Movie Background
Movie Poster

Black Widow

Federal agent Alexandra Barnes suspects Catherine Petersen of being a serial killer who marries affluent men and then murders them for their fortune. Yet Catherine appears to be a master of disguise, wielding multiple identities, making conventional investigative methods insufficient to secure proof. With no other option, Barnes goes undercover, pursuing the same man Catherine targets, hoping that Catherine will slip up and reveal her true identity.

Director(s)

Bob Rafelson

Cast & Crew

Diane Ladd

Diane Ladd

Etta

Rick Shuster

Rick Shuster

-

Leo Rossi

Leo Rossi

Ricci

David Mamet

David Mamet

-

Christian Clemenson

Christian Clemenson

Artie

Rutanya Alda

Rutanya Alda

Irene

Al Cerullo

Al Cerullo

-

James Hong

James Hong

H. Shin

Danny Kamekona

Danny Kamekona

Detective

Brian Haley

Brian Haley

Seattle Cop (uncredited)

Dennis Hopper

Dennis Hopper

Ben Dumers

Arsenio Trinidad

Arsenio Trinidad

Tran

D.W. Moffett

D.W. Moffett

Michael

Terry O'Quinn

Terry O'Quinn

Bruce

Theresa Russell

Theresa Russell

Catharine Petersen

Thomas Hill

Thomas Hill

Attorney

Mary Woronov

Mary Woronov

Shelley

Raleigh Bond

Raleigh Bond

Martin

Bob Rafelson

Bob Rafelson

-

Debra Winger

Debra Winger

Alexandra "Alex" Barnes

Johnny "Sugarbear" Willis

Johnny "Sugarbear" Willis

James

Sami Frey

Sami Frey

Paul Nuytten

Lois Smith

Lois Smith

Sara

Nicol Williamson

Nicol Williamson

William McCrory

Kate Hall

Kate Hall

Young Girl

Mick Muldoon

Mick Muldoon

Doorman

Wayne Heffley

Wayne Heffley

Etta's Husband

Allen Nause

Allen Nause

Clerk

Donegan Smith

Donegan Smith

Reporter

Darrah Meeley

Darrah Meeley

Dawn

George Ricord

George Ricord

Italian Man

Richard Arnold

Richard Arnold

Doctor

Bea Kiyohara

Bea Kiyohara

Clerk

Chris S. Ducey

Chris S. Ducey

Poker Player

Tee Dennard

Tee Dennard

Sid

Gene Callahan

Gene Callahan

-

Juleen Murray

Juleen Murray

Attendant

Ed Pang

Ed Pang

Waiter

Denise Hewitt

Denise Hewitt

Stewardess (as Denise Dennison)

Robert J. Peters

Robert J. Peters

Steward

David Kasparian

David Kasparian

Limo Driver

Details

GenresThriller
Runtime1h 42 mins
Released on06 Feb 1987
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
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Reviews

kevin2019

10/10

"Black Widow" belongs in the category which seems to be attempting to recapture and recreate the classic film noir of the 1940's (this impression is subtly reinforced here by Michael Small's suitably evocative musical score). We first had "The Postman Always Rings Twice" (1981) and then this was followed by the explicit - and subsequently divisive - sexuality of "Body Heat" (1981), but it is "Black Widow" which successfully comes the closest to achieving the incomparable quality to be found in that glorious by-gone cinematic era. It is a wholly compelling and extremely well constructed film which features some beautiful locations (especially those in exqusite Hawaii) that are absolutely breathtaking (replete as they are with even an impressive volcano eruption at one point) and some gorgeously photographed underwater sequences which must surely be every travel agent's ultimate dream.

John Chard

7/10

The female of the species is more deadly than the male. Black Widow is directed by Bob Rafelson and written by Ronald Bass. It stars Debra Winger and Theresa Russell. Music is by Michael Small and cinematography by Conrad L. Hall. Two women. Catherine marries men for their money, then murders them. The other, Alexandra Barnes is on her tail, getting in close to hopefully expose her crimes... Rafelson's neo-noir homages the film noir femme fatales of the 40s and 50s with a high degree of success. There's much potency in the screenplay that puts it firmly in the noir universe. Flip flopping the misogyny angles of yesteryear, pic pitches the ultimate femme fatale destroyer of men into a cat and mouse scenario with a sexually repressed opponent - or is she a jealous but secret admirer? The transformation of Winger's dowdy Justice Department Agent into a blossoming lady at Catherine Black Widow's (Russell super sexy and sensuous) side brings in the doppelgänger effect, a good old noir staple. The sexual tension is a constant, particularly when Paul Nuytten (Sami Frey) is brought into proceedings, something which shifts the piece still further into noirville. There's also other characters straight out of film noir. Be it Alexandra's boss (the always reliable Terry O'Quinn), who's a lech harbouring desires for Alex, or sleazy Private Investigator H Shin (James Hong) who has a needle habit, it's clear that Rafelson and Bass know their noir. Unfortunately most of the play is in daylight, meaning missed opportunities for some psychological shadow play is passed up. Though it should be noted that Hall's photography is slick and tonally in tune, especially when lighting scenes involving Russell as prime focus. It all builds to a splendid finale, the makers pulling us both ways as to where it will lead. Sure, some of the plot devices are weak, but in the main this is sexy, intriguing and tricksy in narrative, whilst tech credits stay at the higher end of the scale. 7/10

All Trailers

Black Widow 1987 trailer
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