Chameleon (1995 film)

For works with similar titles, see Chameleon (disambiguation) § Film and television.
Chameleon
Directed by Michael Pavone
Produced by Dave Alan Johnson
Michael Pavone
Written by Michael Pavone
Dave Alan Johnson
Starring Anthony LaPaglia
Music by John Debney
Cinematography Ross Berryman
Edited by Joanne D'Antonio
Production
company
Rysher Entertainment
Release dates
  • 1995 (1995)
Running time
108 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Chameleon is a 1995 direct-to-video film starring Anthony LaPaglia. The film is directed by Michael Pavone. Pavone wrote and produced the film with Dave Alan Johnson.

Plot

When agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration are ambushed during a raid, Agent Matt Gianni suspects a leak and asks his boss Stuart Langston to enlist an outside agent. Langston brings in Willie Serling, who is a master of disguises and whose family was killed by Alberto Cortese, a drug smuggler. Langston sends Serling to jail undercover to investigate a drug operation possibly run by Cortese.[1]

While in jail, Serling disguises himself as a computer expert and recovers critical bank records. Gianni frees him from jail and sends him to a bank to pose an auditor and follow up on the records. Serling investigates bank executive Jill Hallmann but begins dating her. He finds out that another executive, Morris Steinfeld, is the one involved in criminal activity. Steinfeld finds out that he is being investigated and reports to bank president Jason Ainsley, who informs Cortese of the investigation. Cortese kills Ainsley and also gets Steinfeld killed. Serling, who is targeted next, disguises himself as a hobo and is able to shoot Cortese first, though he does not kill him.[1]

Serling's behavior after the events becomes bizarre, and he ignores Gianni's imploring to quit. Gianni arrests at the prison and the bank the perpetrators involved with the drug operation. Meanwhile, Serling transfers Cortese's money from an offshore account. He tells Hallmann his real identity and leaves her. When Cortese attempts to come after Hallmann, Serling shows up and kills Cortese.[1]

Cast

Reception

The Roanoke Times reviewed the film, "The... plot is standard movie thriller stuff—a little slow and, at the end, cliched—but LaPaglia's performance overcomes the flaws."[2] TV Guide reported, "Chameleon has commendable ambitions to rise above the usual straight-to-video level but is seriously undermined by sluggish pacing and gross overlength... [the film] is a surprisingly low-key, talky thriller that remains consistently watchable but doesn't really explore its intriguing premise involving disguise, identity, and personality transference."[1][3] DVD & Video Guide 2005 said, "LaPaglia has a field day in the central role, but the film's plot is just a bit too derivative."[4]

Psychotherapists on Film noted how the film utilizes a psychiatrist as a character; Willie Serling's boss asks a psychiatrist about Serling's response to his family being killed. The authors write, "She says Serling has an 'as if' personality brought on by his trauma, and if he is left in the field he could lose whatever personality he still has. She is right, but a new love saves him."[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Chameleon Review". TV Guide. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  2. Mayo, Mike (September 28, 1996). "Look for Names You Know in 5 Dramas". The Roanoke Times.
  3. Grant, Edmond, ed. (1997). The Motion Picture Guide, 1997 Annual: The Films of 1996. Cinebooks. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-933997-39-4.
  4. Martin, Mick; Porter, Marsha (2004). DVD & Video Guide 2005. Ballantine Books. p. 186. ISBN 978-0-345-44995-5.
  5. Flowers, John; Frizler, Paul (2004). Psychotherapists on Film, 1899-1999: A Worldwide Guide to over 5000 Films. McFarland. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-7864-1297-6.

External links

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