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Storyline
A love story and murder mystery based on the most notorious unsolved murder case in New York history. The original screenplay uses newly discovered facts, court records and speculation as the foundation for a story of family, obsession, love and loss. Written by
Official Synopsis
Plot Summary
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Taglines:
The Perfect Love Story. Until It Became The Perfect Crime.
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Details
Release Date:
9 December 2010 (Greece)
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Also Known As:
Crimen en familia
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Box Office
Opening Weekend:
$37,172
(USA)
(3 December 2010)
Gross:
$578,382
(USA)
(1 April 2011)
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Company Credits
Technical Specs
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1
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Did You Know?
Trivia
The film's plot is loosely based on the real life case of Robert Durst and the disappearance of his wife Kathleen McCormack in 1982
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Goofs
In a nightclub scene that takes place circa 1972, Janice Marie Johnson's version of the song Boogie Oogie Oogie plays. This song didn't come out until 2001.
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Quotes
Richard Panatierre:
[
first lines]
Richard Panatierre:
For the record, tell the ladies and gentlemen of the jury your name.
David Marks:
I'm David Marks.
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Crazy Credits
Lebroz Ariel James Playing John The Lonely Pimp! Arrested by the 1970's N.Y.P.D.
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Soundtracks
Lovin' The Sin
Written by Terry Campbell and Judith Leroux
Performed by Terry Campbell
Courtesy of Kid Gloves Music
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Some movies are bad. You get to the end and you wonder why you bothered watching them. And then some movies are painful. "All Good Things" falls into the "painful" category. Was this a story that deserved to be told? It's based on the story of Robert Durst (whose name is changed in the movie to David Marks, played by Ryan Gosling.) The details (as far as they're known) of Durst's life are fairly well presented. The story revolves around the troubled relationship David has with his real estate mogul family, and with his deteriorating relationship with his wife Kathleen, played by Kirsten Dunst. Eventually Kathleen disappears, and to this day no one knows what happened to her.
The movie clears nothing up (which is forgivable, since it is an unsolved case.) It revolves around testimony David gave in his trial for killing someone else, which is the somewhat cliché means by which the movie unfolds. The problem with it is that it starts out uninteresting from the very beginning, becomes downright boring quite quickly, and enters the realm of the truly bizarre in the last 45 minutes or so. The story doesn't flow well, and the pieces don't seem to fit together. The story seemed to move in a sort of A to E to M to X direction, with the viewer not really being sure what the connecting points were, and in the end it left me completely unsatisfied.
To be frank, this was a waste of time. (1/10)