De Palma's operation is one of (film history) memory reconstruction and transference
Sisters (1973)
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Reviews Counted:23
Fresh:19
Rotten:4
Average Rating:6.9/10
Runtime: 1 hr 33 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
Synopsis: Director Brian De Palma made a name for himself with this twisty shocker starring a pre-SUPERMAN Margot Kidder as the mysterious Danielle. A French-Canadian model, Danielle may be covering up a... Director Brian De Palma made a name for himself with this twisty shocker starring a pre-SUPERMAN Margot Kidder as the mysterious Danielle. A French-Canadian model, Danielle may be covering up a murder to protect her recently separated homicidal Siamese twin--or maybe not. Plucky female reporter Grace Collier (Jennifer Salt) witnessed the killing from her apartment window but can't convince some clueless cops to investigate, so she hires a private detective (Charles Durning) to help her solve the case. Eventually she winds up at a mysterious sanitarium in the clutches of Danielle's creepy psychiatrist husband, Emil (William Finley), and begins to unravel the shocking truth. Scary, funny, clever, and firmly rooted in a Hitchcockian universe, SISTERS set the tone for many of De Palma's future works, including DRESSED TO KILL and RAISING CAIN. Bernard Herrmann's score even recalls his work on PSYCHO--only this time he's spruced things up with bizarre electronic effects. However, not all of De Palma's work pays debt to the master of suspense. An innovative use of split-screen techniques to heighten the suspense is distinctly his own, as is a memorably twisted black-and-white hallucination sequence. [More]
Starring: Margot Kidder, Jennifer Salt, Charles Durning, Barnard Hughes
Starring: Margot Kidder, Jennifer Salt, Charles Durning, Barnard Hughes, Bill Finley, Lisle Wilson, Dolph Sweet
Director: Brian De Palma
Director: Brian De Palma
Producer: Edward R. Pressman
Screenwriter: Louisa Rose
Composer: Bernard Herrmann
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Reviews for Sisters
A spooky and thematically rich thriller, one that explores the psyche (with an evils-of-racism subtext) without drifting into heavy-handedness.
A dead end -- the mark of a superficial stylist unable to take anything seriously, including his own work.
A bland, lifeless affair full of idiotic and irritatingly stupid logical gaps.
Sisters is pretty close to being director Brian De Palma's signature film.
There is much early evidence of [De Palma's] rampant misogyny, his increasingly blatant stealings from Hitchcock, and most unforgivable of all, his clear distaste for the people he creates.
Just the thing to see on one of those nights when you want to go to the movies for the old-fashioned fun of it.
An undeniably tight homage to Hitchcock, but I'm still inclined to place it at least a tier below the likes of Dressed to Kill and Body Double.
It's the first Hitchcock homage that Brian De Palma directed, and it’s a doozy.
It's all about technique, and if you like the technique he's using, you'll like the film.
Latest News for Sisters
April 13, 2006:
Newcomer Takes a Stab at a "Sisters" Remake
One of Brian De Palma's earliest (and most effective) creepers was 1973's Sisters (which starred Margot Kidder, Jennifer Salt, and Charles Durning), a flick which now seems... More...
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