China Moon (1991) is a pleasing entertainment that assembles the dependable elements of film noir in the tradition of Body Heat (1981), The Last Seduction (1994) and, of course, the mother of all such films, Double Indemnity (1944). There's a femme fatale (the beautiful and talented Madeleine Stowe) and an honest cop (reliable Ed Harris) who soon becomes smitten. Her husband (Charles Dance) is a brute who beats her, so she murders him and inveigles Harris into helping her dispose of the body. That's when the complications begin, and Harris starts to sweat when his... fellow cop keeps asking awkward questions. The acting is uniformly good, with Harris' partner played by Benicio Del Toro (Traffic) offering an excellent performance. Harris and Stowe strike sparks off each other, to the point where you almost believe he is being sucked into her schemes. On the DVD: The disc contains a theatrical trailer and several TV ads, with scroll-down filmographies of the major talents involved which are incomplete for some unknown reason. There's a brief and unenlightening five-minute documentary, with the principal cast plus the director, John Bailey, commenting on the film. Both image and sound are excellent quality, sound in Dolby Digital, picture in anamorphic widescreen ratio of 2.35:1 --Ed Buscombe [show more]
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Please note this is a region 2 DVD and will require a region 2 or region free DVD player in order to play Homicide detective Kyle Bodine (Ed Harris) becomes emotionally involved with Rachel Monroe (Madeline Stowe) after she murders her violent husband (Charles Dance) Bodine helps cover up the murder but when the finger of suspicion points at him he begins to wonder whether he has been set up
Homicide detective Kyle Bodine (Ed Harris) becomes emotionally involved with Rachel Monroe (Madeline Stowe) after she murders her violent husband (Charles Dance). Bodine helps cover up the murder, but when the finger of suspicion points at him he begins to wonder whether he has been set up.
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