- Source: Amateur (1994 film)
- Amateur (film 1994)
- Daftar film Amerika tahun 1994
- Festival Film Internasional Toronto 1994
- Martin Donovan
- Rob Cohen
- Jenna Jameson
- Mildred Cram
- Lauren Shuler Donner
- Kim Hye-soo
- Isabelle Huppert
- Amateur (1994 film)
- Amateur (disambiguation)
- Dwight Ewell
- Kendra Sunderland
- Martin Donovan
- A Man of No Importance (film)
- Michael Bentt
- Elina Löwensohn
- Lee Priest
- Film stock
Amateur is a 1994 crime comedy-drama film written and directed by Hal Hartley and starring Isabelle Huppert, Martin Donovan, Elina Löwensohn and Damian Young. The story revolves around a former nun who becomes embroiled in pornography, violence and international crime.
Plot
Still a virgin after 15 years in a convent, the demure Isabelle earns her living in New York City by writing pornography, which she researches by buying magazines and hiring videos. In a café, she befriends Thomas, who has amnesia after falling from a window. In another café, an accountant called Edward is befriended by Sofia, who pushed Thomas out of the window because, she says, he introduced her to drugs at the age of 12 and made her into a celebrated porn actress. She now wants revenge on Jacques, a crooked businessman for whom both Thomas and Edward worked. Learning from Edward that Thomas has data on disk that could destroy Jacques, she steals Jacques' phone number from Edward's address book while he is in the restroom. Upon returning, Edward gives her the address of a house upstate where she can hide. After contacting Jacques to blackmail him, she meets Edward at Grand Central Terminal, where he mentions that Sofia should not talk about the disks with anyone, since Jacques kills anyone who knows about them. Having agreed to meet one of Jacques' men at Grand Central to give him the address to her apartment where the disks are, Sofia urges Edward to come with her to the house upstate, afraid both she and Edward will end up being killed. She then leaves the station only to see Jacques' hit men shoving Edward into a car. They take him to an abandoned building to torture him and leave him for dead.
Meanwhile, in a hired video, Thomas sees Sofia and his memory starts returning. With Isabelle, he retraces his steps and finds the flat where he and Sofia lived. Isabelle dresses in one of Sofia's costumes and is on the point of losing her virginity to him when someone enters and the two hastily hide. It is Jacques' hit men looking for Sofia, who arrives shortly thereafter only to be tied up by the hit men who begin to torture her. Bursting out, Thomas and Isabelle throw one hit man out of the window and, freeing Sofia, make off with her in the other hit man's car. Sofia suggests they head for the empty country cottage Edward had told her about. On the way Isabelle posts the disks to her publisher, asking him to expose the evil of Jacques after having viewed the files while at the apartment.
When the surviving hit man traces them to the cottage, he wounds Sofia before being shot dead by Edward who arrives in a stolen car. The four make off before the police arrive and Isabelle directs them to her former convent, where they are given sanctuary and the dying Sofia is tended. But the convent is surrounded by armed police, who want Edward for murder. Thomas, his conscience awakened by the kindness and care Isabelle has shown, by the realisation of his criminal past, and by guilt over the fate of Sofia, walks out of the front gate and is killed instantly by a police marksman.
Cast
Isabelle Huppert as Isabelle
Martin Donovan as Thomas
Elina Löwensohn as Sofia
Damian Young as Edward
Chuck Montgomery as Jan, first goon
Dave Simonds as Kurt, second goon
Soundtrack
The soundtrack features excerpts from various alternative artists:
"Mind Full of Worry" – The Aquanettas
"Only Shallow" – My Bloody Valentine
"Water" – PJ Harvey
"Japanese to English" – Red House Painters
"Shaker" – Yo La Tengo
"Tom Boy" – Bettie Serveert
"Girls! Girls! Girls" – Liz Phair
"Then Comes Dudley" – The Jesus Lizard
"Here" – Pavement
The soundtrack also included original music by "Ned Rifle" (a pseudonym used by Hal Hartley) and Jeff Taylor. It was released by Matador Records.
Reception
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 79% based on 28 reviews, with an average rating of 6.1/10.
= Year-end lists
=10th – Michael Mills, The Palm Beach Post
See also
Isabelle Huppert on screen and stage
References
External links
Amateur at IMDb
Amateur at AllMovie
Amateur at AlloCiné (in French)
Amateur at the British Film Institute