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Basic Instinct 2 (Uncut Version) [DVD]

3.8 out of 5 stars 83 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Sharon Stone, David Morrissey, Charlotte Rampling, David Thewlis, Hugh Dancy
  • Directors: Michael Caton-Jones
  • Producers: Moritz Borman, Mario Kassar, Joel B. Michaels, Andrew Vajna, Leora Barish
  • Format: PAL
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Entertainment in Video
  • DVD Release Date: 7 Aug. 2006
  • Run Time: 111 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (83 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000FDK69M
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 17,323 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

Long-awaited sequel to the popular 1992 thriller starring Sharon Stone. Dr. Michael Glass (David Morrissey), a respected London criminal psychiatrist, is brought in by Scotland Yard detective Roy Washburn (David Thewlis) to perform a psychiatric profile and evaluation of novelist Catherine Tramell (Stone) following the mysterious death of a top sports star (Stan Collymore). Physically drawn to Tramell and mentally intrigued by her, Glass is quickly sucked into her web of lies and seduction.

From Amazon.co.uk

Despite its inevitable fate as a critically reviled box-office flop, Basic Instinct 2 sure has a funny way of holding your attention. It's not just Sharon Stone's trash-talk and occasional nudity that keeps you watching, but also the way she gamely earns every cent of her $14 million paycheck, vamping like a real pro in her second outing as mystery novelist and alleged serial killer Catherine Tramell. Now living in London, Catherine sets her lethal sights on Michael Glass (David Morrissey), the control-freak psychiatrist assigned to evaluate her as a risk-addicted suspect in the "accidental" killing of a star soccer player. Turns out Catherine's just getting started (or is she?), and that's bad news for Glass's ex-wife, a tabloid journalist, and the Scotland Yard detective (David Thewlis) who's desperate to put Catherine in jail. With plenty of sex, murder and salacious dialogue, BI2 is certainly never boring, especially with the morbid fascination of seeing the once formidable Stone torpedo her career in a sequel that took 14 years (and countless drafts of screenplays and at least one high-profile lawsuit) to bring to the screen. She's still impressively hot at age 47, prompting critic Roger Ebert to observe, "the Catherine Tramell role cannot be played well, but Sharon Stone can play it badly better than any other actress alive." So, while this ill-fated sequel falls just short of being a guilty pleasure (if only because Morrissey is no match for Michael Douglas in the 1992 original), it's enjoyably absurd and slickly produced, and the hot-tub scene is guaranteed to wear out the freeze-frame function on a lot of DVD players. For some viewers, that's reason enough for multiple viewings.-- Jeff Shannon

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD Verified Purchase
The main problem with this film was going to be trying to live up to the first which is a classic steamy thriller. This had too much to live up to in comparison but it still passes as an ok thriller. Not quite as steamy as the first, but there is some sexual tension between Stone and the detective. There are a few sex scenes but nothing different from most films of this type. Stone does still look very sultry. The story is ok and as it progresses more plot twists come up with different suspects with various good reasons, could be the killer. By the end of the film you could be left wondering who was the killer and who used who as a cover up story. Overall better than a lot of thrillers but far from a classic like the first one. 6/10
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By A Customer on 14 July 2006
Format: DVD
Basic Instinct 2 is indeed a guilty pleasure. Absolutely trashed by the critics upon its cinematic release a few months ago, the film disappeared pretty quickly, but it's a lot more fun than you might expect, and Sharon Stone as the Machiavellian best-selling crime novelist Catherine Tramell really is a pleasure to watch - although it's pretty obvious the actress is trying to fight the hands of time.

Some viewers might consider that Stone is a getting a little too long in the tooth to play this character, but I thought that at forty-eight her age - and her lurid type of sagginess - actually contributed to the authenticity of her character. She spends most of the movie spouting lines loaded with sexual insinuation, casually sitting around her pent-house London apartment in heels, tight skirt and full makeup waiting for Dr. Michael Glass (a very hot David Morrissey) to arrive.

The story is convoluted and not that believable and it tries to skewer the original movie whilst also presenting a fresh take on Catherine's murderous escapades. However, it's all good, sordid and garish fun. As the movie begins, Catherine is driving a fast sports car through the deserted streets of London, upon her climax; she crashes it into the river resulting in the death of a major sports star.

Roy Washburn (David Thewlis), a Scotland Yard detective with a bad attitude is convinced that Tramell, who managed to swim to the surface, was responsible for the man's death. She's got the best defense attorney her massive wealth can buy, so Washburn calls in top shrink Michael Glass (Morrissey) to run a forensic psychoanalysis that could nail her.

Of course, Doctor and subject form an attachment, with Glass becoming as sexually obsessed with Tramell. He's warned by Dr.
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By EA Solinas HALL OF FAMETOP 500 REVIEWER on 28 Jun. 2006
Format: DVD
"Basic Instinct 2: Risk Addiction" is a perfect example of why sequels should be outlawed. And especially sequels with returning actors, because they keep you from blotting the whole thing out of your memory.

Though it took many years to formulate and approve the whole thing, "Basic Instinct 2" ends up being a messy, halfhearted effort that smacks of "direct to video." Except, sadly, it wasn't -- instead, it has been one of the most atrocious box office disasters of 2006 thus far. Both creatively and financially.

Novelist Catherine Trammell (Sharon Stone, still trying to revive her career) is doing 110 mph while having sex. They splash off a bridge, and her soccer star lover dies. In the aftermath, a court shrink (David Morrisey) tries to determine if she is sane or not -- and ends up with the sultry killer salivating for him as her next victim/lover. Take this as a warning, guys: Practice safe sex. By that, I mean don't date a woman with risk addiction.

Then the dead bodies start piling up around London, and it seems likely that Catherine is the culprit. Fascinated by Catherine, Glass soon becomes enmeshed as a murder suspect, and it means trouble for his ex wife and her boyfriend. Like Catherine's prior victims, the unwitting shrink is lured into a game of seduction and death.

The plot is too similar to the original for there to be many surprises in "Basic Instinct 2," although it's rather interesting to relocate the action to London. And as this movie starts to wind up with a shrink and a car crash, it seems that it might actually be worth watching while sober.

Then it deteriorates into a meandering waffle.
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Format: Blu-ray
People that want their crime thrillers to end with an unambiguous conclusion will find this one a disappointment. There are three characters where varying degrees of plausible evidence are put forward indicating that they are a brutal serial killer. Sharon Stone returns as the sensual crime novelist Catherine Tramell, an author that seems to be writing personal nonfiction. She is also a genius at manipulating people, nearly everyone seems to be in awe of her, including the psychology professionals.
David Morrissey is Dr. Michael Glass, a widely respected criminal psychologist that is brought in to consult on Tramell’s involvement in a death where her own life was at risk. Finally, there is a relentless homicide detective that is determined to convict Tramell, yet his hands are not clean, a respected journalist wrote an expose describing him as a ruthless, dirty cop.
The bodies start piling up, yet logical motives for all of their deaths are advanced for all three of the major players. There is one death where the killing is viewed, but that one is only within the context of the overall complexity of the plot and does not resolve any of the primary crimes.
Sharon Stone is once again smoking hot as the ultimate seductress, there are a few scenes where I am sure millions of men have hit rewind several times to view them again and again. The key to enjoying this thriller is in the pondering of the sudden and subtle plot twists, where you think you know the killer, yet enough ambiguity is suddenly introduced so that you are now faced with the viewer equivalent of reasonable doubt. It is a great movie, the facial expressions of Dr. Glass in the last scene are a great use of facial expressions to hint at the truth.
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