COPS,
GUNS, FUN & COUPLE ON THE RUN
by
Gabriel Chong & Linus Tee | 14 June 2010
The
1967 crime thriller “Bonnie and Clyde” starring
Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway perhaps started it all.
Since then, the ‘couple-on-the-run’ genre
has been done to death by Hollywood- although over the
years, you can still stumble on some cinematic gems.
With Jennifer Aniston/Gerard Butler’s “The
Bounty Hunter” opening only months earlier, Ashton
Kutcher/Katherine Heigl’s “Killers”
and Tom Cruise/Cameron Diaz’s “Knight and
Day” opening this month, we take a look at some
of the more memorable lovers on the lam over the past
two decades.
1991 - 2000
Thelma and Louise (1991)
Ridley Scott’s classic road movie
skewed the male/female archetype in favour of a less
conventional female/female coupling. Geena Davis was
the Arkansas waitress Louise who rescues Susan Sarandon’s
housewife Thelma from a man who tries to rape her. They
go on the run, pursued by the state police investigator
Hal Slocumb (Harvey Keitel). Davis and Sarandon were
both nominated for Best Actress Oscars that year and
their respective characters Thelma and Louise are still
considered as two of the greatest characters in pop-culture
over the last 20 years.
True Romance (1993)
Scripted by Quentin Tarantino and directed
by Ridley’s younger brother Tony Scott, this lovers-on-the-lam
tale starred Christian Slater and Patricia Arquette
as Clarence and Alabama, two unlikely lovers (one’s
a loner and the other’s a call girl) who get married.
Clarence’s wedding present? Kill Alabama’s
pimp, steal his coke and then run away from the bad
guys. Talk about a honeymoon…
Natural Born Killers (1994)
Woody
Harrelson and Juliette Lewis were a pair of mass murderers
on a killing spree in this controversial movie helmed
by Oliver Stone. Although based on an original script
by Quentin Tarantino, the script was heavily revised
by Stone and due to its ultra-violent content, suffered
several cuts before it was released in the cinemas.
We can’t really remember the essence of it but
at least, the images of a botak Harrelson and punky-looking
Lewis will always linger in our minds.
The Getaway (1994)
Before
they went hysterical over their child’s custody
and way before Alec Baldwin’s waistline spun out-of-control,
Baldwin and ex-wife Kim Basinger were a married couple
in the Roger Donaldson remake of the 1972 crime thriller,
“The Getaway”. Though their offscreen marriage
never lasted, their work here was immortalized for future
generations. With cheap sex, nudity and the occasional
thrills, this is one mindless flick that everyone should
check out on a boring Sunday afternoon.
Speed (1994)
Theoretically
speaking, both Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock are not
on the run in “Speed”. Bullock in fact was
driving a bus half the time while Reeves was the LAPD
officer constantly on the phone with a manic bomber
played by the recently deceased Dennis Hopper. But this
critical and commercial success deserved a mention for
its over-the-top action sequences and the chemistry
between Reeves and Bullock which led to their onscreen
reunion in the romantic drama “The Lake House”
years later.
The Specialist (1994)
Then
on a post-Basic Instinct career high, Sharon Stone was
a vengeful woman who hires former CIA explosives expert
Ray Quick (Sylvester Stallone) to assassinate the Miami
mobsters behind her parents’ murder. There was
really nothing memorable about the film, except a steamy
sex scene in the shower between Stallone and the then-hot
Sharon Stone. You could say that Stallone wasn’t
the main attraction here.
Fair Game (1995)
Remember
Alec Baldwin’s equally handsome younger brother
William? Well, before his movie career and his finances
went kaput, he starred in this Joel Sliver’s produced
action thriller about a law attorney being pursued by
ex-KGB members with ex-supermodel Cindy Crawford. Nominated
for three Razzie awards, it was made worse by the dismal
box-office and abruptly sealed the end of Crawford’s
would-be movie career and Baldwin’s as well.
The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996)
Geena Davis was the suburban homemaker whose quiet existence
is disturbed by flashbacks of her previous life as a
lethal, top-secret agent. Davis goes on the run with
Detective Mitch (Samuel L. Jackson) from her former
enemies out to silence her. Directed by Davis’
former husband Renny Harlin, this was the nail in the
coffin for Davis’ movie career after it underperformed
at the box office. Though it didn’t do as badly
as their earlier Cutthroat Island, this marked the end
of their collaborations and also the end of their marriage
two years later.
A Life Less Ordinary (1996)
Danny Boyle’s twisted crime comedy
was as unconventional as it gets. Ewan MacGregor stars
as a cleaning man who takes his boss’ daughter
(Cameron Diaz) hostage after he is fired but two ‘angels’
(Holly Hunter and Delroy Lindo) help to bring the pair
together. Despite the chemistry between MacGregor and
Diaz, the movie failed to get much attention at the
box office and was often labeled as a misfire.
Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)
The 18th Bond film was most memorable not for Pierce
Brosnan’s slick, brylcreem-enhanced hairstyle
but the debut of the first Chinese Bond girl played
by Michelle Yeoh. Remember their motorbike chase sequence?
Tomorrow Never Dies has Bond being sent by MI6 to stop
a media baron from starting World War III. As skilled
Chinese spy Wai Lin and Bond’s ally, Yeoh shows
the world Bond needs more than just sex and martini
to survive the crisis.
"Cops,
Guns, Fun And Couple On The Run" continues...
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Thelma
and Louise (1991)
True
Romance (1993)
Natural
Born Killers (1994)
The
Getaway (1994)
James
CameroTitanic (1997)
Speed
(1994)
Steven
Spielberg's Catch Me If You Can (2002)
The
Specialist (1994)
Martin
Scorsese's
Gangs Of New York (2002)
Fair Game (1995)
The
Long Kiss Goodnight (1996)
A
Life Less Ordinary (1996)
Martin
Scorsese's
TheAviator (2004)
Tomorrow
Never Dies (1997)
Sam
Mendes's Revolutionary Road (2008)
Martin
Scorsese's
Shutter Island (2009)
Christopher
Nolan's Inception
(2010)
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