Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Diamond Skulls

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Music by
  
Hans Zimmer

Edited by
  
Rodney Holland

Director
  
Nick Broomfield

Produced by
  
Tim Bevan

4.8/10
IMDb

Directed by
  
Nick Broomfield

Cinematography
  
Michael Coulter

Initial release
  
September 1989

Music director
  
Hans Zimmer

Written by
  
Nick Broomfield

Diamond Skulls httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb4

Starring
  
Gabriel Byrne Amanda Donohoe Michael Hordern Judy Parfitt

Release date
  
Sept 1989 (London Film Festival)

Cast
  
Amanda Donohoe, Gabriel Byrne, Sadie Frost, Judy Parfitt, Michael Hordern

Similar
  
Gabriel Byrne movies, Guilt movies, Dramas

Diamond skulls theme hans zimmer


Diamond Skulls (also known as Dark Obsession) is a British 1989 thriller directed by Nick Broomfield who also co-wrote with Tim Rose-Price. An established documentary filmmaker, this is Broomfield's first work of fiction.It is produced by Tim Bevan and Jane Fraser and stars Amanda Donohoe, Gabriel Byrne and Struan Rodger and has a music score by Hans Zimmer.It includes the last film performance of Ian Carmichael.

Contents

Plot

Lord Hugo Bruckton is a young Englishman who is the heir to a vast fortune. He is married to Ginny, who seems devoted and loyal to him, and they have a young son. But Hugo is haunted by jealousy, for he imagines Ginny in the arms of a colleague. He begins to spy on her and goes into a rage over her suspected infidelity. One night, after a social gathering with members of his old British Army regiment, Hugo and his friends go out for a drive. He accidentally runs over a woman, who dies at the scene. All but one of his friends urge Hugo to drive on. In his drunk state of mind, Hugo had imagined himself running over Ginny. Over the next few days, a psychological war ensues. Peter, Hugo's business associate, wants to use the cover-up to leverage power over the estate. Jamie, who's dating Hugo's sister, wants to go to the police to report it. Hugo's family closes ranks as Ginny and the rest side with Hugo, who fears that his arrest and imprisonment will ruin the family's reputation. As the police investigation closes in on Hugo, the power struggle leads to deadly consequences. At the end, Hugo and Peter murder Jamie and arrange it up to look like a suicide--that it had been Jamie driving the car that killed the woman, and he had killed himself out of guilt. The police believe the story and close the case, and the amoral Hugo gets away with everything as he continues his unwholesome life undisturbed.

Rating

Diamond Skulls received an NC-17 rating upon its release in the United States during June 1991.

Reception

Diamond Skulls received generally mixed reviews: the film carried an 80% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes in 2010 but it has now slipped to 36% from 11 critic's reviews, with no consensus. The film was given two thumbs up by Siskel & Ebert.

In the New York Times review Diamond Skulls; Aristocracy When It Thinks No One is Looking, Janet Maslin considered that "rarely does a documentary film maker make the transition to fiction as adroitly as Nicholas Broomfield has in Dark Obsession, a psychological thriller displaying a documentarian's fascination for small,telling details." Maslin praised "an eerie score by Hans Zimmer, a chilling performance by Struan Rodger as Sir Hugo's cold blooded business associate and the unremarked upon inclusion of many odd bits of traditionalism that have presumably made men like Sir Hugo what they are".

References

Diamond Skulls Wikipedia