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poster of Thinner
Rating: 5.9/10 by 598 users

Thinner (1996)

An obese lawyer finds himself growing "Thinner" when an old Romani man places a hex on him. Now the lawyer must call upon his friends in organized crime to help him persuade the old man to lift the curse. Time is running out for the desperate lawyer as he draws closer to his own death, and grows ever thinner.

Directing:
  • Tom Holland
  • Michael Green
  • Sean McCarron
  • Tricia Ronten
  • Lisa M. Rowe
  • Vebe Borge
Writing:
  • Stephen King
  • Tom Holland
  • Michael McDowell
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Oct 25, 1996

Rating: 5.9/10 by 598 users

Alternative Title:
La Maldicion Gitana - SV
Maleficio - ES
yaseyuku otoko - JP
Stephen King's Thinner - US

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 32 minutes
Budget: $8,000,000
Revenue: $15,315,484

Plot Keyword: based on novel or book, curse, fat suit
Subtitle   Wallpaper   Watch Trailer    

Lucinda Jenney
Heidi Halleck
Kari Wuhrer
Gina Lempke
John Horton
Judge Cary Rossington
Sam Freed
Dr. Mike Houston
Daniel von Bargen
Chief Duncan Hopley
Joe Mantegna
Richie Ginelli
Elizabeth Franz
Leda Rossington
Walter Bobbie
Kirk Penschley
Bethany Joy Lenz
Linda Halleck
Time Winters
Prosecutor
Howard Erskine
Judge Phillips
Jeffrey Ware
Max Duggenfield
Terrence Kava
Gabe Lempke
Ruth Miller
Billy's Secretary
Irma St. Paule
Suzanne Lempke
Stephen King
Pharmacist
Patrick Farrelly
Henry Halliwell
Bridget Marks
Ginelli Bar Girl
Mitch Greenberg
Male Clinic Doctor
Angela Pietropinto
Female Clinic Doctor
Ed Wheeler
Detective Deevers
Peter Maloney
Biff Quigley
Robert Fitch
Flash Enders
Sean Hewitt
"DR" Fander
Josh Holland
Frank Spurton

Charles Tatum

Stephen King's novel, written under the name Richard Bachman, makes a successful transition to the screen. Billy (Robert John Burke) is a highly successful defense attorney, getting an acquittal for known mobster Richie (Joe Mantegna). He is trying to diet, topping the scales at three hundred pounds. One night while driving home, Heidi (Lucinda Jenney), Billy's wife, begins fooling around in the car with him while he is driving. In the throes of passion, Billy does not see an elderly gypsy woman crossing the street, runs over her, and kills her. The judge and police chief conspire to cover the crime up, and the death is ruled accidental. That does not sit well with the old woman's even older father, Lempke (Michael Constantine), who brushes Billy's cheek and whispers the title of the film. Soon, Billy is dropping three or four pounds a day. He seems to be disappearing before everyone's eyes, but concern sets in. He is eating twelve thousand calories a day, still losing weight, and now Heidi and his doctor (Sam Freed) are spending a little too much time together. Billy decides to track down the gypsies, especially after hearing and witnessing others in on the conspiracy were cursed as well, and he mistakenly enlists Richie to help him. Greg Cannom's special effects make-up is phenomenal. He has won Oscars in the past, and he should have won again for this film. Burke is totally believable going from 300 to 124 pounds in the span of the story. It helps that Burke's performance is as flawless as his make-up. He does not let all that latex and rubber get in the way, and goes from sympathetic to slightly deranged rather well. Jenney is also good as Heidi, although her character is often relegated to the "supportive wife" routine. The first hour of the film is very suspenseful. Billy is chasing the gypsies, and the authorities are chasing him. However, the film's biggest flaw was also the novel's biggest flaw- letting the convenient mob friend Richie help get revenge on the gypsies. Mantegna is one of those great actors who never receives his just credit, but here his character is just a caricature of mob types Mantegna has played before especially on "The Simpsons"- try listening to Mantegna and not hearing Fat Tony. Holland's direction keeps things fresh, he shockingly shot this on location in Maine instead of fleeing to Canada like most Hollywood films, but the screenplay feels rushed most of the time. I wonder if this would have made a more effective transition to mini-series form, something King has done before. I was surprised by "Thinner." Considering what some film makers have done to King's work, it is a better adaptation when put in that context. Strongly anchored by believable make-up and gore effects, and a fantastic central performance, I recommend it.


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