Dangerous Liaisons Full Now

Every line is a double entendre. "It is beyond my control" has never sounded so threatening. You need the full pacing to appreciate the verbal jousting.

The catch? Valmont has his eyes on a bigger prize: the famously virtuous and devout Madame de Tourvel (Michelle Pfeiffer). dangerous liaisons full

To watch the film full length is to watch a chess match played with human souls. Merteuil and Valmont are not villains in the mustache-twirling sense. They are aristocrats so bored by their own privilege that cruelty has become their only source of adrenaline. Why does the "full" version matter? Because trimming the edges removes the horror. Every line is a double entendre

If you answer yes, you might be just a little bit like Merteuil. And that is the scariest part of all. The catch

Whether you are referring to the 1988 Oscar-winning film starring Glenn Close and John Malkovich, the modern teen adaptation Cruel Intentions , or the original 1782 novel by Choderlos de Laclos, experiencing Dangerous Liaisons means accepting one uncomfortable truth: This is not a love story. It is a war story. The Game is the Thing At its core, the narrative is brutally simple. The Marquise de Merteuil (Glenn Close) feels slighted by her ex-lover, the Comte de Bastide. To exact revenge, she enlists her former partner-in-crime and current rival, the Vicomte de Valmont (John Malkovich), to seduce Bastide’s innocent, soon-to-be-married fiancée, Cécile de Volanges.

In a sanitized version, you might see the seduction of Cécile as a raunchy comedy. In the full context, you see it for what it is: the destruction of innocence as a tool for petty revenge.