Frannie Avery
Meg Ryan
Frannie Avery

“Everything you know about desire is dead wrong.”
A New York City writing professor, Frannie Avery, has an affair with a police detective who is investigating the murder of a beautiful young woman in her neighborhood.
Theatrical Trailer
Frannie Avery
Meg Ryan
Frannie Avery
Giovanni A. Malloy
Mark Ruffalo
Giovanni A. Malloy
Pauline
Jennifer Jason Leigh
Pauline
Detective Rodriguez
Nick Damici
Detective Rodriguez
Cornelius Webb
Sharrieff Pugh
Cornelius Webb
Angela Sands
Heather Litteer
Angela Sands
Frannie's Young Father
Michael Nuccio
Frannie's Young Father
Young Father's Fiancee
Allison Nega
Young Father's Fiancee
Attentive Husband
Dominick Aries
Attentive Husband
Perfect Wife
Susan Gardner
Perfect Wife
Luther Wilker Red Turtle Bartender
Daniel T. Booth
Luther Wilker Red Turtle Bartender
Frannie's Student
Yaani King Mondschein
Frannie's Student
When a young woman is murdered in New York, one of the investigating police officers encounters local teacher “Frannie” (Meg Ryan) in whose garden the body was found and whilst investigating the crime, “Molloy” (Mark Ruffalo) and she start to have an affair. It’s a sexually-charged arrangement but the more she sees him, the more she begins to suspect that his belief in there being a serial killer is correct, but might it actually be “Molloy” who is up to no good? It’s creepily shot and paced, but I’m afraid that a couple of nude scenes and some explicitly dirty chatter don’t really do anywhere near enough to make this film stand out. The plot is derivative; the denouement rushed and aside from Ryan more erotically reprising her famous diner scene from “When Harry…” (1989) there really isn’t a thing memorable about this film at all. Perhaps the more graphic A-lister sex scenes caused more of a stir in the USA, but for those of us brought up on European detective yarns, some brutal serial killing intermingled with some shagging isn’t anything new, innovative or especially compelling to watch. It does look good, but it’s not a very memorable or scary exercise otherwise.
Read full reviewPress Conference (2003) | TIFF REWIND
Mark Kermode reviews In the Cut (2003) | BFI Player
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