Slow Burn | 
| Director: Wayne Beach Actors: Ray Liotta, Jolene Blalock, Ll Cool J, Mekhi Phifer, Guy Torry Studio: Lions Gate Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98 Buy Used: $0.98 You Save: $14.00 (93%)
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Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 34105
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Full Screen Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 93 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 5 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: 21671 UPC: 031398216711 EAN: 0031398216711 ASIN: B000Q7ZLQK
Theatrical Release Date: April 13, 2007 Release Date: July 24, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description A DISTRICT ATTORNEY IS INVOLVED IN A 24-HOUR SHOWDOWN WITH A GANG LEADER & IS, AT THE SAME TIME, BEING MANIPULATED BY AN ATTRACTIVE ASSISTANT DISTRICT ATTORNEY & A CRYPTIC STRANGER.
Amazon.com Fans of The Usual Suspects or The Departed should check out Slow Burn, a similarly twisty neo-noir starring Ray Liotta (Goodfellas). District Attorney Ford Cole (Liotta) finds his promising political career in danger when a dead body is discovered in the bed of his Assistant DA Nora Timmer (Jolene Blalock, Star Trek: Enterprise), who also happens to be Cole's lover. At first, it seems like a clear-cut case of self-defense, but then a video-store clerk with a strange sense of entitlement (James Todd Smith, better known as LL Cool J, Deep Blue Sea) suggests the killing is tied to an enigmatic criminal kingpin. From there, the plot defies summarizing: Conflicting stories are told in dimly lit interrogation rooms about mistaken identities, political machinations, lots of sex, and a wounded man unveiled by the light from a refrigerator. Everything hinges on real estate (a hint of Chinatown) and racial identity (smacking of Devil in a Blue Dress)--clearly, this movie is not afraid of flaunting its influences. All of these plot threads may not weave together seamlessly when the movie's over, but they catch your interest as it goes along. Slow Burn sometimes suffers from a needlessly slow pace (a few too many lingering shots of Liotta looking baffled or troubled), but the excellent cast--including Taye Diggs (How Stella Got Her Groove Back) as a jailbird with secrets, Chiwetel Ejiofor (Inside Man, Dirty Pretty Things) as a slippery journalist, and Mekhi Phifer (Dawn of the Dead) as the possibly innocent sap who ends up dead in Nora's bed--keeps the movie afloat. --Bret Fetzer
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
Ray Liotta and IRMA THOMAS music and story March 29, 2008 Anonymous 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Disagree that there are too many takes of Ray Liotta's reactions to what is going on. Ray Liotta IS the reason I love the film. He is dramatic and that's the way his fans like him. Liotta is highly under-rated. Also, loved the Irma Thomas music. "Sister" Irma Thomas is finally getting some mainstream exposure. The rain hides the pain... Just wonder which of her albums this was taken from? Interesting story.
Slow Burn November 4, 2007 V. Garcia-Boganey (USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This was a very well put together movie. If you like Unusual Suspect then you will like this as well. You dont know who is the man. Keeps you thinking. Mystery.
inscrutable film noir cop drama September 26, 2007 Roland E. Zwick (Valencia, Ca USA) 5 out of 10 found this review helpful
In the opening scene of "Slow Burn," an assistant district attorney (Jolene Blalock) is found wandering the streets of the city, disheveled and confused, informing those who find her that she has just killed a rapist in self defense. The alleged attacker (Mekhi Phifer) was a man she supposedly met one night in a record store and who then proceeded to stalk her for weeks thereafter. Suddenly, into the head D.A.'s office strides LL Cool J, as a friend of the deceased who has a considerably different story to tell about the events leading up to the murder as well as an entirely disparate take on the couple's relationship. Things get even more dicey when we discover that the D.A. (Ray Liotta) and the assistant D.A. have been conducting a torrid affair of their own for a number of years now. "Slow Burn" fails on so many levels of rudimentary storytelling and filmmaking that it's hard to know where exactly to begin in compiling a list of its shortcomings. To start with, there's something inherently self-defeating and pointless in constructing a narrative from two widely conflicting viewpoints - a la "Rashomon" - when one of the supposed eyewitnesses is already dead and, thus, unable to personally relate his side of the story. How does it enhance the verisimilitude of the tale if most of our information has to come filtered down to us through a secondhand source, a person who wasn't even present at the events he's describing - unless, of course, he was hiding in a nearby closet during all those "intimate" moments he is able to recount in such juicy and exhaustive detail? Either that or the murder victim was one of the chattiest, kiss-and-tell gossips in the history of the movies. And why does it take till the closing reels for the supposedly intelligent professional investigators to smell a rat in that setup? Eventually, the twist-and-turn plotting leads to so much incoherence and confusion that you might well wonder if the filmmakers themselves understood what it was they were doing. Beyond the clumsy, inscrutable storytelling, "Slow Burn" also suffers from some of the most overripe dialogue this side of "The Black Dahlia." With such knee-slapping howlers as "She stood there like a tangerine, ripe and ready to be peeled" and "She walked in smelling like mashed potatoes and every guy within thirty feet wanted to be the gravy," the script could easily win First Prize in a Bad Film Noir Writing contest. It's hard to believe at such times that the film isn't actually intended to be a parody (the acting sure suggests it on occasion). On second thought, perhaps it would be best to stick with that notion; it just might go down easier that way.
Slow Burn September 13, 2007 Mary M. Mcenheimer 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a great movie if you're looking for intensity and excitement. It reminded me of the "Usual Suspects"
THE MOVIE IS WORTH YOUR MONEY GOOD PIC September 6, 2007 Ali P. Breland (new york) 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
THE ONLY REASON WHY I SAY THAT THE MOVIE IS WORTH YOUR MOVIE IS THAT IT HAS SEX AND VIOLENCE AND THAT GIRL Jolene Blalock IS SOOOOOOOOOO HOT CHECK HER OUT IN THIS MOVIE....I AM STILL TRYING TO FIGURE OUT IS SHE BLACK OR WHITE BUT WHATEVER SHE IS SHE IS FREAKING HOT I LIKE THAT I WILL BUY MORE MOVIES OF HER.
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