Metacritic Film

Boxing Helena

Starring Julian Sands, Sherilyn Fenn, Bill Paxton, Kurtwood Smith, Art Garfunkel, and Betsy Clark

MPAA RATING: R

Orion Classics
Suspense/Thriller
107 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters September 3, 1993

Fantasy and desire are unleashed in this haunting, erotic tale of love, lust and obsession. Nick Cavanaugh (Sands) is a brilliant surgeon who seems to have it all -- money, prestige, looks -- everything except Helena (Fenn), a voluptuous, cold-hearted seductress. After a one-night stnad with Nick, she refuses his advances, but he continues to pursue her. When Helena is in a tragic accident in front of Nick's mansion, he takes her into his tome, imprisons her and transforms her into his own version of the mythic Venus. Gradually, they are both forced to confront their inner demons in torrid scenes filled with passion, voyeurism and psycho-sexual torment...all building to a shocking, not-to-be-missed conclusion. (MGM)

WRITTEN BY
Jennifer Chambers Lynch
Philippe Caland (story)

DIRECTED BY
Jennifer Chambers Lynch

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

26 / 100

Critic Reviews

75 Chicago Tribune
Not as worthless as you may have heard. [10 Sept 1993]
60 The New York Times
Ultimately, Ms Lynch has nowhere to take her erotic parable except to a dead end, but she makes the unfolding of the story a spooky, engrossing process. [9 Sept 1993, p.C1]
50 USA Today Tom Green
Even if the script delivered, the film would frankly be overwhelmed by the volume of noteriety that has attended it. [3 Sept 1993]
50 ReelViews
Once it gets beyond a hard-to-swallow setup and into the meat of its story, Boxing Helena is surprisingly involving...The movie discloses its terms early, and expects the audience to buy into them, making no apologies for what it is or intends to be.
42 Entertainment Weekly
Soft-core trash with a tent-show hook.
30 Austin Chronicle Robert Faires
This film has all the pyschological depth of a wading pool. Anything you've imagined without seeing the movie is likely more interesting than what's here.
30 Variety Staff (Not Credited)
The numerous sex scenes are good and steamy.
30 TV Guide Michael Gingold
Lynch's fatal flaw is in her handling of the leads. Sands is made to play his single-minded romantic as a spineless, groveling wimp, while Helena is a one-note ice queen for more than half the movie, never reacting realistically to her predicament. The characters are so lacking in dimension and unsympathetic that it's hard to care about them or their story.
25 San Francisco Chronicle
Just awful. But uniquely awful -- awful in a way that might just attract a cult audience. [3 Sept 1993]
10 Rolling Stone
What Lynch, who wrote the script at 19, sees as high drama is really high camp. And Fenn seems clueless on how to play her limbless character.
10 Washington Post Joe Brown
A two-hour stink bomb, Boxing Helena is a pitifully pervy piece of work.
0 Los Angeles Times
It was probably worth every costly cent for Kim Basinger to get out of doing the dreadful Boxing Helena -- but you have to wonder whatever there was about it that persuaded her to do it in the first place. [3 Sept 1993]
0 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
The whole mess turns nuttier by the second. A black comedy, you ask? I wish. There are plenty of laughs here, but nary a one is intentional.
0 Washington Post
A gruesome tale of obsessive love and mutilation, it's less a work of art, however, than a luridly stylish expression of female self-loathing...A prettied-up snuff movie.

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