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Natural Born Killers

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Natural Born Killers
File:Natural Born Killers (1994).jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byOliver Stone
Written byQuentin Tarantino
Oliver Stone
Dave Veloz
Richard Rutowski
Produced byDon Murphy
Thom Mount
Arnon Milchan
StarringWoody Harrelson
Juliette Lewis
Tom Sizemore
Rodney Dangerfield
CinematographyRalph Richardson
Edited byBrian Berdan
Music byBrent Lewis
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
August 26, 1994
Running time
118 min.
Director's Cut
122 min.
Country United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$34,000,000
Box office$61,615,296

Natural Born Killers is a 1994 satirical crime film directed by Oliver Stone about serial killers and their coverage by the media. It stars Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis, and features appearances by Rodney Dangerfield, Robert Downey, Jr., Tom Sizemore, and Tommy Lee Jones. It is based on a screenplay by Quentin Tarantino that was heavily revised by Stone with Dave Veloz and Richard Rutowski.

Taglines:
The Media Made Them Superstars.
In the media circus of life, they were the main attraction.
A bold new film that takes a look at a country seduced by fame, obsessed by crime and consumed by the media.

Plot

The film opens with Mickey Knox (Woody Harrelson) and his wife Mallory (Juliette Lewis) in a roadside café. The pair are initially seen to be normal customers, with Mickey buying pie and Mallory dancing to rock 'n' roll on the jukebox. A group of rednecks arrive and one of them begins dancing and flirting with Mallory. When he takes his flirting too far, a fistfight breaks out between the two, which Mickey soon joins. Mickey and Mallory then massacre the café's patrons, ending in a morbid game of Eeny-Meeny to decide who lives and who dies. After executing their final victim, the couple laugh at the sole survivor and make sure he remembers their names before they embrace and declare their undying love.

Next, a flashback sequence showing how the murderous pair met up: Mickey worked as a deliveryman, and once delivered some beef to the house where Mallory lived with her physically and sexually abusive father (Rodney Dangerfield), her mother, and Kevin, her younger brother. The scene is portrayed as a sitcom with a canned laughter track, the "audience" laughing hardest when Mallory is subjected to lewd comments and attempted molestation by her repulsive father. When Mickey arrives, he falls in love with Mallory and whisks her away on a date, stealing her father's car in the process. Mickey is arrested and imprisoned for car theft, but escapes and returns to Mallory's house. The two kill her father by drowning him in the aquarium and burn her mother alive in her bed. They spare her ten-year-old brother. Mickey then takes Mallory away with him.

Back in the present, the pair continue their crime-spree (which bears several parallels to Bonnie and Clyde and the Starkweather-Fugate case), slaughtering their way across the southwestern United States and ultimately claiming fifty-two victims. Following them are two characters who see the murderers as a chance to acquire fame and glory for themselves, as well as furthering their own careers. The first is a policeman, Detective Jack Scagnetti (Tom Sizemore), who seems particularly fascinated by Mallory. Scagnetti has a lifelong obsession with serial killers after seeing his mother shot and killed by Charles Whitman when he was five, and hopes to achieve hero status by capturing the pair. The second is journalist Wayne Gale (Downey), who hosts a show called American Maniacs, profiling serial killers in a blatantly sensationalist way. Various clips of his program on Mickey and Mallory are shown, with Gale acting outraged as he details the pair's crimes, although off-air he clearly regards their crimes as a fantastic way of boosting his show's ratings. It is Gale who is mostly responsible for elevating Mickey and Mallory into heroes, with his show featuring interviews with people around the world expressing their admiration for the mass killers as if they were film stars.

Mickey and Mallory become lost in the desert and are taken in by a Navajo man, known as "Old Indian" (Russell Means), and his grandson. After the duo fall asleep, the Old Indian begins chanting beside the fire, invoking nightmares in Mickey about his abusive parents. Mickey wakes up in a rage and shoots Old Indian before he realizes what he is doing. Mallory and Mickey are both traumatized, marking the first time the couple feel guilty for a murder. Mallory exclaims, "You killed life!", implying Old Indian was more worthy of living than their previous victims. While running from the scene through the desert, the two are bitten repeatedly by rattlesnakes.

They go to a drugstore to find snakebite antidote, but the police interfere and a gunfight ensues, ending when the police beat and kick Mickey relentlessly after he surrenders. Scagnetti, who was watching from the parking lot, takes the credit for capturing them. The film then jumps ahead one year. After a surreal trial, shown in clips from 'American Maniacs', the homicidal couple have been imprisoned, but are due to be shipped to a mental hospital after being declared insane.

Scagnetti arrives at the prison and meets up with Warden Dwight McClusky (Tommy Lee Jones) and the two devise a plan to get rid of Mickey and Mallory: McClusky will arrange for Scagnetti to be the driver for the Knoxes' transfer. Alone with the pair during transport, Scagnetti will shoot and kill them, then claim that they had been trying to escape. Gale, also at the prison, persuades Mickey to agree to a live interview to air immediately after the Super Bowl. At the time, Mallory is held in solitary confinement elsewhere in the prison, awaiting her transport to the mental hospital.

As planned, Mickey is interviewed by Gale. He gives a speech about how crime is a normal part of humanity, describes enlightenment through murder and declares himself a "natural born killer." His words inspire the other inmates (who are watching the interview on TV in the D Wing recreation room) and incite them to riot. During the riot, the inmates subdue, torture, and/or murder nearly all of the prison guards and inmate informants.

Warden McClusky orders the interview terminated over Gale's violent protests and heads to the control room, leaving Mickey alone with Gale, the film crew and several guards. Using a lengthy joke complete with hand gestures as a diversion, Mickey elbow-smashes a guard in the face and grabs his shotgun. Mickey kills most of the guards and takes the survivors and the film crew hostage. He leads them through the prison riot to find Mallory. Gale follows, giving a live television report as people are being beaten and slaughtered all around him.

Meanwhile, Mallory is being beaten in her cell by Scagnetti, having fought off his attempts at seduction and breaking his nose in the process (according to Stone's DVD commentary, Juliette Lewis actually broke Sizemore's nose in this scene. Sizemore refused treatment and continued the scene.). Still live on national television, Mickey engages in a short Mexican Standoff with Scagnetti, eventually feigning concession to lower Scagnetti's guard. Scagnetti is then stabbed in the throat with a shank by Mallory; Mickey reveals that he is out of bullets before Mallory picks up Scagnetti's loaded gun and shoots him twice in the head. They continue to escape through the riot-filled prison and Gale's TV crew are killed by corrupt prison guards. One of the two prison-guard hostages is shot and later bleeds to death.

After being rescued by a mysterious prisoner named Owen (Arliss Howard), Mickey and Mallory take cover in a blood-splattered shower room. By this time Gale has snapped and has shot a prison guard himself, finding the killing a thrill. Warden McClusky is outside the shower room with dozens of guards. Obsessed with killing Mickey and Mallory, McClusky threatens to storm the shower room, despite the protests of his guards who insist that there are more pressing problems, namely the hundreds of other rioting inmates heading their way.

Mickey and Mallory, together with Owen, eventually manage to escape by taking Gale and a guard hostage, Gale's camera still capturing everything. After Mickey and Mallory flee, McClusky and his guards are massacred by hordes of inmates who burst into the area, trapping McClusky and the guards against a locked gate. In the director's cut of the film, there is a shot of McClusky's head on a pike.

Owen is never seen or mentioned again after the escape. Mickey and Mallory steal a van and kill the guard, dumping his body out of the van while being chased by police officers. Escaping to a rural location, Mickey and Mallory give a final interview to Wayne Gale before—much to his surprise and horror—they execute him, capturing it on the camera (which, as they point out to Gale, is the one surviving witness).

The couple are then shown years after their escape in an RV together, with Mickey driving and Mallory (who is pregnant) watching their two children play.

Cast

Effects

Natural Born Killers employs a wide range of camera angles, filters, lenses and special effects. Much of the movie is told via parodies of television shows, including a scene presented in the style of a sitcom about a dysfunctional family. Commercials which were commonly on the air at the time of the film's release make brief, intermittent appearances.

Recurring images

Television frequently appears in the film, including real television sets and television images that play on the sky, windows, or the sides of passing buildings. Furthermore, the story is often told via TV programmes, and the characters think about their own stories through the filter of TV. One example is Mickey's flashback to his first meeting with Mallory, which is presented as an episode of a sitcom called I Love Mallory, in which Mallory's abusive home life is set played out to the canned laughter and "aw shucks" attitude of 1950s sitcoms. When Mickey breaks out of the work camp, the scene is shot as a Western, as Mickey steals a horse and rides out against a coming tornado. Much of the pair's violence is only shown as replayed or recreated on television. During the prison interview, Mickey's head is shown talking on a little television in an idealized 1950s Leave it to Beaver living room and on the prison television. The last scene of the film flicks away from Mickey and Mallory as if the viewer has begun to flip channels. It flicks through a variety of images including recurring images interspersed through the film, the O.J. Simpson trial, and the burning Branch Davidian compound. Intermittent breaks from the film show popular commercials from the 1990s making a direct relation between the diegetic audience and the cinematic audience. By challenging the mass media throughout the entirety of the film, Mickey and Mallory represent the idolized products of the society of the spectacle; by including glimpses of true life angry and violent celebrities, Stone concludes the film as a modern satire on the mass media's exploitation of violence.

The story of Frankenstein is mentioned twice: explaining why he's going to shoot Wayne Gale, Mickey says "Frankenstein had to kill Dr. Frankenstein", implying that his actions were created by the media, and when Warden McClusky is explaining to Jack Scagnetti that they plan to have Mickey and Mallory undergo electroshock therapy, footage of Frankenstein is shown.

Snakes reappear throughout the film. One of the first images in the film is of a rattlesnake. The couple later exchange wedding rings of intertwined snakes, and Mickey has a tattoo of two snakes forming a heart on his chest. There are recurring shots of a seven headed dragon, like the one depicted in the Book of Revelation. In the couple's car, there is a toy snake. Mickey and Mallory first meet a real snake at the Navajo's: a rattlesnake is coiled in the corner, a scene which Mickey recalls with fondness and admiration in his prison interview. The Navajo tells a story in his native Navajo about a woman who was shocked that the very snake she'd rescued had bitten her, to which the snake replies "Look bitch, you knew I was a snake." The pair are bitten by a seeming field of rattlesnakes, which leads them to the drug store (a neon sign of Caduceus of Mercury) where they are captured. Also when Mallory and Mickey cut themselves on the bridge to show their love to each other, their blood becomes animated and changes into a red and green snake, entwined and hissing at each other.

Mickey repeatedly uses nature and evolution to justify his killings, saying that "The wolf don't know why he's a wolf, the deer don't know why he's a deer. God just made 'em that way." He explains that he is the next step in evolution, and that he's a "natural born killer". Shots of nature open the film and occur throughout the film, set both on a television and in nature, with a violent or disturbing undertone. As Mickey and Mallory literally walk out of the media's frame at the end of the film, it suggests that only a teleological advanced being can transcend the created establishments that influence common Americans.

Yin and Yang, an ancient symbol of moral equivalence appear more than once. Mickey and Mallory have Yin and Yang tattoos on opposite arms. Mickey's tattoo is opposite and below another tattoo of the face of Christ. Mallory's tattoo is opposite and above a tattoo of a scorpion. Mickey's left earring is a Yin Yang. During Mickey's television interview he suggests that he and Mallory are "dark and light", compatible with one another they function as a single force intended to destroy the "demons" of mass media, corrupt law enforcement and the commonalty's obsession with violence.

A glowing lime green light is used throughout the film, symbolizing the sickness in Mickey's head. It first appears in the film's opening sequence, as lights in the diner jukebox. Green is also present in the key lime pie Mickey orders. It appears again predominantly when Mallory kills a gas station attendant, and absorbs almost the entire screen during the drug store sequence. Lime green lights later make a less pronounced appearance during the riot sequence.

The number 666 pops up in certain areas throughout the film - for example Route 666 and a brief glimpse of a newspaper a patron, who will later appear in the prison riot scene as Owen (Arliss Howard), is holding in the first scene.

Alternate versions

The original theatrical release was edited in order to receive an R-rated certificate in the United States. The film was subsequently released on video in the director's preferred version, which is approximately 4 minutes longer and contains more violent imagery. In the Director´s Cut three of the deleted sequences show a guard getting stuffed into a washing machine, a guard getting his head burnt against a cookplate, a guard getting hanged, and another guard getting stuffed into an oven.

Deleted scenes

  • A deranged inmate (Denis Leary) delivers a rapid-fire monologue about how the Pittsburgh Pirates are responsible for Mickey and Mallory's killing spree.
  • A courtroom scene showing Mickey questioning one of the survivors of his and Mallory's rampage, Grace Mulberry (Ashley Judd). She recounts the night that Mickey killed all of her girlfriends and her brother. After Mickey is done questioning her, he attacks her with a pencil and stabs her to death with it.
  • The Hun Brothers (played by the Barbarian Brothers), professional body builders and still-living victims of the Knoxes' killing spree, talk about their admiration of their attackers. The Knoxes had used chainsaws to cut off the Brothers' legs.(Ironically, the Knoxes' admiration for the Huns is what kept them from killing the twins.)
  • After Mickey and Mallory escape and kill Wayne, they are seen riding down the road in a van with Owen, who asks to accompany them. When Mickey informs him that they will be dropping him off, Owen begins making sexual overtures towards Mallory. He then produces a gun and Mickey and Mallory realize that he is their "demon" incarnate. Owen fatally shoots Mickey, then turns the gun on Mallory; the screen cuts to black, accompanied by Mallory screaming, before cutting to a shot of the van driving away into the desert. In an introductory sequence, Oliver Stone says that he wanted Mickey and Mallory to get their comeuppance, but that it couldn't come from society or the law; rather, it had to come from "one of their own" (i.e., another serial killer).

Production

Natural Born Killers had been based upon a screenplay written by Quentin Tarantino in which a married couple suddenly decide to go on a killing spree. Stone, Richard Rutowski, and David Veloz, rewrote the script, keeping much of the dialogue word for word, but changed the focus of the film from journalist Wayne Gale (Robert Downey, Jr.) to Mickey and Mallory. Tarantino was credited for the film's story. In a 1993 interview, Tarantino stated that he no longer held an animosity towards Stone, and that he wished the film well. "It's not going to be my movie, it's going to be Oliver Stone's, and God bless him. I hope he does a good job with it. If I wasn't emotionally attached to it, I'm sure I would find it very interesting. If you like my stuff, you might not like this movie. But if you like his stuff, you're probably going to love it. It might be the best thing he's ever done, but not because of anything to do with me. [...] I actually can't wait to see it, to tell you the truth."[1]

The prison riot was filmed at Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet, Illinois. In the first two of four weeks on location at the prison, the extras were actual inmates with rubber weapons. The other two weeks over 200 extras were needed to be brought in from 'the outside' because the Stateville inmates were on lockdown. The wedding scene was filmed on the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge just west of Taos, New Mexico.

Box office and critical response

In its opening weekend, the film grossed a total of $11,166,687 in 1,510 theaters. As of January 12, 2007, the film has grossed a total of $50,282,766 domestically,[2] compared to its $34 million budget. [1]

Natural Born Killers had a mixed critical response. The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes records an average response of 48%, based on 27 reviews. However, Metacritic records a 74% positive response based on 20 reviews.

Roger Ebert, a film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the movie four stars out of four and wrote, "Seeing this movie once is not enough. The first time is for the visceral experience, the second time is for the meaning."[3]

However, other critics found the film unsuccessful in its aims. Hal Hinson of The Washington Post claimed that "Stone's sensibility is white-hot and personal. As much as he'd like us to believe that his camera is turned outward on the culture, it's vividly clear that he can't resist turning it inward on himself. This wouldn't be so troublesome if Stone didn't confuse the public and the private."[4] Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote, "for all its surface passions, Natural Born Killers never digs deep enough to touch the madness of such events, or even to send them up in any surprising way. Mr. Stone's vision is impassioned, alarming, visually inventive, characteristically overpowering. But it's no match for the awful truth."[5] James Berardinelli gave the film a negative review, but his dislike of the film was different than most unflattering reviews from other critics, who tended to focus on the film's decrying of violence and the media while sensationalizing both of those elements. Berardinelli said that the film "hit the bullseye" as a satire of America's lust for bloodshed, but repeated this argument so often and so loudly that it ruined the film.

Legacy

Entertainment Weekly ranked it the 8th Most Controversial Movie Ever.[6]

Controversies

Violence and censorship

The film initially had an NC-17 rating but Stone toned down the violence by making a huge number of cuts, and the MPAA re-rated the film an R. The director's cut edition contains the NC-17 rated version along with other deleted scenes. Stone has continually maintained that the film is a satire on how serial killers are adored by the media for their horrific actions and that those who claim that the violence in the movie itself is a cause of societal violence miss the point of the movie.

The UK video release was also delayed due to a shooting at a school in Dunblane, Scotland. It was passed '18' uncut for video release on 26 February 1996. In 2002 the full 'Director's Cut' version of the film, restoring the 3 minutes of cuts required in the US in 1994, was submitted to the BBFC and classified '18' uncut.

Copycat crimes

The film was accused of encouraging or even inspiring several murderers:

  • 17-year-old Nathan K. Martinez shot and killed his stepmother and half-sister while they slept at their home in Bluffdale, Utah, a suburb of Salt Lake City in October, 1994. He was apprehended several days later while sleeping in a motel in O'Neill, Nebraska, following a nationwide manhunt. He was obsessed with the film and had seen it many times. He had shaved his head and wore the same style of round sunglasses as the "Mickey" character did in the film. His father and older brother had left early that morning for a hunting trip.
  • On January 3, 1997, NY Firefighter James Halverson was running the local high school track when three teenagers shot and killed him. The teenagers were reportedly obsessed with the film and wanted to know "what it felt like to kill someone".
  • 18-year-olds Sarah Edmondson and her boyfriend Benjamin Darras supposedly watched the film before carrying out a robbery in 1995 that resulted in murder. Relatives of one victim filed a lawsuit against Stone.[7]
  • Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, perpetrators of the Columbine High School Massacre were fans of the film. They used the initials of the movie's title, "NBK," as a code for their mission, writing "God I can't wait till they die. I can taste the blood now – NBK" and "the holy April morning of NBK". Also, in an undated journal entry, Klebold wrote about his options. "I'm stuck in humanity. Maybe going 'NBK' w. Eric is the way to break free".
  • In 2004, Angus Wallen and Kara Winn, both 27, watched Natural Born Killers the night before murdering 22-year-old Brandon Murphy. They shot him, robbed him, and then set his body and apartment on fire in Jacksonville, Florida.
  • On April 23, 2006, Jeremy Allan Steinke, 23 years old, and his then 12-year-old girlfriend, murdered her parents, Marc and Debra Richardson, as well as her 8-year-old brother, Jacob in Medicine Hat, Alberta. Witnesses testified that Jeremy had watched Natural Born Killers several times previous to the murders. On July 9, 2007, Jasmine Richardson was found guilty of three counts of first-degree murder in the killings.[8] On November 8, 2007, she was sentenced to the maximum allowable sentence of ten years, which is the maximum penalty for a person under 14 years of age.[9] This will include four years in a psychiatric institution and four and a half years under conditional supervision in the community. She is currently the youngest person in Canadian history to be convicted of a multiple murder. Steinke is still awaiting trial.
  • After the murderer of one of novelist John Grisham's friends cited Natural Born Killers as an inspiration, Grisham spoke out against Oliver Stone and the film itself. When Warner Bros. was looking for a lead for the film adaptation of Grisham's A Time To Kill and suggested Woody Harrelson, Grisham, who had director and cast approval, said Harrelson would never be in a film he had anything to do with. Grisham has cited other reasons for not wanting Harrelson to play the role that Matthew McConaughey ended up playing, most notably that Harrelson "looked kind of dumbbell-ish".
  • On July 19, 2008, Eric Tavulares strangled his girlfriend, Lauren Aljubouri to death. Tavulares and Aljubouri, both 18, had been watching the movie, and stopped it about half way through before going to bed. While having a conversation with Aljubouri in bed, he stated that he "switched mentally" and began strangling her. Upon arriving at the scene, Tavulares told police "I did it, I can't believe it. I did it." He later told police he was fascinated with the movie "Natural Born Killers", and had seen it 10 to 20 times. He faces up to 60 years in prison if convicted.[10][11][12]

Style

The film is filmed in a frenzied and psychedelic style consisting of black and white, animation, and other strange color schemes. The techniques were allegedly inspired by Stone's drug use during the making of the film, particularly psilocybin mushrooms, as revealed on the behind the scenes documentary shown on the DVD versions.

Stone considered Natural Born Killers his road film specifically naming Bonnie and Clyde as a source of inspiration.[13] Both these films fall under the road story genre through their constant challenges of their diegetic society. While Bonnie and Clyde attempt to disintegrate the weakened economic and social landscape of the 1930s, Mickey and Mallory try to free America from the overarching conventions which influence the common masses. While the flights of both couples successfully challenge their respective societies, both films conclude with pessimistic outlooks regarding individual freedom within the American sphere of influence. The police's ambush of Bonnie and Clyde exhibits the empirical control of law enforcement over the individual. Natural Born Killers ends as it begins, suggesting the uninhibited influence of the mass media among common Americans; this is seen within the film as the diegetic audience and media turn Mickey and Mallory into international superstars.

The famous death scene in Bonnie and Clyde used innovative editing techniques provided by multiple cameras shot from different angles at different speeds; this sporadic interchange between fast-paced and slow-motion editing that concludes Arthur Penn's film is used throughout the entirety of Natural Born Killers.[14]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was released August 23, 1994 by Interscope Records.

  1. "Waiting for the Miracle" (Edit) - Leonard Cohen
  2. "Shitlist" - L7
  3. "Moon Over Greene County" (Edit) - Dan Zanes
  4. "Rock N Roll Nigger" (Flood Remix) - Patti Smith
  5. "Sweet Jane" (Edit) - Cowboy Junkies
  6. "You Belong to Me" - Bob Dylan
  7. "The Trembler" (Edit) - Duane Eddy
  8. "Burn" - Nine Inch Nails
  9. "Route 666" - BB Tone Brian Berdan feat. Robert Downey, Jr.
  10. "Totally Hot"
  11. "Back in Baby's Arms" - Patsy Cline
  12. "Taboo" (Edit) - Peter Gabriel and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
  13. "Sex is Violent"
  14. "History Repeats Itself" (Edit) - A.O.S.
  15. "Something I Can Never Have" (Edited and Extended) - Nine Inch Nails
  16. "I Will Take You Home" - Russell Means
  17. "Drums a Go-Go" (Edit) - The Hollywood Persuaders
  18. "Hungry Ants"
  19. "The Day the Niggaz Took Over" - Dr. Dre
  20. "Born Bad" - Juliette Lewis
  21. "Fall of the Rebel Angels" (Edit) - Sergio Cervetti
  22. "Forkboy" - Lard
  23. "Batonga in Batongaville"
  24. "A Warm Place" (Edit) - Nine Inch Nails
  25. "Allah, Mohammad, Char, Yaar"
  26. "The Future" (Edit) - Leonard Cohen
  27. "What Would U Do?" - Tha Dogg Pound

Tracks 10, 13, 18, 21, 23, 25 are assembled from various recordings and dialogue from the film.

References

  1. ^ Fuller, Graham (1998). "Graham Fuller/1993". In Peary, Gerald (ed.). Quentin Tarantino: Interviews. University Press of Mississippi. pp. pages 57—59. ISBN 1578060516. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  2. ^ "Natural Born Killers". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2007-01-12. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ Ebert, Roger (August 26, 1994). "Natural Born Killers". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2007-01-12.
  4. ^ Hinson, Hal (August 26, 1994). "Natural Born Killers". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2007-01-12.
  5. ^ Maslin, Janet (August 26, 1994). "NATURAL BORN KILLERS; Young Lovers With a Flaw That Proves Fatal". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-01-12.
  6. ^ "25 Most Controversial Movies Ever". Entertainment Weekly. August 27, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-27. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  7. ^ http://film.guardian.co.uk/interview/interviewpages/0,6737,862931,00.html
  8. ^ "Medicine Hat girl guilty of first-degree murder". cbc.ca. CBC News. 2007-07-09. Retrieved 2007-09-10.
  9. ^ "Teen gets maximum sentence for Medicine Hat killings". cbc.ca. CBC News. 2007-11-08. Retrieved 2007-11-08.
  10. ^ http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=774889
  11. ^ http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2008/0722081killer1.html
  12. ^ Lauryn Aljubouri (18) was strangled to death by Eric Tavulares (18) after watching Natural Born Killers
  13. ^ Lavington, Stephen. Oliver Stone. London: Virgin Books, 2004.
  14. ^ Leong, Ian, Mike Sell, and Kelly Thomas. "Mad Love, Mobile Homes, and Dysfunctional Dicks." The Road Movie Book ed. Steven Cohan and Ina Rae Hark (1997): 70-89.