Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde

Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde
Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde DVD Cover Art
Directed by David Price
Produced by Jerry Leider
Robert Shapiro
Frank K. Isaac (Co-producer)
Written by David Price (story and screenplay)
Tim John
Oliver Butcher (screenplay)
Starring
Music by Mark McKenzie
Cinematography Tom Priestley Jr.
Edited by Tony Lombardo
Production
company
Rastar
Distributed by Savoy Pictures (USA)
Rank Organisation (International)
Release date
  • August 25, 1995 (1995-08-25)
Running time
90 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Canada
United States
Language English
Budget $8 million
Box office $3,039,634 (USA and UK)

Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde is a 1995 British-Canadian-American comedy film starring Tim Daly, Sean Young and Lysette Anthony. The film is based on Robert Louis Stevenson's classic horror novel Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The story takes place in modern times and concerns a bumbling chemist who tampers with his great-grandfather's formula, accidentally transforming himself into a beautiful businesswoman who is hellbent on taking over his life.

Plot

Richard Jacks (Tim Daly) is a perfumer working at a major fragrance company. His projects have failed and the chief executive, Mrs. Unterveldt (Polly Bergen), is thinking of replacing him with a woman. After his great-grandfather dies, Jacks attends the will reading. He receives nothing but notes from scientific experiments. He discovers that his ancestor was Dr. Henry Jekyll. He decides to add more estrogen to the mixture in the hope that it will prove less dangerous.

Monitoring his vital stats after ingesting the formula, he gives up and attends a job interview. Although everything appears normal at first, his voice begins to crack, his nails grow longer and the hairs on his arms recede into his skin. Jacks then feels a strange sensation in his groin area and watches in horror as his manhood disappears. Jacks tries to leave, but starts to develop breasts. Embarrassed, Jacks flees back to the lab. Back in his office, the final stages of the transformation into a woman take place. The new female alter-ego names herself Helen Hyde (Sean Young) and introduces herself as Jacks's new assistant. Helen rewrites his reports, is kind to his secretary, flirts with his superiors, Yves Dubois (Harvey Feinstein) and Oliver Mintz (Stephen Tobolowsky) and rewards herself with a shopping spree. Later, Helen meets and befriends Jacks' fiancee, Sarah (Lysette Anthony), and convinces her to move out of Jacks' apartment just so she can have it for herself.

The next day, after several comments from colleagues, Jacks realizes that Helen was real but is unable to access any of her memories. Nonetheless, he feels invigorated and invites Sarah to his place for a romantic meal. Everything appears to be going well until he realizes he is again transforming into Helen, causing Sarah to flee. Hyde becomes resentful at having to share a body. She disfigures one of Richard's colleagues, Pete (Jeremy Piven), and steals his ideas. She even attempts to seduce Oliver. Just when Hyde is about to have sex with him, she starts changing back into Jacks and hides in the bathroom and escapes via a nearby window. Due to her flirting with Oliver, Hyde is named Jacks' superior at work. To stop her, Jacks handcuffs himself to the bed, only to be horrified as Sarah walks in and finds his closet to be full of lingerie. This leads Sarah to believe that he and Hyde are having an affair.

Hyde then has a private meeting with Dubois and Mintz presenting "Indulge", the perfume she stole from Jacks. It is during this meeting that she fondles the crotches of BOTH MEN with her hosed feet SIMULTANEOUSLY under the table, in order to persuade them. She then sleeps with Dubois shortly after he confronts her about her false resume. Hyde then warns Jacks via video of her intentions to take over completely. Jacks realizes that he is actually starting to spend more time as Hyde than himself. He tries to humiliate Hyde in front of her superiors by stripping naked and writing obscenities all over his body, hoping that they will walk in on her after she takes over. Hyde manages to outsmart him by delaying the change, causing his plan to backfire and Jacks to be fired.

Sarah is finally convinced by seeing CCTV footage from the initial transformation. Jacks comes up with a formula that would effectively destroy the Hyde part of himself, but he must consume it as Hyde within a certain time frame. After he transforms, Sarah attempts to inject her with the formula but fails—injecting only about 20% of it, causing random body parts to spontaneously transform between male and female. A fire breaks out in the apartment and Hyde escapes.

At the launch of "Indulge", the perfume she stole from Richard, (the same one that Mintz and Dubois sniffed as she fondled them with her feet), Hyde steals a guest's dress. As she mingles, the effects of the formula cause her to temporarily grow stubble; her breasts also disappear and reappear. Sarah, who sneaked into the party, hides in a podium and waits until the promotion video starts before injecting the rest of the formula into Hyde, who begins transforming back into Jacks for good. A relieved Jacks realizes it's over but sees that he's now standing in a room full of colleagues wearing a dress. He makes a speech about the only way he could understand a woman was to become one. He then is offered a promotion as well as a vacation, which he accepts. As he removes the undergarments he comments "Helen and her damn thongs" before heading out with Sarah.

Cast

  • Tim Daly as Dr. Richard Jacks whose only wish is to make a scientific breakthrough that will change his life for the better.
  • Sean Young as Helen Hyde, a nymphomaniac seductress with a quest for power. (Young performs the first-ever two-way footsie (foot-in-crotch) scene in cinema history in this film)
  • Lysette Anthony as Sarah Carver, Jacks's devoted girlfriend.
  • Stephen Tobolowsky as Oliver Mintz, Jacks's supervisor.
  • Harvey Fierstein as Yves DuBois, a marketing mogul.
  • Thea Vidale as Valerie, Jacks's overworked and disgruntled secretary.
  • Jeremy Piven as Pete Walston, Jacks's colleague.
  • Polly Bergen as Mrs. Unterveldt, the company's CEO.

Reception

The film received a 14% "rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

The film was nominated for three Razzie Awards including Worst Actress for Sean Young, Worst Remake or Sequel and Worst Screen Couple for Daly and Young.

"At an age when she should be hitting her stride," wrote film critic Mick LaSalle, "she is already parodying herself -- parodying her public image, of all things, not her screen image...It's just possible that schlock is Young's natural element and roles like this her true calling".[1] Hugo Davenport in the Daily Telegraph said, "Apart from being a travesty of Stevenson, it is so crass, witless and misogynistic that it makes "Confessions of a Window Cleaner" look like Dostoevsky".[2]

A review from The Austin Chronicle summarized the film by saying, "Overall, this PG-13 bore is neither crass enough nor intelligent enough to hold anyone's attention."[3]

Home Media

After its theatrical run, HBO released the film onto VHS and Laserdisc. It was released on DVD in 2004.

See also

Notes

  1. LaSalle, Mick (September 1995). "Young is a Horror as 'Ms Hyde'". San Francisco Chronicle.
  2. Quoted at .
  3. O' Bryan, Joey (September 1, 1995). Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde. The Austin Chronicle.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.