Friday, October 31, 2025

SNAKE EYES (1998)

 


Snake Eyes is a 1998 American mystery thriller film directed and produced by Brian De Palma. The film stars Nicolas Cage as a detective investigating a political assassination at a boxing match in Atlantic City, with supporting roles played by Gary Sinise, Carla Gugino, John Heard, Stan Shaw, Kevin Dunn, Joel Fabiani and Luis Guzmán. De Palma also devised the story with David Koepp, who was the sole writer of the screenplay. The musical score was composed by Ryuichi Sakamoto.

The film was released and produced by Paramount Pictures in North America and Buena Vista International (through Touchstone Pictures) internationally on August 7, 1998. The film garnered mixed reviews from critics, criticizing the film's story, writing and pacing while praising its style and the performances. It grossed $104 million worldwide against a $73 million budget.

Plot

During a tropical storm, corrupt Atlantic City police detective Rick Santoro attends a boxing match at the soon-to-close local arena between heavyweight champion Lincoln Tyler and challenger Jose Pacifico Ruiz. He meets up with his best friend since childhood, U.S. Navy Commander Kevin Dunne, who is escorting Defense Secretary Charles Kirkland and Arena director Gilbert Powell at the fight after a trip to Norfolk, Virginia.

As the first round begins, Kevin notices redhead Serena who wears a ruby ring; he leaves his seat which is then taken by Julia Costello, a platinum blonde in a white satin suit. When Ruiz unexpectedly knocks out Tyler, gunshots ring out, mortally wounding Kirkland and grazing Julia, who loses her blonde wig, revealing her naturally dark hair. Kevin kills the sniper and orders the arena be locked down. Julia escapes into the casino.

Rick notices the supposedly knocked-out Tyler awoke at the sound of shots, and studies the fight tape which reveals the knockout punch didn't connect. Tyler confesses he threw the fight to pay gambling debts. Serena paid him to take a dive. Suspecting a conspiracy, Rick reveals everything he has learned to Kevin, who says the Norfolk trip was to test the AirGuard missile defense system, which Powell's company is backing. He deduces that the sniper, Palestinian terrorist Tarik Ben Rabat, assassinated Kirkland over the Pentagon's defense cooperation with Israel.

Rick studies surveillance footage to find Serena while Kevin searches for Julia, aided by Powell's security guards. Kevin is actually the conspiracy mastermind. He kills Serena and enlists Tyler.

Julia seduces a hotel guest so she can hide in his room. Rick finds her and takes her into protective custody. Julia confesses she is an analyst and had discovered the AirGuard test results were faked. She had tipped off Kirkland, but Kevin discovered her actions and arranged the conspiracy to kill her and Kirkland. After hiding Julia in a warehouse, Rick finds footage proving Kevin's guilt.

Kevin confesses to Rick, saying his motive was to prevent further attacks on U.S. ships, like one in which Kevin had had to leave 28 men to drown. He offers Rick one million dollars for Julia's location. When Rick refuses Kevin has Tyler beat him up, then plants a tracker on Rick and follows him to the warehouse just as Hurricane Jezebel hits. Rick uses a large wave as cover to rush Julia outside, where the police witness Kevin opening fire. Despite his protests, Kevin commits suicide on live news.

Rick is hailed as a hero, but the press uncover his corruption and he loses his job, mistress, and family. Before reporting for his prison term, Rick meets Julia. She thanks him, as Powell is scrapping AirGuard. Rick promises to call her when he gets out in twelve to eighteen months. Serena's ruby ring is seen embedded in a concrete pillar of the new Powell Millennium Arena.

Cast

Production

Casting

De Palma offered the role of Commander Kevin Dunne to Al Pacino but he turned it down.[4] Will Smith was then cast as Commander Kevin Dunne,[5] but Smith later dropped out of the role as he wasn't offered enough money.[6]

Filming

The majority of Snake Eyes was filmed on studio sets and the Montreal Forum in Montreal, Canada. The production spent two weeks on-location in Atlantic City, New Jersey, filming at the Trump Taj Mahal Hotel & Casino (now the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City).

Unused ending

Snake Eyes' original ending involved a huge tidal wave going through the casino.[7] This visual effects-heavy ending was cut and replaced with a reshot sequence in post-production, but numerous references to it still remain in the final film. A shot near the end of the film shows an ambulance driving down an oceanside road with a wave about to crash into it before the film cuts to another shot, Rick Santoro talks about almost drowning at the very end of the film, and references to a storm are made throughout the entire film, which were all meant to build up to the cut climax.[7]

Reception

Released on August 7, 1998, Snake Eyes debuted at No. 2 on its opening weekend (behind Saving Private Ryan), with $16.31 million, beating out the weekend's other wide release Halloween H20: 20 Years Later at $16.19 million.[8][9] It grossed $55.6 million in North America, and $103.9 million worldwide.[3]

Critical response

The film received a 42% "rotten" score on Rotten Tomatoes based on 71 reviews with the critics' consensus: "Snake Eyes has a number of ingredients that promise a trashy fun time; unfortunately, they're lost in an energetic and stylish thriller with a frustratingly hollow core."[10][11][12][13][14] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 52 out of 100 based on reviews from 24 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[15] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade "C+" on scale of A+ to F.[16] De Palma himself responded to the criticisms in an interview with Mark Cousins, "There's a lot of discussion in Snake Eyes about why do we reveal who did it so soon. Well, the problem is that it isn't about who did it. It's a mystery about a relationship, two people, and how finding that out affects their relationship ... those kinds of procedural movies are extremely boring..."[17]

Resemblance to Charlie Kirk assassination

Following the assassination of Charlie Kirk in 2025, social media users perceived parallels between the real-life assassination of Kirk and that of the fictional Charles Kirkland.[18] Besides the very similar names of both Charleses (with the film’s incident occurring during a boxing match and Kirk’s at a political rally), online discussions highlighted additional coincidences, including the name of the alleged shooter (Tyler Robinson) resembling the film’s boxer Lincoln Tyler,[19] the billboard supposedly showing September 10th (the date of Charlie's assassination), and a hurricane named Jezebel, the same name a site has that paid for witches on Etsy to supposedly curse Charlie (albeit weeks before his death).

The comparisons went viral on social media, with some users alleging "predictive programming", though fact-checkers attributed the similarities to coincidence, confirmation bias, poor estimations of likelihoods by chance (see the Improbability Principle by David J. Hand), and false positives (for illustration, Charles Kirkland was actually shot in the chest rather than the neck, as can be clearly seen midway through the movie when two angles are presented).[20]

Accolades

Award Category Subject Result
Blockbuster Entertainment Awards Favorite Actor – Suspense Nicolas Cage Won
Favorite Supporting Actor – Suspense Gary Sinise Nominated
Favorite Supporting Actress – Suspense Carla Gugino Nominated
Cahiers du Cinéma Annual Top 10 Lists Brian De Palma 9th place

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