Details

Movie Description Oliver Stone's over-the-top satire on America's worshipful fascination with tabloid criminals stars Woody Harrelson as Mickey Knox and Juliette Lewis as girlfriend-wife Mallory Wilson. Commencing with the dual murder of Mallory's sexually abusive father (Rodney Dangerfield) and grossly negligent mother (Edie McClurg), the anomic couple take off on a three-week killing spree across the country, telling everyone who they are so that they get the credit for their crimes. The media are immediately enthralled with the couple, especially Wayne Gale (Robert Downey Jr.), the bloodthirsty host of a tabloid TV show who follows their every move. By the time they're finally arrested, they've become such huge media stars that the cops treat them more like celebrities than criminals. Even the maniacal limelight-hogging warden of the Batongaville State Prison, Dwight McClusky (Tommy Lee Jones), is in awe. Stone pulls out all the stops in the prison riot, as the unwitting Gale becomes an unwilling participant in his own broadcast of the event. Again the director switches from film to video, from color to black and white, from sitcom parody to newsreel parody, and from one film stock to another, hoping to jar the audience out of its complacency with visual hyperbole.
Synopsis Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis star as Mickey Knox and Mallory Wilson, two young, attractive mass murderers in love in Oliver Stone's wild-eyed satire on the American fascination with criminals. After killing Mallory's loathsome parents, the pair perform a ritual "marriage" and take off on a "honeymoon" killing spree that wipes out 52 people. Bloodthirsty tabloid reporter Wayne Gale (Robert Downey Jr.) reports their every move to an adoring public while warden Dwight McClusky (Tommy Lee Jones) is only too eager to welcome such celebrities to his prison.
Industry Reviews Ranked #1 in Entertainment Weekly's "10 Favorite Films of the '90s" -- "...Fevered genius....[A] hypnotic, revolutionary head trip..." Entertainment Weekly - p.159 - Owen Gleiberman (04/01/2000)
"...The movie is a technical marvel, stunningly photographed..." Rolling Stone - p.83-7 - Peter Travers (09/08/1994)
"...Stone's vision is impassioned, alarming, visually inventive, characteristically overpowering..." New York Times - p.C1 - Janet Maslin (08/26/1994)
"...[A] brilliantly outrageous film..." Film Comment - p.80-1 - Harlan Kennedy (11/01/1994)
"...[Harrelson and Lewis are] superb at exaggerating the archetypes of cool psychopathology..." Sight and Sound - p.44-5 - Nick James (03/01/1995)
"...NATURAL BORN KILLERS is like a slap in the face, waking us up to what's happening..." Chicago Sun-Times - Roger Ebert (08/26/1994)
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