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Requiem for a Dream - Director's Cut

Requiem for a Dream - Director's Cut

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Something original in a hollywood world
Review: This movie is an amazing movie. The actors in this movie all give great performances. This is made by the same guy who did Pi and if you havent seen that you should see it as well. He has a nack for making things interesting, for making what some might find boring and making it intense and real. Everything about this movie is great. It is fairly depressing but to me this movie is one of the greatest and most realistic movies about drugs that has ever been made. Traffic got all sorts of attention but in my oppinion it introduced nothing new, it showed you nothing of what the world of drug addiction can be like. This movie is shocking in many ways and if you want to watch a movie that is going to make you feel all happy when you get done watching it this is not the one for you, you might want to go rent disney or something. What this movie is is an intelligent and provacotive look at a world in which there is much hope to go around but that hope is never realized, it is a honest look at what it is like for some to live a life of drug addiction and it is also a wonderfull and shocking and entertaining movie.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Ripped off by a &^*##@# edited version
Review: This IS one of the most brilliant movies I have ever seen. I am a filmmaker and Darren is, IMHO one of the monster directors of our time. That said, this version being palmed off to unsuspecting film fans is a travesty. To be clear, LOVED THIS MOVIE IN THE THEATER. I hate, hate, hate this abomination. Look for the NC-17 version if you want to see what the filmmaker wanted you to experience in this movie. This is an adult movie with very adult themes, why, why, why, gut it in the edit suite?? So you could eek out a few more sales to the kiddies??

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Shockingly overrated
Review: Aronofosky's style has no variety. Everything is shoved down your throat at 100 miles per hour. If the drog problem were this cut-and-dry, nobody would take drugs.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nothing short of amazing
Review: This film was recommended highly to me but I had no idea of it's content before seeing. For the first five minutes I thought, what is this junk about. Soon I was hooked and by the time the film ended I was totally floored. Literally. This film will take your breath away. Ellen Burstyn was robbed of an Oscar. If you doubt that before seeing the movie you will have no doubt afterwards. See this movie, experience it's power. You will be totally overwhelmed.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: No. She won't.
Review: "Requiem For a Dream makes Traffic look like an after-school 'Just Say No' video." I don't recall where I read it, and I'm just paraphrasing it, but that's about as good a review of both those films as any I've read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Children should be required by law to see this film.
Review: Aside from being a wonderfully disturbing and visually stimulating film, which was clearly about a billion times better than any of this year's best picture nominees; Requiem for a Dream thankfully undoes everything that Trainspotting did to glamorize heroin use. You want kids to say nope to dope, just plop your ten year old down and show em this flick....I think the part where the junkie's gangrenous arm is removed with some type of power saw will be especially effective.... All's well that ends well you know. As for Aronofsky's next film, a fifth installment of the popular Batman films which haven't been any good since Tim Burton split two movies ago, keepthe kids away from it. That kinda stuff could rot their brains.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Whoa! Great Film!
Review: Requiem is a great film. There is beauty in its chaos, and horror in its truth. This is the most brilliant, mind shatteringly beautiful film focusing not only on drugs, but also on the people that use them. Darren Aronofsky is a brilliant director. Buy this movie...NOW!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Briliant, powerful filmmaking.
Review: Darren Aronofsky's follow-up to his acclaimed indie debut 'Pi' is an expertly made nightmare, chronically the lives of four characters, woven together through addiction and tragedy. It does not sugar-coat it's subject matter. It is brutally frank in it's depiction of drug use and the ultimate physical, mental, and emotional deterioration that comes from losing control of one's own life to drugs. Ellen Burstyn plays Sara Goldfarb, a lonely woman whose husband has passed away and whose son, Harry (Jared Leto), only comes to visit when he needs to take her television set down to the pawn shop for drug money. She is addicted to television and sugar, eating chocolates while watching her game shows, day in and day out. She receives a junk phone call one day, a call that misleads her into thinking that she is going to be a contestent on one of these shows. She is ecstatic. She will wear her red dress, the one she wore to her son's high school graduation. The problem is, she no longer fits into it. So she tries a diet, but her need for sweets is too great and chooses diet pills instead. Harry spends his days with Tyrone (a straight and wonderful Marlon Wayans) who is the man with the connections, and his nights with Marion (Jennifer Connelly), his girlfriend. Each of these three characters is already addicted to drugs, not one in particular, rather anything to keep them feeling right. Harry and Tyrone devise a scheme by which they will become dealers, insuring the constant income of money and the possible score of something really, really good. Aronofsky's technique is brilliant, using every cinematic trick in the book to fully realize the effects of the drugs they're shooting, snorting, smoking, or swallowing. Over and under-saturated colors, quick jump cuts, overexaggerated sounds, slow motion, fast motion, steady cam, split screen... everything blazes by in a strange hallucinatory way when the characters are using. Everything seems skewed but yet right. When they come down, the film's look seems to slow down with them and the illusion fades. The world becomes dank again, becomes dull and hefty, the weight of normal life is felt. The film is not a happy story, the characters go from bad to very, very bad to beyond rescue by it's finale. Each character ends up where they should and not because we want them to. Each character is a tragedy, they are glimpses of lost dreams, abandoned hopes, failed promises, and needless depressions. By the film's end we feel sorry for them, not because they were addicted to drugs and suffered the consequences of them. But rather we for the fact that they even shot up in the first place. What a waste of life. 'Requiem For A Dream' is a masterpiece of cinematic direction and is a tough, unflinching film. It should be watched by parents with their teenage children. It's probably the best deterrent to drug use that exists right now. A cautionary tale that is both heartfelt and heart breaking. One of the best films of 2000.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Amazingly beautiful film
Review: Requiem is the best film that I have ever seen. It is a film of such power, and of such amazing beauty that to watch it is the same as to have your heart ripped out. Darren Aronofsky is a brilliant director of incredible genius.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: warning!!!!
Review: warning amazon costumer!! do not buy this dvd. it is an edited, r-rated version of the original film, which is one of the gratest movies of 2000. the original cut features frequent drug use and a really creepy sex scene that freaked the mpaa out! if you are easily offended, you shouldn't be buying this movie anyway. if you liked the movie, or you didn't watch it but are in search of something totally new and original, buy the unrated version. this one is not good.


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