Dirty Weekend (1993 film)
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Dirty Weekend is a 1993 British film directed by Michael Winner and starring Lia Williams, Rufus Sewell, Ian Richardson and David McCallum.<ref name="BFIsearch">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It was written by Winner based on the 1991 novel of the same title by Helen Zahavi.
Bella, a secretary, becomes a victim of Tim, a voyeur who harasses her. After the police provide no assistance, Bella consults an Iranian clairvoyant, Nimrod, who encourages her to take matters into her own hands. She kills Tim and goes on a murder spree, ultimately evading capture.
Synopsis
In the coastal town of Brighton, Bella is a mild-mannered secretary who works from home in a basement flat. Soon, she finds herself the victim of Tim, a voyeur who watches her through her windows and plagues her with obscene phone calls in which he threatens to assault and rape her. After the police refuse to offer any assistance, Bella visits Nimrod, an Iranian clairvoyant who suggests that she take matters into her own hands.
That night, Bella breaks into Tim's flat while he is sleeping and batters him to death with a claw hammer. Empowered, Bella embarks on a spree in which she slaughters six more men by a variety of methods. Ultimately, she evades capture by the authorities and prepares to carry on her murderous rampage in the large, faceless city of London.
Cast
Production
Filming took place in the Notting Hill and Kensington areas of London and also in Brighton. The Internet Movie Database lists other locations. The gun shop scenes were filmed at Park Street Guns near St Albans; the country pub (now demolished) was the Grenville Lodge, East Burnham (Burnham Beeches), Buckinghamshire; and the dentist scenes were shot at a real dental practice in Twickenham, Greater London.Template:Citation needed
Theft of equipment was a problem during filming.<ref>Winner Takes All: A Life of Sorts Michael Winner, p. 269.</ref> While filming in Brighton, all the catering equipment was stolen and in Notting Hill Gate, a mobile kitchen with generator was stolen.
Release
The film was banned from video release for two years by the BBFC for its violent and sexual content.Template:Citation needed
Reception
Halliwell's Film Guide described Dirty Weekend as "a sleazy little tale of a female vigilante, directed and acted in a perfunctory, over-emphatic manner".<ref>Leslie Halliwell and John Walker Halliwell's Film Guide. HarperPerennial, 1996 (p.316).</ref>
In The Independent Sheila Johnston wrote: "no window-dressing can hide the fact that an aura of indelible naffness hangs over the movie ... the screenplay is hewn out from Helen Zahavi's over-written novel with no concessions to the way people actually speak". Johnston argued Dirty Weekend was inferior to other female revenge films such as Ms. 45 and Lipstick, and criticised the making up of the white actor Richardson with "brownface" to portray a Middle Easterner.<ref name="sj">Template:Cite news</ref>
The Observer review said Dirty Weekend has "a certain factitious topicality", but went on to state "a work so bad in every way, and mostly risibly so, cannot be the focus of serious controversy".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Brian Case, reviewing the film for Time Out, dismissed Dirty Weekend as "pretty rotten", and criticised Winner's direction, stating it resembled "out-takes from local cinema advertising, which distances the audience from the material and indeed from wakefulness itself".<ref>"Dirty Weekend", in Time Out Film Guide 2011, Time Out, London, 2010. Template:ISBN (p. 274).</ref>
In Variety, Derek Elley wrote: "Michael Winner aims low and half-misses with Dirty Weekend ... Winner plays up the unreality with off-center framing and careful use of lenses, recalling Polanski’s efforts to give a heightened, jet-lag feel to Frantic, although flat lighting and grubby color give the whole thing a bargain-basement look."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Ian Nathan in Empire gave the film 1/5 stars, writing: "Justly vilified on release as a piece of asinine exploitation trumped up as a feminist tract, this is an ugly movie indeed."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
References
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External links
- [https://www.imdb.com/{{#if: 0106727
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- Pages using IMDb title instead of IMDb episode
- Pages using IMDb title instead of IMDb episodes
- 1993 films
- 1990s serial killer films
- 1990s vigilante films
- 1990s English-language films
- Films based on British novels
- Films directed by Michael Winner
- Films set in Brighton
- Films shot in London
- Films shot in East Sussex
- Films shot in Hertfordshire
- Films shot in Buckinghamshire
- British serial killer films
- British vigilante films
- Films with screenplays by Michael Winner
- Films produced by Michael Winner
- 1990s British films
- English-language crime films
- United International Pictures films