A daring double life leads a beautiful young woman down a silken path of sex, scandal and greed in this steamy, provocative thriller. Bank exec by day - high priced call girl by night, Alex (Anne Heche) gets in deeper than... more » she ever imagined when she meets charismatic millionaire Bruno Buckingham (Christopher Walken) and his stunning, enigmatic wife (Joan Chen). Now, in a slow, exquisite seduction, Alex will be pulled into Buckingham's perverse world of fast cash and kinky thrills - and into an ever telescoping money laundering scheme that will bring her face-to-face with pure corruption - and the very depths of desire.« less
Lots of actors and actresses you know with a strange plotline. RIP Anne Heche.
Dani A. from NORTHAMPTON, MA Reviewed on 4/27/2011...
It was enjoyable ^^
1 of 1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Movie Reviews
Terrible version of the film.
Michael Long | Denver, Co USA | 02/29/2008
(1 out of 5 stars)
"This is a terrible version of the film. The transfer is dull and faded, and the film itself has been cut down to 92 minutes from the 111 minute version. Don't waste your time or your money."
Avoid This Version......
T. Dissinger | Jacksonville, AL USA | 07/13/2009
(2 out of 5 stars)
"This is just a rehash of the old Lion's Gate version that was cut beyond belief. If you really want to see this film there is an affordable "Director's Cut" available from Tartan Video in England and available from Amazon.UK. All you need is a DVD player that can play PAL (a surprising number of low-end DVD players will do the conversion). You can google your model and see if it will handle PAL broadcast format. You can order the Brit DVD here:
Just don't bother with any of the current US releases."
Wild Side - no, actually mild side....
G. A. Vanderlek | Marshallton, DE United States | 06/03/2009
(1 out of 5 stars)
"This title is not the original theatrical release of Wild Side. The original release was 111 minutes and the runtime of the DVD is slightly more than 90 minutes.
The transfer is acceptable - however the chaptering was poorly done."
So patchy that it fails to hang together
Robert J. Crawford | Balmette Talloires, France | 05/13/2009
(2 out of 5 stars)
"Boy am I sorry that I bought this version. I had no idea that so much of it was cut that the story barely makes sense. The characters seem incomplete, some of the best scenes are simply not there, and you get little sense of the geography in which they are operating. Who on Earth would have produced this incomplete version? Who would ever want it this way? Incredible.
As for the acting, Walken and Chen save it, but only to a degree (i.e. not a one-star rating). They are both accomplished actors who can evoke entire personalities and environments in simple gestures and body language, and their characters appear reasonably complete. However, the script is so poor that not even they can get beyond it and so much of it comes off as making less than cogent sense. Heche, unfortunately, is pretty bad, for the most part failing to achieve a coherent and believable character. She is quirkily beautiful and has her moments in the film, but doesn't quite pull it off in a manner of speaking. OK, she is an ambitious young banker in debt to a corrupt boss and she decides to moonlight as a hooker. Steven Bauer is also pretty bad as her dirty-cop antagonist.
The plot is also badly uneven. Not only is there no clever secret to discover - no subtle double entendres or a hidden pattern revealed later - but the sudden transitions of the characters identities make no sense and don't add to the plot. Thus, Heche and Chen "discover" they are in love - it's just there to titilate and comes off as unbelievable and kind of stupid.
Not recommended."
Which version?
J. Scott | 01/02/2009
(2 out of 5 stars)
"I recall seeing this film on cable (HBO or Cinemax) years back. It's silly in spots, smart in others, and I like Christopher Walken in almost anything. But the undeniable eroticism and bravery of the lesbian sex scene between Anne Heche and Joan Chen certainly had the most positive impact. I've since seen a version where this scene is truncated. It's still there, but shorter with less action and ultimately, less impact. From all the reviews I've read of this DVD, I know this is not the longer director's cut and that that version appears to be difficult to come by. (I'm wondering if it is possible that HBO or Max was originally airing the director's cut?) But what I'm unclear about is if this DVD edition contains that scene in its entirety, if it the shorter edit, or if it is in this version at all? I'm hoping someone who knows the film and its edited variations can verify the contents. Thanks."