A Perfect Murder: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Deleted Scene]]: The original ending was that Emily shoots Steven after finding out what he did. His dying words are that the police would know, so she fakes a struggle, and she ends up committing the perfect murder.
* [[Deleted Scene]]: The original ending was that Emily shoots Steven after finding out what he did. His dying words are that the police would know, so she fakes a struggle, and she ends up committing the perfect murder.
* [[May-December Romance]]: Then 25/26-year-old [[Gywneth Paltrow]], with then 54-year-old [[Michael Douglas]].
* [[May-December Romance]]: Then 25/26-year-old [[Gywneth Paltrow]], with then 54-year-old [[Michael Douglas]].
* [[Modesty Bedsheet]]
* [[Modesty Bedsheet]]{{context}}
* [[Plethora of Mistakes]]
* [[Plethora of Mistakes]]{{context}}
* [[Thanatos Gambit]]
* [[Thanatos Gambit]]{{context}}
* [[Third-Act Stupidity]]
* [[Third-Act Stupidity]]{{context}}
* [[Xanatos Speed Chess]]
* [[Xanatos Speed Chess]]{{context}}


{{Needs More Tropes}}


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Latest revision as of 20:58, 5 October 2020

A Perfect Murder is a 1998 thriller film starring Michael Douglas, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Viggo Mortensen. It's a Remake of the 1954 Hitchcock film Dial M for Murder.

Steven Taylor is a Wall Street hedge fund manager who has risen his way through riches. He has a faithful wife named Emily. However, unknown to him, she isn't a faithful wife as she is having an affair with a poor artist, David Shaw, and plans to leave him.

Upon discovering the affair, Steven confonts David and exposes him as a con-artist after his and Emily's money, but offers to pay him a substantial amount of money anyway....in exchange for killing his wife.

Tropes used in A Perfect Murder include: