Faithful (1996 film)


Faithful is a 1996 American comedy crime drama film directed by Paul Mazursky and starring Cher, Chazz Palminteri and Ryan O'Neal. Palminteri wrote the screenplay, which is an adaptation of his stage play of the same name. Faithful tells the story of a woman, her husband and a hit man. The film was entered into the 46th Berlin International Film Festival.

Plot

On her twentieth wedding anniversary, Maggie receives a diamond necklace and a price on her head; both from her husband, Jack. While waiting for the signal, all the way from Connecticut, to do the murder, the hitman Tony starts bonding with Maggie instead. Later, Jack shows up himself, complicating the entire situation.

Cast

The film was received poorly at the box office, grossing just $2,104,439. It was a huge drop compared to Cher's previous starring role, Mermaids, which grossed $35,419,397 in 1990. The film's opening weekend of just $967,956 would end as 46% of the film's total gross. This film was Cher's least successful film of the decade in a starring role.
The film was also widely panned by film critics, earning a 7% "rotten" rating on the website Rotten Tomatoes. Multiple critics remarked that the story had obviously been written for theatre, and had not converted well to the motion picture medium. Writing in Entertainment Weekly, Owen Gleiberman described it as "an awkward hybrid of Deathtrap, Scenes from a Marriage, and a David Mamet barstool rant." The Austin Chronicle gave it one and a half stars, commenting that "The dialogue packs a lot of witty one-liners, yet their power is insufficient to carry this dud.... The comedy never works up enough froth to overcome the movie's implausibility. Palminteri is carving himself a familiar niche as a personifier of tough guys with soft spots, but this chatty hit man is not of this world." Roger Ebert similarly praised the dialogue as clever but felt it was outweighed by the predictable plot and logic holes such as the "kill" signal being two telephone rings. He gave Faithful two and a half stars, summarizing it as "the kind of movie that's diverting while you're watching it, mostly because of the actors' appeal, but it evaporates the moment it's over, because it’s not really about anything. Nothing is at stake, the relationships are not three-dimensional enough for us to care about them, and it's likely that nobody will get killed."