Additional information for Blood Simple, which has a domestic theatrical release set for January 18, 1985. The film is being distributed by USA Films and has not yet been rated. Blood Simple has a total running time of 99 minutes.
18
Argentina
K-16
Finland
-12
France
16
Norway
PG
Singapore
15
Sweden
16
Switzerland
18
UK
R
USA
16
West Germany
16
Iceland
R
Australia
16
Netherlands
M/16
Portugal
18
South Korea
16
Brazil
R16
New Zealand
14A
Canada
18
Germany
99min
96min
Blood Simple.
Finland
Blood Simple.
France
Bérgyilkos
Hungary
Blood Simple - Blut für Blut
West Germany
Blood Simple - Eine mörderische Nacht
West Germany
Blood Simple - Sangue facile
Italy
Blood Simple - et nemt offer
Denmark
Blood Simple: The Thriller
Japan
Gosto de Sangue
Brazil
Kansiz
Turkey
Krvavo jednostavno
Yugoslavia
Krvavo prosto
Serbia
Mono aima
Greece
Sang pour sang
France
Sangre fácil
Spain
Sangue por Sangue
Portugal
Simplemente sangre
Argentina
Smiertelnie proste
Poland
Véresen egyszerü
Hungary
September , 1984
France
September 07, 1984
Canada
October 12, 1984
USA
January , 1985
USA
January 18, 1985
USA
March , 1985
Belgium
March 07, 1985
Argentina
March 28, 1985
Netherlands
April , 1985
France
April 11, 1985
Norway
May 10, 1985
Sweden
June 27, 1985
Australia
July 03, 1985
France
August 30, 1985
Denmark
September 13, 1985
Italy
September 26, 1985
West Germany
February , 1986
Portugal
April 18, 1986
Hong Kong
November 27, 1987
Finland
December 25, 1988
Brazil
November , 1999
Italy
January 06, 2000
Germany
March 23, 2000
Hungary
June 02, 2000
USA
June 02, 2000
USA
June 08, 2000
Switzerland
June 30, 2000
Greece
July 07, 2000
USA
July 12, 2000
Czech Republic
July 19, 2000
France
July 26, 2000
Belgium
July 27, 2000
Israel
August 03, 2000
Czech Republic
September 08, 2000
Spain
September 15, 2000
Poland
November 04, 2000
Japan
November 30, 2000
Netherlands
March 02, 2005
Portugal
June 13, 2007
Italy
No taglines exist for this title.
A rich but jealous man hires a private investigator to kill his cheating wife and her new man. But, when blood is involved, nothing is simple.
In an unnamed Texas town, a bar manager, Ray (John Getz) and his boss's wife, Abby (Frances McDormand), are suspected of having an affair by her husband, Julian Marty (Dan Hedaya).A private detective (M. Emmet Walsh) hired by Marty, has subsequently taken photos of Ray and Abby while they stayed at a local motel, a stay during which Marty makes a menacing phone call to them, making it clear that he is now well aware of their relationship.The next day Ray confronts Marty at the bar, it ends badly and Ray quits, walking out at which point Marty threatens Rays life. However, after yet another ugly incident between the three, Marty arranges for the private detective to kill the pair, and on the detective's suggestion, Marty goes on a fishing trip to create an alibi. That night, the detective breaks into Abby's apartment and steals her gun.The detective now uses photos he has doctored to make it appear that he has actually murdered the lovers, goes to collect his $10,000 fee from Marty, whereupon he kills Marty, with Abbys gun. Upon leaving, the detective does not realize not only has he has left behind his lighter (hidden under the fish) but that before being shot, Marty had taken one of the incriminating photos and locked it in the bar's safe. Abby's revolver is kicked into the corner, presumably to implicate her when it is found.Later, that same evening, Ray arrives at the bar to insist that Marty pay him the wages he's owed. Marty, sitting in a chair facing away from him, doesn't respond to anything Ray says, and doesn't move when Ray steps on Abby's gun, setting it off. Ray walks around the chair and sees that Marty is quite dead, bleeding out onto the floor. Ray discovers the gun, which he recognises as belonging to Abby. Ray is interrupted by another employee, Meurice, who arrives in the bar outside Marty's office. Ray runs to shut and lock the office door; Meurice calls for Marty, gets no response, and puts his signature song, The Four Tops' "It's the Same Old Song," loudly, on the jukebox. Ray uses the noise from outside to mask his cleaning the office, and removes Marty's body, dropping Abby's gun into Marty's coat pocket, packs the body into his car and drives off, but not before throwing the windbreaker and towel into the incinerator behind the bar.Driving down the highway, he hears a noise from the rear seat: Marty is alive. Panicking, Ray stops the car, jumps out, and runs a short distance over a farm field. On returning to the car, he sees that the back driver's side door is open and Marty is gone. He is crawling down the highway, muttering. At first Ray debates running him over with his car, but then follows him with a shovel, intending to kill him that way, but is interrupted by an oncoming tractor-trailer. Ray considers throwing Marty into the path of the truck, but instead he picks up Marty and drags him back to the car, forcing him in as the semi passes. Ray drives to the middle of a field, digs a hole and throws Marty in. He is in process of burying him when Marty discovers Abby's gun in his jacket pocket. He pulls it out, trembling, points it at Ray, and pulls the trigger. It clicks; he pulls it again, and again; Ray removes the gun from him and continues to bury Marty alive. The next morning Ray drives off.Meanwhile, at his apartment the private detective burns the series of try-out doctored copies of the photograph he used to fake the murder of Abby and Ray, and, upon opening the envelope in which was the one he handed out to Marty, he discovers that Marty has replaced one of the incriminating faked photos with a sign admonishing employees to wash their hands before returning to work. Annoyed, he then goes to light his cigarette, but notices his prized lighter is gone, and believes somebody may have taken it, forgetting that it was under the fish from earlier.At Abby's apartment, a deeply disturbed Ray tries to explain that he cleaned up Abby's mess. Abby does not understand what Ray is talking about, and they get into an argument. Ray thinks Abby is being coy for some reason he doesn't understand. The phone rings, interrupting their argument; Abby answers. It's the detective. However, he doesn't say anything and Abby hangs up."Well, that was him." "Who?" "Marty." Horrified, Ray leaves. Meanwhile, Meurice checks his answering machine and gets a message from Marty claiming that a large amount of money has been stolen from the safe and either he or Ray took it. Meurice goes to confront Ray. Abby goes to Marty's bar to try to find out what Ray is talking about--Ray had returned with blood on his shirt and she had assumed that he and Marty got into a fight. Abby finds the bar ransacked, the safe's combination lock dented, chipped, and partially shattered. The private detective had been trying to break into the safe and was interrupted by Abby's arrival: he is hiding in the bar watching Abby move about. She picks up a towel from the top of the safe; a hammer falls out. Abby spins the dial but does not open the safe. The now-rotting fish that Marty brought back from his trip are still on the desk where Marty was killed; and the lighter is still underneath.At her apartment, Abby lies in bed; she gets up to wash her face and hears someone enter the apartment. She calls Ray's name, then pushes open the bathroom door. Marty is sitting on the bed. He tells her that he loves her, and then warns her; "He'll kill you too.", then pitches forward and vomits a torrent of blood. Abby wakes up from the dream. Ray is at his apartment packing. Abby thinks that Marty refused to pay Ray, that Ray broke into the bar to get his money, and that the two of them got into a fight. Ray interrupts and tells her it was her gun at the bar, that he can't eat or sleep lately, and that Marty was alive when he buried him.Abby leaves to tell Meurice that she thinks Marty is dead; Meurice leaves for the bar. Ray is at the bar; he opens the safe and finds the faked photo showing him and Abby in bed, bodies riddled with holes, blood staining the sheets. He leaves for Abby's apartment and notices a car parked behind him, the driver watching him in the same car that was following them at the beginning of the movie. Ray pulls out, and the private detective follows him. Abby arrives at her apartment and turns on the lights; Ray is looking out a large window and tells Abby to turn off the light. Abby is reluctant to do so. The private detective is on top of a nearby building, watching the two through a sniper scope, and shoots Ray through the back, killing him. Abby runs to crouch beneath the window, takes off her shoes, and throws them at the light bulb, breaking it. The private detective arrives at Abby's apartment, and she goes to the bathroom to hide; outside the bathroom window is a precipitous drop. In Abby's sparsely furnished living room, the private detective bludgeons Ray with a large coin bank, then searches Ray's pockets for the lighter, thinking he took it. Failing to find it, he goes into the bathroom. Abby is not there; he looks outside the window, then reaches his arm over, finding a window to another room in a neighboring apartment. He opens the window; Abby slams it on top of his wrist and drives a knife through his hand into the windowsill. The detective screams and shoots chiaroscuro holes through the wall, then punches through and removes the knife. Abby, dazed, backs out of the room and slides down the wall opposite the bathroom door, holding a gun. The door is partly closed; eventually the man's shadow darkens the doorway, and Abby fires through the door. The detective falls. "I'm not afraid of you, Marty," Abby says. The detective, laying out on the bathroom floor, bleeding from his chest, suddenly bursts into laughing. "Well, ma'am, if I see him, I'll sure give him the message." The detective lies looking up at the underside of the bathroom sink. Water collects on its underside, grows into a drop, and drips. The movie ends.
Joel Coen
Ethan Coen
Director(s)
Joel Coen
Ethan Coen
Writer(s)
Daniel F. Bacaner
executive producer
Ethan Coen
producer
Mark Silverman
associate producer
Joel Coen
producer (uncredited)
Producer(s)
Carter Burwell
Composer(s)
Ray
John Getz
Abby
Frances McDormand
Julian Marty
Dan Hedaya
Private Detective Loren Visser
M. Emmet Walsh
Meurice
Samm-Art Williams
Debra
Deborah Neumann
Landlady
Raquel Gavia
Man from Lubbock
Van Brooks
Mr. Garcia
Señor Marco
Old Cracker
William Creamer
Strip Bar Exhorter
Loren Bivens
Strip Bar Senator
Bob McAdams
Stripper
Shannon Sedwick
Girl on Overlook
Nancy Finger
Radio Evangelist (voice) (as Rev. William Preston Robertson)
William Preston Robertson
Helene Trend (voice) (uncredited)
Holly Hunter
Marty's Vomiting (voice) (uncredited)
Barry Sonnenfeld
Ethan Coen
Director(s)
Ethan Coen
Writer(s)
executive producer
Ethan Coen
producer
Mark Silverman
associate producer
Joel Coen
producer (uncredited)
Producer(s)
Composer(s)







