The preposterous "88 Minutes" is a serial killer movie starring Al Pacino's festival of hair. Second-billed Al Pacino plays forensic psychiatrist Dr. Jack Gramm, chasing a copycat psycho all around Seattle, as blood-drenched female victim after female victim is discovered hanging upside down from some sort of pulley contraption, like a Cirque du Soleil act gone awry.
Years ago, according to Gary Scott Thompson's script, Gramm's court testimony helped put the copycat's inspiration behind bars. Nine years later, someone has revived the old routine. Early in an increasingly addle-brained plot, half of which is relayed via cellphone conversations, it's suggested the copycatter has some connection to Gramm's university course. Is it his teaching assistant, the one with a crush on Gramm, played by Alicia Witt? Is it the dean with the bedroom eyes, played by Deborah Kara Unger? Is it Gramm's assistant Shelly (Amy Brenneman, constantly constantly constantly on the phone), who has an ill-advised one-off with one of Gramm's students?
