Ever since this convoluted thriller dazzled audiences and critics in 1995 and won an Oscar for Christopher McQuarrie's twisting screenplay, The Usual Suspects has continued to divide movie lovers into opposite camps. While a lot of people take great pleasure from the movie's now-famous central mystery (namely, "Who is Keyser Söze?"), others aren't so easily impressed by a movie that's too enamored of its own cleverness to make much sense. After all, what are we to make of a final scene that renders the entire movie obsolete? Half the fun of The Usual Suspects is the debate it provokes and the sheer pleasure of watching its dynamic cast in action, led (or should we say, misled) by Oscar winner Kevin Spacey as the club-footed con man who recounts the saga of enigmatic Hungarian mobster Keyser Söze. Spacey's in a band of thieves that includes Gabriel Byrne, Stephen Baldwin, Kevin Pollak, and Benicio Del Toro, all gathered in a plot to steal a large shipment of cocaine. The story is told in flashback as a twisted plot being described by Spacey's character to an investigating detective (Chazz Palmintieri), and The Usual Suspects is enjoyable for the way it keeps the viewer guessing right up to its surprise ending. Whether that ending will enhance or extinguish the pleasure is up to each viewer to decide. Even if it ultimately makes little or no sense at all, this is a funny and fiendish thriller, guaranteed to entertain even its vocal detractors. --Jeff Shannon
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Stephen Baldwin | McManus |
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Gabriel Byrne | Keaton |
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Benicio Del Toro | Fenster |
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Kevin Pollak | Hockney |
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Kevin Spacey | Verbal |
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Chazz Palminteri | Dave Kujan |
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Pete Postlethwaite | Kobayashi |
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Suzy Amis | Edie Finneran |
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Giancarlo Esposito | Jack Baer |
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Dan Hedaya | Jeff Rabin |
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Paul Bartel | Smuggler |
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Carl Bressler | Saul Berg |
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Phillipe Simon | Fortier |
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Jack Shearer | Renault |
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Christine Estabrook | Dr. Plummer |
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Clark Gregg | Dr. Walters |
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Morgan Hunter | Arkosh Kovash |
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Ken Daly | Translator |
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Michelle Clunie | Sketch Artist |
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Louis Lombardi | Strausz |
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Frank Medrano | Rizzi |
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Ron Gilbert | Daniel Metzheiser |
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Vito D'Ambrosio | Arresting Officer |
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Gene Lythgow | Cop on Pier |
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Bob Elmore | Bodyguard #1 |
| Director | Bryan Singer |
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| Writer | Christopher McQuarrie | |
| Producer | Hans Brockmann, Francois Duplat, Art Horan, Robert Jones, Kenneth Kokin, Michael McDonnell, Bryan Singer | |
| Musician | John Ottman | |
| Photography | Newton Thomas Sigel | |
| Edition | Special Edition |
|---|---|
| Packaging | Keep Case |
| Nr Discs | 1 |
| Screen Ratios | Anamorphic Widescreen (2.35:1) |
| Audio Tracks | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 FRENCH: Dolby Digital Surround |
| Subtitles | English (Closed Captioned) | French | Spanish |
| Distributor | MGM Home Entertainment |
| Layers | Dual side, Single layer |
| Edition Release Date | Apr 02, 2002 |
| Regions | A |