the blonde killer, therefore becoming both the prime suspect and the killer's next target. Dr. Elliott receives a bizarre answering machine message from "Bobbi", a transsexual that he is treating. Bobbi taunts Dr. Elliott for breaking off their therapy sessions, apparently because Dr. Elliott refuses to sign the necessary papers for Bobbi to get her sex change operation and physically become a woman. Elliott eventually becomes desperate, visiting Bobbi's new psychiatrist and trying to convince him that Bobbi is a danger to herself and others.

Meanwhile, the police are less than willing to believe Liz's story, and she joins forces with Kate's son Peter to expose the psychopath themselves. Peter (Keith Gordon) is an inventor, and he uses a series of homemade listening devices and time-lapse cameras to track patients from Elliott's office. They catch Bobbi on camera leaving Elliott's office, but Liz is being stalked by a tall blonde figure in a wig and sunglasses. Bobbi makes several attempts on her life, one of them being thwarted by Peter, who rescues Liz in the nick of time by spraying Bobbi with some homemade mace.

Finally Liz and Peter scheme to get into Elliott's office to look at his appointment book and get Bobbi's name. Liz baits Dr. Elliott by coming on to him sexually, and distracts him long enough to make a brief exit and rifle through his appointment book. When she returns, she is confronted by Bobbi instead of Elliott; they are the same person. Elliott/Bobbi is shot and wounded by the female police officer who has been trailing Liz, and Liz recognizes her as the tall blonde figure who was tracking her all along. Elliott is arrested by the police and placed in a mental asylum. In the film's final sequence, Dr. Elliott escapes from the asylum and slashes Liz in the throat in a bloody act of vengeance, and she wakes up screaming, realizing that Elliot's attack was just a dream.

Spoilers end here.

Won: Best Actress (Angie Dickinson)
Nominated: Best Director (Brian De Palma)
Nominated: Best Horror Film
Nominated: Best Music (Pino Donaggio)
Nominated: New Star of the Year (Nancy Allen)
Nominated: Worst Actor (Michael Caine)
Nominated: Worst Actress (Nancy Allen)
Nominated: Worst Director (Brian De Palma)

The film was the target of mild controversy when it became known that the nude body in the opening scene, taking place in a shower, was not that of Angie Dickinson but of a Playboy model. This controversy stemmed mostly from Dickinson's status at the time as being a mature, still-slender and shapely, sex symbol; the provocative shower scene - and the film - originally seemed to cash in on the idea that this nude body was that of its star. However, this revelation of a body-double (a theme later explored by director DePalma in his 1984 release, "Body Double") seemed to do no harm to its box office performance.

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