Director: William Friedkin
Writer: William Friedkin, based on the novel by William P. Wood
Stars: Michael Biehn, Alex McArthur, Nicholas Campbell, Deborah Van Walkenburgh, John Harkins, Art LaFleur and Billy Greenbush
![]() |
Index: Make It a Double.
At first glance, Michael Biehn’s second pick is pretty much the same movie as his first. It’s another story about a psychopath, like Deadly Intentions, with Biehn in the lead and we see it unfold from the act to the pursuit to the trial. However, it doesn’t take long for a whole slew of differences to manifest. And, in the end, it’s a very different movie, often a mirror image.
Sure, his wife leaves him here too but it isn’t because he’s the psychopath tormenting her; it’s because he’s the prosecuting attorney who is given the task of seeking the death penalty for the psychopath, even though he personally opposes it for moral reasons. His wife Kate is a lawyer too who also doesn’t believe in capital punishment and she sees this as a step too far for her to accept in a relationship.
He’s Tony Fraser, who heads Major Crimes either for the state of California or the city of Stockton, and his personal struggle with the death penalty echoes that of the director, the reason why there are two different endings.
![]() |




















