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In 1994, the term ‘straight to TV movie’ was used mostly as an insult. So when a small film called The Last Seduction premiered on HBO, nobody expected much. But those who caught it were floored by a darkly comic noir thriller with a knockout performance from Linda Fiorentino as Bridget Gregory. Bridget is a smart-talking New Yorker who hits ‘cow country’ with a suitcase of cash her husband Clay (Bill Pullman) had acquired in a drug deal. Advised to lie low for a while, Bridget shacks up with smitten local Mike (Peter Berg) and uses him to enact a devious plan. Directed by John Dahl and written by Steve Barancik, The Last Seduction is bitterly funny and deliciously clever – the razor-sharp dialogue is loaded with one-liners. It’s also sexy in a way that appeals to both women and men. With its manipulative femme fatale, it touches on similar themes to the big-budget Basic Instinct – but many believe it does it much better.
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Thanks to a rapid cult following, The Last Seduction made it into cinemas, and onto many a video, then DVD, then Blu Ray shelf, including my own. It was listed as one of ‘the greatest crime films of all time‘. It’s been analysed in books, essays and think pieces – one or two of them written by me. Its critical consensus is 94% positive on reviews aggregator sites. And yet, it’s still a cult film rather than a mainstream hit – and one with a suitably troubled past.