True Crime (1996 film)

This article is about the 1996 direct-to-video film starring Alicia Silverstone. For other uses, see True Crime.
True Crime
Directed by Pat Verducci
Produced by Jonathan Furie
Andrew Hersh
Written by Pat Verducci
Starring Alicia Silverstone
Kevin Dillon
Bill Nunn
Marla Sokoloff
Music by Blake Leyh
Cinematography Chris Squires
Edited by Gib Jaffe
Distributed by Trimark Pictures
Release dates
  • March 12, 1996 (1996-03-12)
Running time
94 minutes
Country United States
Language English

True Crime is a 1996 film that was directed and written by Pat Verducci. It starred Alicia Silverstone and Kevin Dillon.

Synopsis

Mary Giordano (Alicia Silverstone) is a bright, intelligent student who attends a Catholic school in an unnamed American city. She is addicted to mystery novels and detective magazines, hence the title of the movie; this inspires her to do her own detective work, as she has aspirations of becoming a police officer herself. When she starts snooping around on the case of murdered teenage girls, it gets her into difficulty with her mentor, Detective Jerry Guinn (Bill Nunn). Mary teams up with police cadet Tony Campbell (Kevin Dillon) to investigate, and as the two work together to find the murderer, they seem to have feelings for one another. But the closer Mary gets to solving the murder, the greater the danger of being the next victim to which she exposes herself.

Ultimately, "Campbell" is revealed to be using an alias; his real name proves to be Daniel Henry Moffat, and he proves to be the culprit in the murders. The last scene of the film shows Mary pulling on an eight-sided visored cap, obviously part of a police uniform, as she has achieved her ambition and actually become a cop, evidently as a reward for not only having solved the case of the murdered teens but also having saved the internal-affairs unit of the city's police department from the possibility of having to deal with a major corruption scandal years down the line.

Cast

Production

The film was produced on location at John Marshall High School in Los Angeles, California.

Other titles for this film are Dangerous Kiss and True Detective. As stated above, it was released directly to video instead of in theaters.

External links

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