Ice Hockey Wiki
Advertisement

The Cutting Edge is a 1992 American sports-romantic comedy film directed by Paul Michael Glaser and written by Tony Gilroy. The plot is about a rich, spoiled figure skater (played by Moira Kelly) who is paired with an injury-sidelined ice hockey player (played by D. B. Sweeney) for Olympic figure skating. Competing at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France, they have a climactic face off against a Soviet pair. It spawned a film series including a number of sequels. The film was primarily shot in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.[1]

Plot[]

Kate Moseley is a world-class figure skater representing the United States in the pairs event at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary. She has genuine talent, but years of being spoiled by her wealthy widower father Jack has made her impossible to work with.

Doug Dorsey is captain of the U.S. ice hockey team at the same Winter Olympics. Just minutes before a game, he and Kate collide in a hallway in the arena. During the game, Doug suffers a head injury that permanently damages his peripheral vision, costing him a shot to play in the NHL and forcing him to retire from ice hockey. During Kate's event, her partner drops her during their program, costing them a chance at the gold medal.

While training for the 1992 Winter Olympics over the next two years, Kate drives away all potential skating partners with her attitude and perfectionism. Her coach, Russian native Anton Pamchenko, has to find a replacement, an outsider who doesn't know that Kate is spoiled and difficult.

He tracks down Doug, who is back home in Minnesota, working in a steel mill and as a carpenter on the side, living with his brother, and playing in a hockey bar league. Desperate for another chance at Olympic glory, Doug agrees to work as Kate's partner, even though he has macho contempt for figure skating.

Kate's snooty, prima donna behavior gets on his nerves immediately, and their first few practices do not go well as they antagonize one another. However, they develop a mutual respect as both strive to outdo one another in work ethic.

As their relationship grows warmer, they learn to set aside their differences, becoming a pair to be reckoned with both on and off the ice. Kate even boldly defends Doug to her former coach who patronizes and insults them, and Doug defends his unusual choice of sport to his own family and friends, whom he had expected to mock him.

At the U.S. Nationals, despite strong performances in the short program and long program, they place third and their Olympic dreams are shattered. However, when one of the leading pairs falls during the competition, they advance to second place, earning their spot on the Olympic team.

Their potential is threatened, however, by their growing attraction to each other. Kate attempts to seduce Doug after a night of drunken celebration, revealing that she broke off her engagement to wealthy financier Hal. Usually a ladies' man, Doug uncharacteristically rebuffs her advances, fearing the possibility of regret and loss of respect for one another. When Kate discovers that Doug has bedded another woman (a rival skater) almost immediately after leaving her to sleep off her intoxication, she becomes enraged. The temporary rift is set aside, however, as they attempt to train a risky skating move invented by Pamchenko, which will assure them a gold medal if they can pull it off without serious injury.

At the finals at the Albertville Olympics, they look to be one of the top pairs competing for the gold. Yet another argument threatens their chemistry on the ice, and in the process Doug and Kate both discover that Kate is the fallible partner after all. Before getting on the ice for their decisive performance, Doug professes to Kate that he’s fallen in love with her, leaving Kate overcome with emotion, and she decides they are going to do the Pamchenko. They proceed to skate with a passion neither had shown before, performing the Pamchenko flawlessly and presumably winning the gold medal. When Doug asks why Kate decided to do it, her response is, “Because I love you.” Doug responds, "Just remember who said it first," and the two kiss on the ice.

Cast[]

  • D. B. Sweeney as Doug Dorsey
  • Moira Kelly as Kate Moseley
  • Roy Dotrice as Anton Pamchenko
  • Terry O'Quinn as Jack Moseley
  • Dwier Brown as Hale Forrest
  • Chris Benson as Walter Dorsey
  • Michael Hogan as Doctor
  • Kevin Peeks as Brian Newman
  • Rachelle Ottley as Lorie Peckarovski
  • Barry Flatman as Rick Tuttle
  • Christine Hough and Doug Ladret, as Soviet team Smilkov and Brushkin. This Canadian figure skating pair finished 9th in the actual Olympic competition portrayed in the film, just 6 weeks before the film was released.

Music[]

The original music score was composed by Patrick Williams. The film's theme song "Feels like Forever" was performed by Joe Cocker and written by Diane Warren and Bryan Adams.

Soundtrack[]

The soundtrack album was originally released by Rykodisc in 1998; in 2004 it was reissued by Varèse Sarabande with 20 minutes of Patrick Williams's score (tracks 11–22).

  1. Street of Dreams – Nia Peeples
  2. Cry All Night – Neverland
  3. Ride On TimeBlack Box
  4. Groove Master – Arrow
  5. It Ain't Over 'til It's Over – Rosemary Butler & John Townsend
  6. Shame Shame Shame – Johnny Winter
  7. Turning Circles – Sally Dworsky
  8. Baby Now I – Dan Reed Network
  9. I've Got Dreams to Remember – Delbert McClinton
  10. Feels Like Forever (Theme From The Cutting Edge) – Joe Cocker
  11. Ich Namen Gita/Olympic Hockey
  12. Battle of the CD's
  13. Limo to Mansion/Nine Months Later
  14. Kate Skates Alone
  15. Chicago Practices
  16. Hoedown
  17. Tequila
  18. Olympic Fanfare/Dubois & Gercel
  19. Doug & Kate Get Angry
  20. The Russians Skate
  21. Finale
  22. End Credits

The following songs are heard in the movie but not included on the soundtrack album:

  • Lauretta – Malcolm McLaren
  • Love ShackRosemary Butler
  • Auld Lang Syne – Rosemary Butler & Warren Wiebe
  • Walking the Dog – John Townsend
  • The RaceYello
  • Diddley DaddyChris Isaak

Reception[]

The Cutting Edge was released on March 27, 1992, and grossed $25,105,517 domestically.[2]

The film was met with mixed critical reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes it has an approval rating of 57% based on 35 reviews, with the site's consensus: "Part contrived romance, part hackneyed sports drama, The Cutting Edge shows how difficult it can be to figure skate through cheese."[3] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade "A-" on scale of A to F.[4]

Sequels[]

The film was followed by several sequels: The Cutting Edge: Going for the Gold (2006), The Cutting Edge: Chasing the Dream (2008) and The Cutting Edge: Fire and Ice (2010), each with mostly different casts. The first sequel which involves the couple's daughter moves the timing of The Cutting Edge from 1992 back to the 1984 Winter Olympics so that their daughter could be 21 at the time of the sequel.

References[]

External links[]

This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at The Cutting Edge. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).


Advertisement