The following review is from the 1996 edition of Roger Ebert's Video Companion , pages 616-617:
River's Edge *** 1/2
R, 100m., 1987
Crispin Glover (Layne), Dennis Hopper (Feck), Keanu Reeves (Matt), Ione Skye (Clarissa), Daniel Roebuck (Leitch Sampson), Joshua Miller (Tim), Rosana Zal (Maggie). Directed by Tim Hunter and produced by Sarah Pillsbury and Midge Sanford. Screenplay by Nea l Jimenez.
I remember reading about the case at the time. A high school kid killed his girlfriend and left her body lying on the ground. Over the next few days, he brought some of his friends out to look at her body, and gradually word of the crime spread through his circle of friends. But for a long time, nobody called the cops.
A lot of op-ed articles were written to analyze this event, which was seen as symptomatic of a wider moral breakdown in our society. River's Edge, which is a horrifying fiction inspired by the case, offers no explanation and no message; it regards the crime in much the same way the kid's friends stood around looking at the body. The difference is that the film feels a horror that the teenagers apparently did not.
This is the best analytical film about a crime since The Onion Field and In Cold Blood. Like those films, it poses these questions: Why do we need to be told this story? How is it useful to see limited and brutish people doing cruel and st upid things? I suppose there are two answers. One, such things exist in the world and some of us are curious about them as we are curious in general about human nature. Two, because an artist is never merely a reporter and by seeing the tragedy through hi s eyes, he helps us to see it through ours.
River's Edge was directed by Tim Hunter, who made Tex, about ordinary teenagers who found themselves faced with the choice of dealing drugs. In River's Edge - that choice has long since been made. These teenagers are alcoholics and drug abusers, including one whose mother is afraid he is stealing her marijuana and a twelve-year-old who blackmails the older kids for six-packs.
The central figure in the film is not the murderer, Sampson (Daniel Roebuck), a large, stolid youth who seems perpetually puzzled about why he does anything. It is Layne (Crispin Glover), a strung-out mercurial rebel who always seems to be on speed and wh o takes it upon himself to help conceal the crime. When his girlfriend asks him, like, well, gee, she was our friend and all, so shouldn't we feel bad, or something, his answer is that the murderer "had his reasons." What were they? The victim was talking back.
Glover's performance is electric. He's like a young Eric Roberts, and he carries around a constant sense of danger. Eventually, we realize the danger is born of paranoia; he is reflecting it at us with his fear.
These kids form a clique that exists outside the mainstream in their high school. They hang around outside, smoking and sneering. In town, they have a friend named Feck (Dennis Hopper), a drug dealer who lives inside a locked house and once killed a woman himself, so he has something in common with the kid, you see? It is another of Hopper's possessed performances, done with sweat and the whites of his eyes.
River's Edge is not a film I will forget very soon. Its portrait of these adolescents is an exercise in despair. Not even old enough to legally order a beer, they already are destroyed by alcohol and drugs, abandoned by parents who also have lost h ope. When the story of the dead girl first appeared in the papers, it seemed like a freak show, an aberration. River's Edge sets it in an ordinary town and makes it seem like just what the op-ed philosophers said: an emblem of break down. The girl 's body eventually was discovered and buried. If you seek her monument, look around you.