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poster of Dead Ringers
Rating: 7.1/10 by 886 users

Dead Ringers (1988)

Elliot, a successful gynecologist, works at the same practice as his identical twin, Beverly. Elliot is attracted to many of his patients and has affairs with them. When he inevitably loses interest, he will give the woman over to Beverly, the meeker of the two, without the woman knowing the difference. Beverly falls hard for one of the patients, Claire, but when she inadvertently deceives him, he slips into a state of madness.

Directing:
  • David Cronenberg
  • Dug Rotstein
  • Izidore K. Musallam
  • John Board
Writing:
  • Jack Geasland
  • David Cronenberg
  • Norman Snider
  • Bari Wood
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Sep 23, 1988

Rating: 7.1/10 by 886 users

Alternative Title:
Inseparables - ES
데드 링거 - KR
Связанные насмерть - RU
Dead Ringers - Die Unzertrennlichen - DE
Dead Ringers - Tödliches Doppelspiel - DE
Tvillingskjebner - NO

Country:
Canada
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 55 minutes
Budget: $13,000,000
Revenue: $8,038,508

Plot Keyword: bondage, based on novel or book, nurse, sadism, obsession, toronto, canada, sadomasochism, twin brother, murder, prostitution, drugs, twins, receptionist, extramarital affair, medical profession, gynecologist, voyeurism, identical twin, romantic

Jeremy Irons
Beverly / Elliot Mantle
Stephen Lack
Wolleck / Anders Wolleck
Miriam Newhouse
Mrs. Bookman
David Hughes
Superintendent
Richard W. Farrell
Dean of Medicine
Warren Davis
Anatomy Class Supervisor
Jane Luk
Lecture-Hall Nurse
David Cronenberg
Obstetrician (uncredited)
Jonathan Haley
Beverly Age 9
Nicholas Haley
Elliot Age 9
Susan Markle
Operating Room Nurse
Murray Cruchley
Assisting Surgeon
Tita Trevisan
Furniture Salesman
Liliane Stillwell
Wardrobe Person
Denise McLeod
Art Gallery Lady
Joe Matheson
Sean / Waiter
Hadley Kay
Delivery Boy
Cynthia Eastman
Sobbing Woman
Nora Colpman
Mrs. Randell
Rena Polley
Soap Opera Character
Madeleine Atkinson
Soap Opera Character
John Bayliss
Performance Double
Graham Evans
Picture Double
Alan Gough
Director (uncredited)
Jordan-Patrick Marcantonio
Twin Boy (uncredited)
Greg Van Riel
Man in Reception (uncredited)

John Chard

I've often thought that there should be beauty contests for the insides of bodies. Dead Ringers is directed by David Cronenberg who also co-adapts the screenplay with Norman Snider from the book "Twins" written by Bari Wood and Jack Geasland. It stars Jeremy Irons and Genevieve Bujold. Music is by Howard Shore and cinematography by Peter Suschitzky. Identical twin gynaecologists Beverly and Elliott Mantle (Irons) run a high end fertility clinic in the city. Both in tune with each in spite of being different personalities, their world starts to fold inwards when Beverly falls in love with drug dependent actress Claire Niveau (Bujold). Inspired by the real life story of gynaecologist twins Cyril and Steve Marcus (who were both found dead from suicide brought about by drug addiction), Dead Ringers is an amalgamation of unsettling horror and icy cold playfulness; in other words a perfect canvas for auteur Cronenberg to paint some of his peccadilloes. Cronenberg doesn't need to be gory, gimmicky or schlocky, he instead utilises the characters on the page to spin a clinical character study. Themes pulsing throughout involve individuality, identity, misogyny, narcissism, eroticism and addiction, all played out in the mystical world of surgery and in-human metaphysics. The tempo never rises above a steady heart beat, rumbling along ominously, until we enter the home straight and the director delivers a devastating yet deeply moving conclusion. Backed by a stunning dual performance from Irons, and a ballsy one from Bujold, Dead Ringers is a film of genuine greatness and a piece of work that's alive with smart ideas. 8.5/10

talisencrw

Sheer brilliance. Deep down, EVERYONE has a love/hate thing about identical twins. On the one side, they wish they had that kind of communion with someone, that sort of magical intimacy they share, having someone basically the exact same as themselves...yet that same one-of-a-kind companionship is scary as hell. I haven't seen, from my fellow Canadian, either 'Scanners' (1981) or 'Naked Lunch' (1991), so I can't honestly say whether or not my assertion can be thus extended, but I dare ANYONE to find in horror a finer run than Cronenberg had, in 'Videodrome', 'The Dead Zone', 'The Fly'...and this, 'Dead Ringers'.

tmdb47633491

David Cronenberg reveals himself to be a total pseud. "Our identities blur together. We are one soul." Give me a break


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