Basic Instinct 2 (2006) Poster

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4/10
Writers could not pull off what Joe Eszterhas created.
doorbomb621 July 2015
There's really no way to pull off a sequel to the original classic, Basic Instinct. To do so would require much more than Sharon Stone who sizzles no matter what she is doing. She a fine actress, but surrounding her with unfamiliar actors in London, and handling a script that lacks everything witty and tight that Joe Eszterhas weaved in the original picture, is just disastrous.

Our story here has Ms. Tramell, notorious author from Basic Instinct at the epicenter of a death, accidental, or perhaps...intentional??? She is handled by Scotland yard in this one, a far cry from the San Fransisco PD and Detective Nick Curan, who is sorely absent. Rather than prance around with her sexuality tugging at the police, and seducing them blindly, she is more a bully here, and she pushes authoritative figures, especially Michael Glass the professional assigned to her case, into her game this time around.

Sharon Stone turns in a mostly witty and sharp (no pun intended) continuation of Catherine Tramell, Complete with incomparable physique, sexy sultry voice, and some more blonde poison. Her co-stars, however, do not measure up.U.K. veteran Charlotte Rampling is the only other cast member/character on Stones level. The rest of the cast are like fish out of water. I think it's part of why the film doesn't work. We have very stiff European authoritative figures, bent on the unraveling of the case, as well they should be, except it doesn't feel like Basic Instinct, and the good moments that are had, are reminders that it might have been better had they stuck with the original idea which was to have been set in NYC.

The production design and art direction are diabolical though (again, no pun intended), and it's a scene set greatly, if only the expectations were met. Ultimately I feel the writing was the biggest let down. It's as if Leora Barish and Henry Bean didn't know the character of Catherine, and thusly could not completely tell her story. Whatever they have for every one else is a more or less lacking shadow of what the original was.

Michael Caton-Jones is okay, but this flick, released in 2006, looks like EVERY other action thriller from that time period, and that's sad. The original was a cut (there I go again)above the rest of what was released back in 1992. It had so much style and charisma, and even charm, mixed with an extremely interwoven and complex, even abstract plot/story. This is just a run-of-the-mill follow up sequel that is as bland and boring as every other product that was churned out by studios at the time. It's all in your face at value, which is not very high. There is noting beyond the cheese & crackers. The cigar is just the cigar, and in this films case, it needed to be a highly intoxicating cigarette.
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5/10
BI2. A beaten down horse without a fighting chance,
smashsmack11 April 2006
It has been over a decade since the original Basic Instinct was released and more resources have came along that provide easy access to information. Have these very resources caused more harm than people realize? Have people become stuck up and over-opinionated for their own good? In the recent years it seems to be pointed in that direction, some people are dependent on popular belief and with these new resources it can sometimes cause a negative reaction. More on this later, right now let's move onto the review.

Basic Instinct 2 is the long-awaited sequel, at least by Sharon Stone, of a raunchy classic that was released back in 1992. Sharon Stone reprises her role as Catherine and once again finds herself mixed up in some trouble. After surviving a car crash, tragically leaving her momentary lover dead, Catherine is put to psychiatric care with one Dr. Michael Glass and is diagnosed with "Risk Addiction." After a very intimate session, more murders are taking place and Michale starts to gain an obsession over the might-be murderer. Is she really capable of such unspeakable acts? Is there someone else out there after her? Or are they after him.

The plot is very basic indeed, if not a little exacerbated by me, but the movie really isn't as bad as everyone says it is. The suspense might not be high, the sexual tension isn't always there, but that doesn't mean the movie isn't interesting. The plot holds it's ground and can keep your attention if you don't try to take it all seriously. Despite what other people might say, Sharon Stone steals every scene she is in, no matter how over the top it may be. I guess we'll have to wait until the "unrated" DVD to be released to see all of the goods, which may be very shortly from the looks of it.

Since the announcement of the movie, people have been trashing it before the production even began. Even the negative votes were coming in long before the movie was released, which is something IMDb really needs to fix, because how can people rate a movie that isn't even released? Most of the trashing is towards Sharon Stone, according to some once you hit over 45 you're not allowed to be sexy anymore. The fact is that Sharon Stone still is sexy and she can still deliver the goods she did over a decade ago. So what if she's up there? Let me see you at her age and try to pull off anything she did in this movie.

It really seems that this movie didn't have a fighting chance, because now it seems to be a popular thing to not give anything a chance. Even when given a chance, a hard headed person will still trash something, despite them enjoying it. Which is why I gave this movie a 10, it really doesn't deserve it, but somebody has to bring some balance to the ever opinionated and biased world.
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5/10
Sexy Beast
Newairbus28 April 2006
Hey, Basic Instinct 2 feels like a Agatha Christie novel written for a sexy protagonist and a modern setting. But there is no Miss Marple involved, for she is at the same time the woman who gets away, the author and the "gärningskvinna" or perpetrator. The word in quotes is Swedish, not German, though it looks like "Götterdammerung".

Everybody and his cousin has chided Sharon Stone for being such a wooden actress cast in this role for the second time, but put your hand on your heart: Could someone else have pulled off the part (which is provocative and implausible from the beginning) any better? Would Keira Knightley, Gwyneth Paltrow or Lena Olin have portrayed a better Catherine Tramell? My verdict is no, therefore, she gets a vindication of sorts. You see, this role doesn't require a perfect body but rather someone who almost has it with brains, conceit and assuredness on top of that. Also, this sequel is good in the sense that it has made me want to see the first part which I missed to see at the time.
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1/10
Worse than any of us could have imagined.....
Screen-Space22 March 2006
It's not like I have overwhelmingly fond memories of Verhoeven's original pants-down shocker - it always struck me as a glossy, well-made airport-novel-of-a-movie. Thrilling, sexy trash, but trash nonetheless. It was also a film that tapped into a certain sexual zeitgeist. After a decade of anti-sex AIDS-induced hysteria, a film about a wildly-sexual hotbod who thrill-kills to heighten her sexual pleasure was pretty enticing stuff. Basic Instinct 2 was always going to struggle to provide the same social relevance and immediacy, so the fact that it's desperate attempts at raunchiness are so lame can sort-of be overlooked. All it really had to provide was that thin veneer of titillation and a mildly engaging story and all would have been watchable. That it resoundingly fails on so many levels, and in such a way to be a career nadir for everyone involved, is really quite extraordinary to watch. Let's state the obvious for starters - Sharon Stone is too old for the part of sexual magnet Catherine Trammell. What was so photogenic thru Verhoeven's lens looks like mutton dressed as lamb in the hands of gun-for-hire Michael Caton-Jones, who's flat, drab colours and static camera render her undeniable beauty totally moot. I like Sharon Stone a lot, but if the first film launched her career, BI2 could kill it. She has no chemistry with stuffed-shirt David Morrissey - their only sex scene is embarrassing too watch. His dough-faced mamma's boy of a character made me yearn for the swaggering, orange-skin machismo of Michael Douglas. Supporting turns by David Thewlis and Charlotte Rampling waste these fine actors on talky exposition scenes and cliché-heavy posturing. And what of the much-touted sexual shenanigans? Poorly-lit, fleetingly-glimpsed, as utterly mainstream as an episode of Desperate Housewives - the European sensibilities that Verhoeven brought to the sexual content of the first film are sorely missed. Don't watch this film for carnal thrills - there are none and what there is is tragic. The film is, as a whole, convoluted to the point of utter confusion, boring and laughable. The last 40 minutes in particular, where you come to the realisation that the film is, in fact, not going to go anywhere of interest at all, are particularly gruelling and hilarious in equal measure. As a failed sequel, Basic Instinct 2 will come to occupy similar cinematic ground as Exorcist 2 The Heretic, Beyond The Poseidon Adventure and XXX2. As a vanity project, it rivals Battlefield Earth in its misconception. As a multi-million dollar piece of Hollywood film-making, it's a travesty that will be hard to top as the years worst.
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1/10
Painfully Bad
annaharbacz19 March 2006
Well, I saw this movie yesterday and it's - unfortunately - worse than you could think. First of all the plot is idiotic, it has no sense at all. The screenplay is full of intentionally funny dialogues. The audience was laughing many times. And the suspense is very low. Actors play so-so, with an exception of Sharon Stone, who has some good moments but also some awfully bad acting moments. The saddest parts are when she tries to be aggressively sexy and says things like "I want to *beep* you " and it looks like, let's say it gently, a very very mature woman acting rude and not sexy at all. That erotic tension from BI1 is totally gone. From the technical point of Basic Instinct 2 is a mediocre movie - better than typical straight to DVD, but on a far lower lever than the original movie. For instance the scene of crazy joyride is done poorly. The director of Basic Instinct 2 is no Paul Verhoeven and it shows. The new composer is no Jerry Goldsmith and its shows. The script is done by people who are no match for Joe Eszterhas. There's no substitute for Michael Douglas in it. The film looks cheap and badly edited at times. I'm sorry but my first thought after I left the theater was: "Why heaven't they made this movie earlier and with original talents behind the success of the first movie?" All to all the original movie is like Citizen Kane compared to this. The first Basic Instinct is a classic and was a kind of break-thru in the popular cinema. It was provoking, sexy and controversial. It had the best Sharon Stone's performance in her career. It had this specific Paul Verhoeven's style. Unfortunately Basic Instinct 2 is a unintentionally funny movie, badly directed and a sure Razzie Award Winner in many categories. It's a pity that they made this film.
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2/10
Stone Cold Vanity.
herlenwein-131 March 2006
It's hard to believe, after waiting 14 years, we wind up with this piece of cinematic garbage. The original was a high impact, dark thriller that achieved "cult" status demonstrating the fine art of cinema as directed by Paul Verhoeven. This film adds nothing, delivers nothing, and ultimately winds up in the big box of failed sequels.

The opening sequence could have triggered an intriguing set of plot developments using a considerably talented and able cast. Unfortunately we are treated to a 90 minute dissertation in the self-indulgent life of Catherine Tramell... or is it Sharon Stone. Possibly a copulation of both.

If the desire is too see a continuation of the sensually provocative stying of sex as in "B.S.1", forget it. You wind up with soft-porn boredom which ultimately upholds the old adage that a woman can be more alluring in clothes than out of them. It's interesting to note that the wonderful Charlotte Rampling was romping around in her skivvies, via the 1966 GEORGY GIRL, when Ms. Stone was only 8 years old. A very talented actress and quite adept at holding her own even here.

If you're a true cinema fan then you must see this film and judge it using your own rating system. If not, you might as well wait for the DVD release in the "rated" version, "unrated" version, "collectors" edition, or "ultimate" version, and perhaps in another 14 years we will be saturated with news of "Basic Instinct 3" at which point Ms. Stone will be 62 years old and nobody will really care.
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1/10
A really terrible film with no saving graces - bad dialogue, bad acting, bad direction...just plain BAD!
DutchMan8216 March 2006
I saw this film at the London Premiere, and I have to say - I didn't expect much, but I did expect something that was at least mildly entertaining.

The original "Basic Instinct" was no great film and is still something of a "smut classic" but it was entertaining. I can recall countless times flipping through channels on TV on a late Friday or Saturday night having come across the movie and finding myself beginning to actually pay attention to it.

However, this lame-brain, waaay-belated sequel has nothing. Is Sharon Stone still gorgeous? Well, let's put it this way -- for a 47-year-old, she's pretty hot. Is she as beautiful as she was in the original? No. She also has clearly had plastic surgery on her face, and her haircut in this movie is somewhat unappealing. She doesn't look as soft or genuine or innocent as she did in the original -- which is sort of the whole point of being an evil seductress, and whatnot.

The rest of the performances range from bad to terrible -- and Michael Caton-Jones (a typically safe director -- one who doesn't always do great work but manages to make worthwhile movies) has officially delivered his first true turkey; a movie so bad people were laughing at certain moments that were intended to be serious.

I hear the film went through multiple editing sessions, and it's very clear from the start. Nothing makes much sense. The whole plot is a cosmic mess and the ending -- oh my! Talk about stupid AND unbelievable. (Still predictable, though.) I saw "Gigli," I saw "Son of the Mask" -- and although I'm not looking to "smear" this film, I can say with my own authority (which you don't have to agree with at all, mind you) that I prefer both those films over this catastrophic failure.

By the way, Stone left five minutes before the movie began and people in the theater began throwing things at the screen during a particularly outrageous and insulting scene inside an orgy-type nightclub.

"Basic Instinct 2" -- basically, it stinks, too.
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1/10
A sequel that should have never been made!
karl-mauk30 March 2006
In my book "Basic Instinct" was a perfect film. It had outstanding acting on the parts of Stone, Douglas and all the supporting actors to the tiniest role. It had marvelous photography, music and the noirest noir script ever. All of it adding up to a film that is as good as it will ever get!

This sequel is the exact opposite, it cannot possibly get worse, bad acting and a lame script, combined with totally inept direction, this is really bad, boring, annoying. The only thing that somewhat keeps you concentrated is the relatively short wait for the next scene that is an exact re-enacted copy of the original. These copies are so bad they make you laugh and I laughed a lot in spite of myself, because it was like watching the demolishing of a shining monument. The only thing that is good in this horrible mess are the excerpts of the Jerry Goldsmith score of BI1. Michael Caton-Jones and the half-wit responsible for the script even included the "There is no smoking in this room" dialog in the interrogation scene and yes she sends her attorney (who is now a solicitor) away!

I am sorry I have seen this awful film that should have never been made! It does damage to the original, so bad is it. The only redeeming value is the realization that cosmetic surgery (and I am sure Ms Stone afforded the best surgeon money can buy) can do a good job but can obviously not restore the perfection of the original. And what concerns the human body applies to film-making, too. There should be a law: Don't ever make a sequel to a perfect film!
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7/10
film noir with a confusing cleavage
Chris_Docker29 April 2006
Sharon Stone has had a very chequered career, spanning performances that have garnered Golden Globes and Oscar nominations, as well as Razzies. Her performance in Casino convinced skeptics of her acting ability and yet it is for her portrayal of the sexily sinister author Catherine Tramell - in Basic Instinct - that she is perhaps most remembered. Basic Instinct II revives the role – a dangerous undertaking and one that many critics have panned (possibly without even watching it). Yet the character is an interesting one and deserves not to be dismissed so lightly, especially in this well-written sequel.

The enigma of Tramell is whether, in researching her novels, she just gets very close to actual murders, or whether she actually commits them. In Basic Instinct II we become aware of a third possibility – that she manipulates people into creating interesting story lines, even if it means pushing them over the edge mentally and emotionally so they perhaps commit crimes they would not otherwise have committed. Following in the footsteps of twisted real-life authors recently depicted on screen such as Capote, such a possibility does not seem so preposterous.

Where Basic Instinct II fails, is in capturing a suitable target audience. The original Basic Instinct, however good a thriller, is linked in the public imagination with a particularly explicit scene involving Stone uncrossing and crossing her legs during a police interview. Given the raunchy nature of Tramell's personal life, to which the film gave ample reign, the movie drew adult audiences hoping to be shocked. This creates a number of problems for Basic Instinct II. Firstly, the public taste for sexual explicitness seems to have ebbed. Sex scenes are more likely to kill a blockbuster than boost attendances. The independent and European films featuring explicit sexuality tend not to get multiplex coverage – and the limits are now so broad that most mainstream actresses are unlikely to want to push the envelope with such explicitness unless it is to test the limits of art – and Basic Instinct II, like its forerunner, is a thriller not an art house movie.

Yet it suffers from the 'sex-movie' tag. Re-shot in black and white, with a shorter running time, and minimizing any nudity, Basic Instinct II could have been marketed as film noir. The difficulty of puzzling out the who-dunnit keeps the attention, but waiting for the next sex scene it just fizzles (as there's very little to wait for). With a running time of nearly two hours, some of the direction could have been tighter, but the overall feel of the movie almost creates a genre. Sharon Stone hones Tramell's character even better than in the original, and the final twist is difficult to anticipate. As a portrait of a genius writer that can run rings around police detectives and psycho-analysts, Basic Instinct delivers in spades. While Sharon Stone is a good-looking fortysomething, those watching it for sexy thrills may be disappointed.
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1/10
Piece of crap
avenkash15 March 2007
Seriously,

I felt like I developed a tumor in my head after watching this movie. The movie is so pathetic and it should have been in the category of a comedy. Sharon stone is old and she looks like an ugly witch. The story line is so weak and none of the characters were impressive with their performances. There was no suspense, the sexual scenes are horrible and finally it was a real pain to watch the movie. At least there should have been an end to the story in the sequel after watching all that crap. Instead watch either a pure thriller or a porno. I would not suggest this movie to anyone.....especially to people who might fall into the trap of watching Sharon... No she is not hot at all.....It so funny that she at grandmother's age had done this film. Actually I thought of giving a zero to this film, but unfortunately there is no zero here.
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8/10
It is now fashionable to trash "Basic Instinct 2" even before you see it.
ENRIQUE-33 April 2006
It seems that it is becoming fashionable to rip "Basic Instinct 2," to the point that a significant part of the audience (including critics) found it terrible even before it was released. It seems even more fashionable to trash Sharon Stone who—like all of us—is now fourteen years older, and—unlike most of us—still looks wonderful. First comments on this movie were so vicious that I had to see for myself. In my opinion, this sequel is not nearly as good as the original film, but is not as bad as most comments pretend. Michael Caton-Jones is not Paul Verhoeven, neither Henry Bean and Leora Barish are Joe Eszterhas. "Basic Instinct 2" is just an entertaining, average thriller, and besides the addition of Jerry Goldsmith original score, keeps little resemblance to its predecessor. Even Stone gives her character a different dimension, creating a lustful, devilish Catherine Trimell, who can perfectly well rank among other monsters like Hannibal Lecter. She is an intelligent actress who is not afraid of taking risks and can play with camp at her leisure. Unfortunately, she seems to be the main target for those who enjoy trashing this flick. She became too successful, too much of a main icon, and like all those actors who have reached that level, her time has arrived and she is now bound to be destroyed by Hollywood audiences.

The rest of the cast is outstanding, giving performances that are far better than the material deserves. David Morrissey is a much better actor and by far more interesting than Michael Douglas: his acting is flawless, giving a dense, complex dimension to an otherwise one dimensional character. Since he has more screen time and is the axis of the movie, he can keep your attention from beginning to end.

I am not recommending "Basic Instinct 2" as a great movie; I am just expressing my disagreement with most of the comments on this site and my conviction that agendas other than the movie itself are shaping the opinion of most spectators.
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7/10
Well I liked it !
peter-burton-19 April 2006
I cannot accept the negative comments of other reviewers. They are too critical, perhaps because they are stuck in the past. I would like to see a comment from someone who had never seen Basic Instinct 1, perhaps someone very young ? I left the cinema feeling glad that I had not been swayed by the IMDb reviewers. 14 hours later I am still trying to find flaws in the plot but I cannot think of anything serious. My advice to everyone is see it for yourself and make up your own mind.

It follows a similar pattern to Basic Instinct 1 but the plot is less confused. It still left me wondering at the end but in a more satisfactory way. Sharon Stone is as sexy and evil as before and wears her 48 years extremely well; this remains her defining role. David Morrisey was satisfactory even though he is no Michael Douglas. Of the supporting cast I particularly liked David Thewlis as the police detective.
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2/10
Reasons Not To Care
jfgibson739 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I watched this movie because I heard a reviewer say that even though it was bad, it wasn't boring. I now know that this is not a good enough reason to see a movie. "Not boring" does not always mean entertaining. Sometimes it can mean that you may not like yourself for having sat through it.

Basic Instinct 2 is an erotic thriller, which must be the genre that is easiest to produce a piece of trash from. In this movie, the main character is the psychiatrist who becomes obsessed with Sharon Stone's character and makes every possible bad decision until it eventually ruins his life. Now, because it involves temptation, murder, and a career in jeopardy, it may seem to justify its existence as a cautionary tale for adults. Actually, the behaviors in this movie don't reflect real life adults any more than Spongebob contains real children.

I'm not going to give in to the argument that this was just meant as entertainment, is supposed to be escape or enjoyment and not taken seriously. This movie takes itself VERY seriously and works very hard to be grown-up. I don't mind a movie that has a dark tone if it does so to show us that sometimes the world really is bleak. Basic Instinct 2 is sour and joyless because it wants to appear deadly serious.

If you were to watch a movie about, say, Darfur and the difficulties its people are going through, imagine how upset you would be if you found out afterward that the writer had never been there and nothing you had seen about the people or the place resembled reality. Even when a story is set in a complete fantasy world, it can still show you something truthful about human nature. Here is a movie that is set in the real world, but employs characters that are complete fantasies. I think that kind of emptiness is a reason not to recommend a movie.
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2/10
sequels this bad usually go straight to video
lotekguy-11 April 2006
Seldom has the decline from hit to sequel in a theatrical release been this severe. B.I. 2 is an awful movie (B.O. might be more accurate), coasting on fumes left over from the sizzling sensuality of the 1992 thriller that made Sharon Stone a star.

First of all, Stone is absolutely not too old to reprise her femme fatale, Catherine Trammel. Though we don't see as much of her body this time, at 48 she's still got enough of the icy cool sexuality to toy with the men around her, despite their authority over her. It's the script that's flaccid, further sapped by British TV actor David Morrissey replacing Michael Douglas as the male lead. Douglas played a tormented cop, torn between convicting and bedding her; Morrissey's a tormented psychiatrist who can't tell whether she's a psychopath or the love of his life. The guy's such a stiff, one wonders how many wiser Clive-Owen wannabes read the script and declined. Morrissey's wife is Sigmund Freud's great-granddaughter, which apparently qualifies him more for the part than either his charisma or chemistry with Ms. Stone. He imbues this shrink with about the same emotional range as the office couch.

In a sexy, but almost cartoonish, opening sequence, Stone drives a drugged-out dude around London for a high-speed thrill ride that ends in his death. Once again, the circumstances ominously match the plot of one of her novels. A detective (David Thewlis) seems hell-bent on convicting her, and brings in Morrissey for a medical opinion on how dangerous she may be to herself and others. The rest of the film involves more murders and another guessing game about whether Stone is the killer, someone else's front, or even a potential victim, while dredging up various devils and temptations of Dr. Dull.

Everything about this story feels contrived, failing to create characters or a situation that stirs the emotions as the first one did. The original interrogation scene has become a film classic, even apart from Ms. Stone's controversial leg-crossing. Its analog here is so ill-conceived, director Michael Caton-Jones almost seems to have intended parody, rather than an homage.

At one point Stone's Catherine asks the shrink who he thinks she's gonna kill next? In real life, her most obvious choices would be among the writers, director and her agent.
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1/10
Basic Rubbish
robspacey31 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
How are people giving this a 9 rating? Are they seriously saying this 'effort' is on the same levels as the Godfather and LOTR? Be serious, just for a minute. After all, these reviews are for people to read...

OK, so for anyone under 16 or has lived in a cave for 20 years, let me bring you up to date on Basic Instinct. It was a film, made in the early nineties which, like it or not, came to be hugely influential on the film industry. It wasn't amazingly well acted, well written or particually well directed. However, what it did have was eroticism. And in huge doses. It created the Erotic-Thriller genre of the 90's and became the trend-setter for every horny guy looking for a 'proper' film.

Fast forward 14 years and we have BI2: Risk Addiction. Now pay attention to the 'Risk Addiction' bit because you'll hear it about twenty times through the movie, just in case you didn't get what it's about the first time through.

The film opens with Sharon Stone sucking Stan Collymore's (1990's footballer, convicted women-beater and dogger) finger as he's pushing her buttons in a night time drive over a bridge. Yes, good idea director, cast a renound real-life villain doing what he was made infamous for. Brilliant. All we need is a 'Gary Glitter at a playground' scene and the film's complete.

So, we're then following the trial of Stone, on trial for Collymore's death. This is where the storyline ends. The next 90 minutes are mostly dialogue between Stone and her Psychiatrist, mostly going along the lines of this:

Stone: "Innuendo, Innuendo, Innuendo, Risk Addiction?" Psychiatrist: "I'm your psychiatrist" Stone: "Innuendo, Innuendo, Innuendo, I like playing games" Psychiatrist: "I'm your psychiatrist" Stone: "Innuendo, Innuendo, Innuendo, I'm off now, to MAYBE murder"

And that's pretty much it...I've not bothered referencing all 30 seconds of erotic scenes, or AMAZING acting skills, not to mention having to see a 47 year old woman trying what only can be described as a mid-life-crisis erotic display, complete with chair. This film, is TERRIBLE. Possibly the worst film ever made - worse that Gigli, Showgirls and Striptease combined. Anyone who can even see an ounce of credibility in this film needs a head exam.
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3/10
Not very thrilling, intrigueing, nor sexy.
Just_a_critic31 March 2006
OK so I just saw Basic Instinct the US rated-R version.

From what I've heard is the heavily edited version. The movie for me wasn't very thrilling. The twists are just devices that make no sense, and their explanations are weak.

The acting was OK not great, The British actors do better than Stone though.

I did like the first one it was sexy and kept you wondering "Is she the Killer?" This one made me think man when is this movie going to be over?

If you going to see this movie hoping for a good thriller don't bother. If you live in the US and hope for a movie that is sexy, don't bother. If you want to waste a couple or hours and some money then go ahead and see the movie.
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1/10
BASICally should have followed my INSTINCTs.....
lfca131 March 2006
.....and stayed away. This movie was like a really, really, bad parody of itself. Where to begin? Sharon Stone. She looks "good" for her age.......the last three words are imperative to follow the first three. Never once did her highly BOTOX-ed brow move. She was angry? Nothing. She was smiling? Nada. And the sneer! Too much. Her constant monotone delivery did nothing to help the audience stay awake- and I noticed 3 movie goers dozing in my area within the first 45 minutes! David Morrissey wasn't much better. His weak, sniveling character was totally implausible for a shrink. (She WASN'T "all that"!!) Michael Douglas, he ain't! And speaking of Michael Douglas....they sure paid homage to the absent -but sorely needed actor: Shrink's name? Michael. Stone's name? Catherine. And the shrink was trying to earn the "Douglas" award. In a better script, with better actors, it could have allowed for some comic relief, but near the end of the movie when one character emits an overly-long anguished scream, I found myself, with the rest of the audience, wishing I could do the same aloud, instead of inwardly. Sharon, PLEASE, I beg of you, if they come around (which is doubtful) with BI-3, "Just say NO!" You're already too long in the tooth to play the original seductress. Everyone was laughing at you! Minus one star from me! This was an abominable waste of time and money. It's destined to be a 2 week (max) runner.....

PS It's now 4/22, and apparently I was right. It's not to be found anywhere around here!!
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2/10
what a sad waste of Stone's marvelous character
aharmas1 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I had been looking forward to catching the sequel to "Basic Instinct", a film that was inspired by a twisted admiration for a killer that actually gets away with it and enjoys every minute of it. The original had Stone, portraying the sassy and sexy writer who might or might not be a killer (depending on what you want to believe). She was a terrific, beautiful, and intelligent manipulator who pushed every single male's, and some females' buttons. She remains as powerful and bewitching as ever, but this time, she manages to wander into a mire of banal and polluted talent.

Catherine is now in England, still seeking thrills and inspiration for what will give her another successful bestseller. Does her creativity lead to the destruction of others? Is she just "lucky" enough to wander into a pile of stupid people who surrender to her charms and find themselves involved in a mess of their own design? These are tantalizing prospects that never come to full realization in the film. Instead, we are given an awful, half-cooked mess of a script that can't ever survive the terrific sets and some new provocative outfits for Stone.

Her poses are still effective and were the only things that kept me from slapping a zero on this film, but she can't fight everything that is wrong with this movie. In fact, there are a couple of things when we see how powerful an actress and incredible her Catharine could be in the right film. The closing scene hints at what could have been as she slowly details the plot of her novel to one of her victims. These last minutes show how much the camera can love an actress with the magnetic star power Stone has, but it is not enough. One can only wish she doesn't go the way of Indiana Jones, and someone gives us the opportunity to see her in her full glory (no pun intended).

Too bad.
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6/10
It's not easy to take your eyes off Stone
Nazi_Fighter_David12 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
In Michael Caton-Jones' "Basic Instinct 2," Sharon Stone tries desperately to prove she is still sexy and dangerous… To each uncrossing of legs, she supplies every type of attraction… And yes, she does get naked, but not as naked as before… teasing us only with a glimpse of her nethers… In every step of the way, every line of dialog, every gesture, makes her look absolutely stunning, even better than she did in the original erotic thriller back in 1992…

Stone returns as novelist Catherine Tramell whose bestselling books match her deadly reality so perfectly making us wonder… This time the action moves from San Francisco to London, where she attracts the attention of the Scotland Yard… Soon a celebrated psychologist named Michael Glass is caught between her seductive powers… Glass knows all about homicidal impulse and identifies Catherine as having "risk addiction." But when the people surrounding him start falling in graphic ways, Glass starts jeopardizing his profession to keep at distance the siren's notorious advances…

With his soft brown eyes, bland haircut, and prominent chin, Morrissey's Dr. Glass is no match for a sultry, sexy and smart vixen like Sharon Stone… Stone completely embodies every aspect of Catherine's physical attribute, manipulating the hell out of the freshly divorced psychiatrist… Dr. Milena Gardosh (Charlotte Rampling) recognizes Glass is falling for Catherine and advises him to remove himself as her therapist…

Stone seems to be a strong figure only composed of "capital sins." She is daring and shameless in her teasing, temptations and commands… She never shows any remorse, and remains, one more time, one of the classic femme fatales…

"Basic Instinct 2" is hardly unwatchable, because Stone is very winding, puzzling and intensely fascinating in the way she puts out of side issues through dialog that seems foolishly open and penetrating
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5/10
It Has Its Moments But Doesn't Measure Up To The Original
crazy_nanabush12 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Yes, it's true. This film is a bit of a turkey but it does have its moments. For instance, one of my favourite scenes takes place during Catherine's last treatment with Dr. Glass. Straddling an armless black leather chair with her legs spread out on either side, she confronts Dr. Glass with a seductive sexual purr about his fantasies of wanting to sleep with her. She goes into explicit detail about how he'd like to ravage her all the while we hear the squeaking of the leather fabric on the chair that she's straddling. It was a great moment. Probably the best in the entire movie. The audience literally burst out laughing when Catherine suddenly breaks her predatory purr and gets up from the chair then walks out of the office.

True, this film will probably go onto to win a bunch of Razzies but I'm sure it will do relatively well on home video with the "rated" and "unrated" versions. I got a sense that a lot of the sexuality was cut out of the movie. A lot of the steamy scenes felt chopped to bits by bad editing.

Do I recommend you go see this film in the theatre? If you simply want to see a little bit of eye candy, fluff and experience Ms. Stone at trying to squeeze what's left out of the role that helped catapult her to stardom, then by all means go for it. But be for-warned. This movie is pretty bad. Even laughable at certain points that are suppose to be serious. It's camp value I think, but that's just my opinion. You be the judge after watching it.
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10/10
What is wrong with you people?
ericose4 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I don't understand your objections to this movie. It is a taut, thrilling extension of the character created in "Basic Instinct". The only part of the story that is the least bit unrealistic, is the fact that Sharon Stone's character is still alive and not in jail at this late date.

SPOILER ALERT: As the movie progresses, we are presented with three theories of what is going on: 1) Sharon Stone's character is killing all these people because she's crazy (Risk Addicted); 2) David Thewlis' crooked cop is killing these people in order to frame Sharon Stone's character; 3) David Morrissey's analyst is killing these people for revenge. What upsets most people about the movie seems to be that none of these theories are ever explicated as the "real" story. (Although the analyst is in a psychiatric care facility for killing the cop; the only killing that occurs on screen.)

I think this is a brilliant plot device in the spirit of "2001, A Space Odyssey." WHO CARES what is real? The blonde really is crazy, the cop really is crooked and the analyst really wants revenge. What's important is the interactions between these and other characters in the story. Like real life, everyone is more complicated than anyone thinks and reality is more complicated than a movie. Get over it!
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6/10
Not So Basic as you would imagine
Chris Clazie6 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Yes,this movie is not as good as the original.That's that out of the way.It is,however,not so turgid as most reviews would have you think.There is an underlying intelligence to the whole movie,and although it is quite different to the first one in terms of mood and mystery,after all,we didn't know Catherine Tremayne then,it is a fairly decent attempt to attempt a what if,what if Catherine hadn't been caught out,what if she had succeeded in getting to England to carry on in her evil ways.The movie is good to look at,as was the first one,there are several confused characters,as in the first one,and there are more murders,although it's never really made clear as to who does what.In tone it reminded me of the ITV Monday,Tuesday night thrillers but I guess that's because it's set in London.Yes,there are some fairly amusing sexual encounters along the way,but they are there to give some emotional coherence to the characters involved.Stone still looks good,although her hairstyle is unflattering,and she seems to play it as though she's an ageing Barbie doll doing her best to get rid of all the sexual heat she's built up.The other actors are fair to good,and it was a good idea of the writers to add the scene at the end which is meant to screw our minds just as much as the poor Psychologist who's been caught up in all this.If you liked the first one,then give this a go.See it with an open mind.The first half is slow and a bit dull,the second half is much better.Six out of 10.
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4/10
On its own the movie is passable; Compared to the 1st movie, it just sucks.
marco-mendoza77717 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
The immense dissing Basic Instinct 2 is getting even before its release makes me go say "Hmmmmm...." My take on it is that the issues were just blown out of proportion. I think Basic Instinct 2 is a passable film with a good story and is just a victim of snowballed negative emotions. I'm beginning to feel like to give Basic Instinct 2 a bad bad bad review is somehow cool and there's this need for reviewers to join the bandwagon. It has become the easy target when there are worse films out there. Before I saw the film, i rarely found an objective review (NOTE: I said objective, not positive, because even though I am aiming for objectivity, I cannot say that Basic Instinct 2 is a perfect film, as mentioned earlier, it is passable).

(SPOILER ALERT) I liked the story's twists and how Catherine Tramell's evil schemes and cunning caused the disintegration of Michael Glass. It seems that after all these years, Ms. Tramell has just gotten better deceit-wise.

I agree that the film lacked eroticism and I think that the London setting did not help: It just lacks the sleaze and the lusty atmosphere of California in the first film.

If this film has been shown earlier, say 3-5 years after the first installment, then things would have been way different.
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5/10
the power of a vicious woman{in this case}
dinod-230 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
about lead character:yes Catherine is evil.yes she's like to harm people{especially men with problems}.most of men are powerless against her passion to lust &seduced those who opposed her.Catherine likes to be insidious &that makes me feel so glad from her actions{only on movie of course}good ms.STONE.but why we men afraid so much from strong women?maybe it's all about the competition.about movie yes he's little bit boring,but when you haven't any kind expectations about this movie{even if you heard bad rumors}you may like it,as some kind of pointless movie exercise.i.yes you will guess what happens next{even who will be the next victim},but if you have enough time to see "basic instinct 2"just watch it.it's good loss of time{i paid only 0.5 euro to entertain myself with helpless doctor Glass}.
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What Were They Thinking
Michael_Elliott29 February 2008
Basic Instinct 2 (2006)

BOMB (out of 4)

Sharon Stone is back, this time she's being questioned by a psychologist on whether or not she's a murderer. If you've followed this thread the past two years you'd see that I try and track down back movies from all the previous decades. I'm quite sure that one hundred years from now there'll be another weirdo doing the exact same thing and this movie here will be some sort of holy grail. I was expecting a bad movie but good Lord was this thing horrid. I'd say this film should have gone straight to DVD but that would be an insult to those films that do go straight to DVD. Stone, at best, is a fair to poor actress who can do good work if she's with a great director. Here she gives one of the worst performances I can think of coming from someone with an Oscar nod. She's so incredibly bad that you can't even laugh at her performance. Morrissey is also quite dull and whenever he's on screen I couldn't help but want to take a nap. Even the sex scenes are quite dull, although I've heard that some of them were trimmed for the theatrical release. Most depressing is that this crap is from director Michael Caton Jones who previously gave some good films like Rob Roy and This Boys Life.
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