Pacific Heights (1990 film)
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| Pacific Heights | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | John Schlesinger |
| Produced by | Scott Rudin William Sackheim |
| Written by | Daniel Pyne |
| Starring | Matthew Modine Melanie Griffith Michael Keaton |
| Music by | Hans Zimmer |
| Cinematography | Amir M. Mokri |
| Editing by | Steven Ramirez Mark Warner |
| Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
| Release date(s) | September 28, 1990 |
| Running time | 102 min. |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Pacific Heights is a 1990 thriller film directed by John Schlesinger, starring Melanie Griffith, Matthew Modine, and Michael Keaton. Griffith's real-life mother Tippi Hedren has a cameo as an rich older woman who is conned by Keaton's character. The original music score was composed by Hans Zimmer. The film's tagline is: "It seemed like the perfect house. He seemed like the perfect tenant. Until they asked him to leave."
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The film opens up with Carter Hayes (Michael Keaton) lying in bed with a woman, only to be quickly jostled out of bed and beaten up by some hired thugs who tell him to leave town or else.
The film then moves to an unmarried yuppie couple Patty Palmer (Melanie Griffith) and Drake Goodman (Matthew Modine) buying a large $750,000+ polychrome apartment in the exclusive San Francisco neighborhood of Pacific Heights, where they renovate it and plan to rent the two apartments on the first floor to cover most of the monthly mortgage.
Things seem rosy until they meet Carter Hayes who has all the trappings of being a good client, i.e. a friendly face, smiling demeanor and the ability to talk as if he is part of some legitimate educated middle class.
In reality, Hayes is really a manipulative and deadly con man who does not pay rent, or the deposit, and then changes the locks on all the doors. In short order Hayes gets the Goodmans into all sorts of trouble through scare tactics, verbal baiting and turning his own apartment into a dark cockroach-infested den. All of this is part of Hayes' elaborate scheme to use the California tenant laws against the Goodman's and through his army of cockroaches to get the property cheaply. How this would happen is not truly explained and the film's depiction of tenant rights is bizarre.
All of this constant stress causes Patty Goodman to have a miscarriage. This causes Drake Goodman to attack Hayes after which Hayes vanishes almost without a trace..
While Goodman lies in bed recovering from gun shot wounds fired by Hayes (who was not incriminated due to Drake disobeying a restraining order), Patty becomes determined to have her revenge. She searches what remains of the apartment and is able to track Hayes down to his new con game involving a wealthy and elderly widower.
Patty poses as Hayes' wife in order to get into his hotel room and charge plenty of expensive room service and wine on his credit cards and then call in to have them declared stolen so that when Hayes returns he is arrested and forced to charm his way out of jail. Hayes quickly makes it back to the apartment and a fight erupts between Patty and him, resulting in Hayes' demise.
Roger Ebert criticised the film for producing a yuppie horror thriller with a Freddy Krueger-like tenant, the use of obvious shock effects and following too many clichés of horror films, such as the dark basement or murder of a family pet.[1] It was also noted that the film was penned by a writer with a bad experience with a tenant and came out with a message that tenants have too many rights[citation needed]. However, Chris Hicks of the Salt Lake City Desert News was among the critics who praised the acting, especially of Keaton, and found enjoyment in having Patty getting her revenge on a man who had manipulated the law, albeit a Hollywood version of the law, to wreck her dreams and hurt the man she loved.[2]
This film was #94 on Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments.
Pacific Heights is set in Pacific Heights in San Francisco. However, the location of the house in the film is on Potrero Hill in San Francisco at the corner of 19th Street and Texas Street.
The DVD edition of the film was released in 1999 and included a trailer for the film, but no other special features such as a director's audio commentary, deleted or extended scenes or subtitles.
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Matthew Modine | Drake Goodman |
| Melanie Griffith | Patty Palmer |
| Michael Keaton | Carter Hayes |
| Laurie Metcalf | Stephanie MacDonald |
| Mako | Toshio Watanabe |
| Nobu McCarthy | Mira Watanabe |
| Dorian Harewood | Dennis Reed |
| Tippi Hedren | Florence Peters |
| Beverly D'Angelo | Ann Miller |
| Carl Lumbly | Lou Baker |