El cabo del miedo backdrop
El cabo del miedo poster

EL CABO DEL MIEDO

Cape Fear

1991 US HMDB
noviembre 13, 1991

Los Bowden son una pareja feliz: Sam es un abogado de éxito y Leig diseñadora gráfica. Tienen una hija de 15 años, Danielle, y acaban de trasladarse a una preciosa casa en una tranquila ciudad. Max Cady acaba de salir de la cárcel, trás pasar en ella 14 años, acusado de violar y apalear a una adolescente. En prisión ha estudiado leyes, y ha llegado a la conclusión de que el responsable directo de su condena fue su abogado, Sam Bowden. Ahora va a dedicar cada minuto de su existencia a hacerle pagar su error. Candy ejecutará su terrible venganza, aterrorizando a la familia Bowden y convirtiendo su vida en una pesadilla.

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Equipo

Produccion: Frank Marshall (Executive Producer)Barbara De Fina (Producer)Kathleen Kennedy (Executive Producer)
Guion: Wesley Strick (Screenplay)
Musica: Bernard Herrmann (Original Music Composer)Elmer Bernstein (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Freddie Francis (Director of Photography)

RESEÑAS (1)

Andrea Costantini
Max Cady, un hombre violento y muy peligroso, acaba de salir de la cárcel después de cumplir dieciséis años por violación y se traslada a la ciudad donde vive su antiguo abogado Sam Bowden y toda su familia. Inicialmente intenta entablar amistad con el abogado, pero en realidad sus intenciones van mucho más allá de la amistad. Está convencido de que el abogado no lo defendió adecuadamente durante el juicio, sino que omitió voluntariamente detalles sobre su caso para hacer que terminara entre rejas. Con el odio en la sangre, Cady planea un diabólico plan para atormentar a Sam y su familia. Empecemos por el principio. Corría el año 1962 cuando Lee Thompson, director de la película "Los cañones de Navarone", basado en el libro "The Executioners" de John McDonalds, dirigió a dos monstruos sagrados del cine mundial como Robert Mitchum y Gregory Peck, intérpretes tan poderosos que no pueden dejar de materializarse ante los ojos cuando se pronuncia la palabra "Actor". La película era "El promontorio del miedo", aún hoy un gran ejemplo de cine de tensión. Treinta años más tarde, un pilar fundamental del cine moderno, quizás el más grande director en vida actualmente, autor de obras maestras absolutas como "Taxi Driver" y "Quei bravi ragazzi", retoma la historia del criminal Max Cady y del abogado perseguido Sam Bowden. Efectivamente, Martin Scorsese se enfrenta a su primer remake, adaptando las vicisitudes originalmente narradas por Thompson y las hace suyas, gracias al inconfundible estilo que lo ha hecho famoso. Primeros planos, montaje rápido alternado con planos secuencia, carretillas rápidas y un elenco que hace lo posible por eclipsar la película anterior. Todo esto es "Cape Fear", "El promontorio del miedo" versión años noventa. Se hablaba del elenco, por lo que parece apropiado comenzar con las presentaciones: los cónyuges Bowden son interpretados por Nick Nolte y Jessica Lange (entonces ya premio Oscar por "Tootsie"), dos actores perfectamente en el papel de la familia atormentada por un error del pasado. Apariciones ilustres también para los intérpretes originales Peck y Mitchum que no podían faltar al carrusel de estrellas de la película. ¿Nos hemos olvidado de alguien? Obviamente sí. El motivo principal por el que "Cape Fear" entra de derecho en la lista de películas que no pueden faltar en la videoteca de un verdadero amante del thriller es, precisamente, la parte restante del elenco que aún no ha sido mencionada: Robert De Niro, que no necesita presentación y la (entonces) semi desconocida Juliette Lewis. Sobre sus hombros, como los del mítico Atlante, descansa el universo de la película. La pareja de actores interpreta respectivamente a un maniaco al límite del demoníaco, una criatura del mal que no tiene reparos en destruir todo lo que es caro al abogado que lo encerró años antes y a una adolescente avergonzada, una niña perdida que acaba de entrar en el mundo real cargada de ganas de trasgredir pero que aún tiene dificultades para entender cuán malvado puede ser. La combinación de estos dos personajes, uno la antítesis del otro, es el combustible para que funcione la película. "Cape Fear", aunque un título de todo respeto, no habría dejado una huella tan profunda si Scorsese hubiera elegido otros protagonistas. El clímax de la película se alcanza en una escena ahora incluida en la antología scorsesiana, en el largo diálogo entre Cady y Danielle en el teatro, una escena estática que tiene una fuerza tal que pega al espectador a la pantalla y alcanza la punta del clímax interpretativo de la pareja de actores, ambos merecidamente nominados al Oscar. Pero no es solo el elenco lo que destaca en la película de Scorsese. Para acompañar el carrusel de estrellas no podía faltar el montaje de Thelma Schoonmaker, fiel colaboradora del director desde los tiempos de "¿Quién llama a mi puerta?", que se convierte inmediatamente en un elemento necesario para el éxito de la película. De hecho, le da a la película un ritmo intenso que acompaña al espectador desde el principio hasta el final sin aburrirlo. Todo esto está sazonado con una banda sonora escalofriante, ahora famosa, otro pilar fundamental de la película. El resto es un bonito ejercicio de estilo, que tiene el defecto de exagerar un poco demasiado en algunas partes, especialmente en el final donde De Niro roza la omnipotencia. Pero quizás todo es una exageración intencionada, comenzando por el cuerpo (exageradamente) tatuado de Max Cady que proclama justicia y su (exagerada) sed de venganza por haber pasado años en la cárcel. Y como Cady dice correctamente en otra escena importante, "¡Yo soy similar a Dios y Dios es similar a mí! ¡Yo soy tan grande como Dios, Él es pequeño como yo! ¡Él no puede estar por encima de mí, ni yo por debajo de Él!" Quizás esto es suficiente para justificar la ampliación del final.
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RESEÑAS DE LA COMUNIDAD (3)

Eky

Meet Max Cady, the most terrific villain role De Niro ever played simply because he successfully portrayed a crook who possesses a very complex personality of being stone-cold, violent, absolutely merciless, also on the other hand quite witty and charismatic to ever lure Danielle Bowden (Juliette Lewis) into his trap when he pretended to be her drama teacher so convincingly. Martin Scorsese’s Cape Fear tells the story of a brutal rapist who waited for so long just to be able to avenge his wrath towards Attorney Sam Bowden (Nick Nolte) for he believed that Bowden could have done much better in defending for his case. This film is well-told with so many suspense elements through some shocking events throughout the film.

Cape Fear is one of the examples of film whose remake, in some ways, considered outwits the original one produced in 1962 starred Robert Mitchum and Gregory Peck. This is quite understandable remembering the remake was filmed many years later, with sufficient advancements in technology and financial supports. In Cape Fear, De Niro managed to portray the chilling Max Cady successfully. He had a best-laid plan to avenge his disappointments/hatred towards Bowden by studying laws in prison just to be able to find the flaws that in the end shall leave him untouchable by the law.

Sometimes it’s amazing to understand how an actor/actress willing to go through for the sake of a role. Robert De Niro paid a dentist $5,000 to make his teeth look suitably bad for the role of Max Cady whereas right after filming, he paid $20,000 to have them fixed. De Niro migh have been spectacular in portraying Cady but we also have to consider how remarkable and superb were Peck and Mitchum.

Filipe Manuel Neto

Filipe Manuel Neto

8 /10

A really very good movie, and proof that there are remakes that are really worth it for their quality and good execution.

I've just seen this movie (which I've actually seen on television, but without paying enough attention to a movie I want to write something about) and once again I was very impressed. The truth is that, without wanting to legitimize the practice, which is often taken to exaggeration, there are remakes that manage to justify themselves, not only for the quality they demonstrate, but also for the gift, not to mention, of drawing the public's attention to the older movies. I can give my personal example: it was the contact with some remakes that made me know that there were older films and go looking for them to be able to see them.

This film maintains, without significant changes, the story told in the older film, which dates from 1962 and was starred by Gregory Peck and Robert Mitchum: very briefly, it is the story of a lawyer who finds himself persecuted and threatened, with his wife and daughter, by a spiteful ex-con who blames him for many years of incarceration. Of course, there are things that change between the two films, and this film has the advantage of not giving us a simple story where a terribly bad man wants to harm a very nice man. Bowden, the lawyer, is a man with a past full of mistakes (much like many of us) who hasn't always been good at his job and his role as a husband and father, and we see that, and the way character is called upon to face the consequences. The sexual theme, which the original film attenuates a lot (due to the restrictions imposed on cinema at the time), is also more pronounced here, transforming Max Cady into an almost perfect pervert.

In addition to the nuances that make the film denser and with a more complex story, we can count on an excellent cast where Robert De Niro steals all the attention, thanks to a powerful, convincing and genuinely menacing interpretation. This film is worth seeing just to savor the actor's performance. Nick Nolte played attorney Sam Bowden, a man who desperately seeks to protect his family. The actor is good and does a good job. Much less interesting, Jessica Lange and Juliette Lewis play the lawyer's wife and daughter in an ambiguous and sometimes very unpleasant way: Lange can still reasonably extricate herself from the challenge she has, but Lewis has turned her character into a kind of teenage nymphet who sees Cady as a terrifying sexual temptation rather than having the discernment and intelligence necessary to at least realize the risk her entire family is running. Also a reminder of the cameos of honor by Gregory Peck, Robert Mitchum and Martin Balsam, three actors who were pivotal in the original film. Incidentally, this film would end up being the last in the life of Peck, who died shortly after.

Martin Scorsese made this film as a means to an end, that is, a way to get the studio to invest in another film he wanted to make. Anyway, and for whatever reason, it was a good bet by the director. The film deserves our attention and is full of merits. The filming work and cinematography are excellent, the sets and costumes too, with an emphasis, of course, on the scenes on the Bowden houseboat. The effects were also well done, although not particularly extraordinary. The central score of this film is the same as its older counterpart, composed by Bernard Herrmann, one of the best and best conceived by the composer, and which is already part of the collective memory.

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

7 /10

"Cady" (Robert De Niro) is released from jail after serving eighteen years for rape. He alights on the doorstep of his erstwhile defending counsel "Bowden" (Nick Nolte) with his cigar and his red sports car and generally starts intimidating the man and his family. Why? Well it turns out that the lawyer had buried some evidence during the trial that may have cast doubt on the voracity of the evidence given by the victim - and so now, "Cady" has revenge in mind. Now I loved the 1962 version of this film - Robert Mitchum is superb - and so I was always a bit sceptical about this remake. No, this honestly isn't a patch on that version, but that's as much to do with it being in colour and with it featuring the really poorly cast Nick Nolte and Jessica Lange. De Niro thrives in his element as the manipulative and genuinely odious character whilst Martin Scorsese allows the tension to increase, the sense of desperation and control to blossom and for a genuine sense of peril to develop. Hats can also go off for a strong effort from Juliette Lewis as the daughter "Danni" - a naive young girl whom "Cady" soon has in his sights. The setting for the denouement is as good as cinema can offer - an houseboat and a rainstorm - and as remakes go, this is not bad at all.

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