Color of Night Poster

Color of Night (1994)

R 08/19/1994 Romance, Mystery, Thriller 2h 1m
58%
User
Score
5.2/10
22%
36/100

In the heat of desire, love can turn to deception. Nothing is what it seems when day turns into night.

Overview

A color-blind psychiatrist is stalked by an unknown killer after taking over his murdered friend's therapy group and becomes embroiled in an intense affair with a mysterious woman who may be connected to the crime.

Richard Rush

Director

Matthew Chapman

Screenplay

Billy Ray

Screenplay

Top Billed Cast

Bruce Willis

Bruce Willis

Capa

Jane March

Jane March

Rose

Rubén Blades

Rubén Blades

Hector

Lesley Ann Warren

Lesley Ann Warren

Sondra

Scott Bakula

Scott Bakula

Dr. Bob

Brad Dourif

Brad Dourif

Clark

Lance Henriksen

Lance Henriksen

Buck

Kevin J. O'Connor

Kevin J. O'Connor

Casey

Andrew Lowery

Andrew Lowery

Dale

Media

Color of Night (Trailer)

Color of Night (Trailer)

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Reviews

A review by MoHA

Written on April 14, 2015

ust when you thought they'd never make a mystery thriller as deliriously bad as Midnight Lace, just when you imagined that the gold lame spirit of Douglas Sirk had departed forever, comes director Richard Rush's COLOR OF NIGHT to brighten up your dull evenings. Color of Night isn't just bad: it's bad with raisins in it.

If you were one of the few who saw Color of Night in a theater, you probably remember the plot, but for those millions and millions who missed this gem, let's recap.

Bruce Willis stars as a psychologist. (Are you laughing too hard or can we go on now?) Willis is having a crisis of conscience/ confidence because one of his patients leaped out of a window after applying lots of lipstick. (We all know, don't we, that applying lots of lipstick is a sure sign of suicida...

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A review by tmdb28039023

Written on September 5, 2022

Rare is the movie that benefits from addition. Color of Night is almost but not quite the exception that proves the rule. According to TV Tropes, “The director’s cut [which runs 20 minutes longer than the theatrical release] restored … much of the film’s humor.” Not nearly enough of it, though; if the movie had truly embraced its comedic potential, it could have been the Naked Gun of erotic thrillers.

Less than three minutes after he has been accused of being figuratively colorblind, psychologist Bill Capa (Bruce Willis) goes literally colorblind. To call this foreshadowing is an insult to prefixes. Bill loses the ability to see the color red when one of his patients defenestrates herself (the dummy that takes the fall is so stiff it looks like it might start gliding away at...

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