Color of Night

    Color of Night
    1994

    Synopsis

    A color-blind psychiatrist is stalked by an unknown killer after taking over his murdered friend's therapy group and becomes embroiled in an intense affair with a mysterious woman who may be connected to the crime.

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    Cast

    • Bruce WillisCapa
    • Jane MarchRose
    • Rubén BladesHector
    • Lesley Ann WarrenSondra
    • Scott BakulaDr. Bob
    • Brad DourifClark
    • Lance HenriksenBuck
    • Kevin J. O'ConnorCasey
    • Andrew LoweryDale
    • Eriq La SalleAnderson

    Recommendations

    • 67

      Entertainment Weekly

      Possible unmet expectations aside, Color of Night remains compelling for a number of reasons. Foremost among them is Bruce Willis, who gives a quietly persuasive performance.
    • 40

      TV Guide Magazine

      [A] sleazy, generally embarrassing Hitchcock knock-off.
    • 40

      The New York Times

      The enthusiastically nutty Color of Night has the single-mindedness of a bad dream, and about as much reliance on everyday logic.
    • 40

      Empire

      A film that isn't so much bad as bizarre with Willis disastrously miscast as a gun-hating trauma victim and the kind of ending that even the writers of Scooby Doo wouldn't dare contemplate.
    • 40

      Austin Chronicle

      Color of Night is yet another in a string of vapid, low-tension headaches passing for suspense thrillers (Fatal Attraction, Jennifer 8, Single White Female) that tries to go everywhere and, instead, goes nowhere. At all.
    • 40

      Orlando Sentinel

      Color me dissatisfied with Color of Night. For starters, it's a murder mystery with a really obvious solution. How obvious? It's so embarrassingly obvious that even I figured it out - and I can never figure these things out.
    • 38

      Chicago Sun-Times

      Color of Night approaches badness from so many directions that one really must admire its imagination. Combining all the worst ingredients of an Agatha Christie whodunit and a sex-crazed slasher film, it ends in a frenzy of recycled thriller elements, with a chase scene, a showdown in an echoing warehouse, and not one but two cliches from Ebert's Little Movie Glossary: The Talking Killer and the Climbing Villain.
    • 30

      Washington Post

      A convoluted psychosexual thriller that promises the moon and gives us Bruce's butt.

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