Rating: Summary: Amazing and disturbing Review: "Requiem for a dream" is the most disturbing film I've seen recently. It tells two parallel stories very well connected. The first is about sarah goldfarb, a widowed mother who lives by herself and is very lonely. One day she gets a call from a tv show and decides to start a straight diet to get a better looking on TV. A doctor prescribes her some pills, which were supposed to feed her, but everything starts to change when diet becomes an obsession. The second story happens with sarah's son, Harry, who is a drug addicted, and spends all day long taking all kinds of stuff, with his girlfriend and his best friend.This movie is very good and shows how much damage drugs can do. It's almost a lesson to be learned, a story with a moral at the end. The casting is wonderful. Ellen Burstyn is amazingly real playing sarah in one of her best performances ever. Jared Leto is also great playing the good young guy who has good intentions but is sick, addicted. Jennifer Connely is bright as always. She is very beautiful and I think this part had to be played by her. After you watch this movie, you'll really feel lonely and depressed. It's like a punch in your stomach! It is very sad to see how far someone can go to keep its addiction. The main characters are young, intelligent and surely had a great future ahead of them, if they didn't get addicted. I liked the edition, with fast images, and zoom in the character's eyes.Darren Aronofsky made a great film, which I will never forget. I think no one has shown drug addiction in such a realistic and painfull point of view, and he surely deserves all the credit for doing that.
Rating: Summary: Requiem for a Dream Review: I don't think that there has ever been a film as bleakly harrowing or as brave as Darren Aronofsky's "Requiem for a Dream." The film deserved to win a dozen Oscars, including Ellen Burstyn for Best Actress. What makes this film different from other movies about drug addiction is that it never offers a moral view. It tells the story of four addicts living in Brooklyn who we see spiral with unstoppable momentum down into drug addiction hell over the seasons of one year. You feel for all of these characters, but the one you will pity most is Sara Goldfarb, a lonely widow played brilliantly by Ellen Burstyn. Sara hangs on to the pathetic dream of being on her favorite TV game show and losing weight to fit into her beloved red dress. Enter the diet pills. The scene where Sara explains to her son Harry (Jared Leto) that she "likes the way" she feels now. "Now, I smile," she says. You get the feeling that Sara is teetering on the edge of madness, and more heartbreaking, she is aware of it. Her later scenes tear you apart as she plunges straight down into insanity, with no hope of ever coming back, because she doesn't want to come back. Jared Leto delivers another outstanding performance as Harry Goldfarb, Sara's heroin addict son. Harry really wants his mother to be happy, and when he learns that she is addicted to speed, he breaks down and sobs on the way home. But a shot of heroin makes him all right again. He and best friend Tyrone (Marlon Wayans-who is very very good) decide to start dealing heroin themselves, but the scheme goes horribly wrong. Also very affecting is Jennifer Connelly as Harry's girlfriend Marion, who will do anything for her next fix, including prostituting herself. Harry even sends her out with a man when he knows that she will have to have sex with him to get much needed cash. This is the wedge that drives them apart, only reconciling when it is too late for both of them. This is all seen with an unflinching eye, holding nothing back. Darren Aronofsky's highly effective visual style pays off in the powerful punch of the final montage of scenes which shows the fate of the four characters we feel for so deeply. The music jars us to attention as Sara undergoes electro-shock therapy, Harry's infected arm is amputated, Tyrone tries to drift to sleep in prison, and as Marion willingly suffers sexual degradation. The final images show Tyrone dreaming of his mother, Harry sobbing that Marion will never come see him, Sara lost in insanity, and Marion emotionlessly cradling a packet of coke. These four people, now without dreams, now without souls, curl up into fetal positions and sleep. The last clip shows Sara and Harry on the game show, and we see the look of crazed fear and sadness in Sara's lost eyes. "Requiem for a Dream" is the most powerful film I have ever seen. It takes a second viewing to catch all of its subtleties, notable the two women who told Sara about diet pills visiting a now cadaverus Sara in the hospital. If you can bear it, you will be changed forever by this sorrowful and realistic vision of four victims of addiction. See it.
Rating: Summary: Disturbing Masterpiece Review: Requiem for a Dream was a fantastic movie possibly the best I've seen in all of 2000/2001 and I have seen a lot of movies in that time. The story follows 4 drug addicts. Although the movies isn't really about drugs, its more about thier depletion of hope. The movie is faced paced with amazing cinematography which makes you feel that your on a trip yourself. The movie is definatly not for the weak at heart, its disturbing and has a lot of gore in the last 10 minutes. The ending is definatly depressing, I saw this about 4 days ago and I'm still disturbed by it. Requiem For A Dream is a great movie and should definatly be shown in classrooms to show students what drug addiction can do.
Rating: Summary: Hypnotic, fascinating, and mesmerizing! Review: From the moment the movie began to the moment it ended, this movie kept me thrilled and interested! It shows the inter-twined lives of four addicts... and how they each feed and cope with their habits. Brilliantly directed and filled with brilliant actors, this movie is a MUST-SEE for anyone who wants to be absoultely intrigued!
Rating: Summary: Good, not great Review: While the movie is well-made and well-acted, it is also rather obvious and not nearly as "disturbing" or "brilliant" as many reviewers ...would have you believe. For starters, I found the ending, which many have trumpeted as the crowning achievement of the film, rather disappointing and silly. Silly points: Sarah being force fed in the hospital; her being restrained almost immediately in the ER, despite the absence of any evidence that she was a threat to harm herself or others (forced rehab?); the entire treatment of ECT as the near-equivalent to electrocution; Leto and Wayans being arrested in the ER for drug use (please!); Leto's arm being amputated with blood spraying all over his face (please!). One general problem with this film is that it treats everyone outside of the four main characters as two-dimensional cardboard cut-outs and stereotypes (the phony talk-show host; the cruel doctor prescribing Sarah's pills; the bigoted Southern policeman; the uncaring white-coated psychiatric nurses). Also, unless you're extremely naive, you probably already knew that drug addiction is an unpleasant lifestyle. After numerous films on the subject, does anybody still think there's glamour involved in it? What does hold the film together are the four main characters and the actors/actresses that portray them. Especially touching was Sarah's scene when she describes why she's so excited about appearing on television. The film needed more of that (as well as more of Wayans' character, and his relationship to his mother), and less of the attempted shock value. It could have been great, and Aronofsky could make a great film if he would quit trying to shock us and start trying to move us.
Rating: Summary: Compelling Ellen, Riveting Visuals and a Few Complaints Review: It is a strange thing to hear that this is a film about drugs; actually, it is about anything you may dream of, like being a celebrity or getting rich, and that is why this film is so harrowing and shocking, and to some, irritating. It is a cliche now after so many reviews to say that "Requiem" is a requiem for any American dreams, but it is an inevitable feeling you get. Anyway, that's how I think. So, please do not think "Requiem" is just another "Trainspotting" because the latter has a sense of humor while "Requiem" gives almost nothing of that. You will be attacked relentlessly by variety of cameraworks, so in the end you will feel really, really, exhausted. And the acting is all compelling; I would not dwell on it too long, but just let me say, Marlon Wayans is so good that you forgive him for appearing in "Scary Movie," and some film about dragons (though I liked it) and about Ellen Burstyn, she proves again that she is one of the most talented actresses in the world. But you already know that for she survived the now legendary shooting of "The Exocist." Having said that, I point out several things that you don't want to hear. Though "Requiem" is a fascinating ride to hell, director Darren Arnofsky shows, I think, too much visual tactics; for instance, the close-up of an eye (you can see that on the video jacket) and its pupil appears more than 5 times (I lost count), but the repetition is too much and unnecesary. Of course I know the point, his stress on the addiction of drugs, but the repeated use of the same skill is generally bound to lose its effects, and this film is the case. The other thing I complain (though a minor one) is, we have seen the same kind of story before, and though Jared Leto - Marlon Wayans story is gripping, I couln't help remembering the masterpieces of the past; Al Pacino's "The Panic in Needle Park" is the first to come up in my mind, and Jon Voights's "Midnight Cowboy" next, and probably "Scarecrow." I don't say "Requiem" is not good, but for those old fans like me, the comparison is inevitable, and probably that is why Ellen Burstyn falling down into her own fantasy world got deservedly Oscar nonimation while the other story, though compelling itselfand, got less good reviews.
Rating: Summary: Impossible to be unaffected after seeing this! Review: Requiem For A Dream is one of those rare films that leaves the viewer totally drained. This story of addiction and broken dreams pummels you with imagery that only director Darren Aranofsky can pull off. Many of the camera effects he honed in his movie PI, are perfected in "Requiem". The cast, down to the smallest part, is flawless. Ellen Burstyn's methodical descendance into dependence is one of the all-time greatest performances by any actress. How the Oscars passed her over is beyond me. Wayans even turns in a dramatic performance of unexpected caliber. Jennifer Connely's rich-girl romantic turned junkie/prostitute should serve as a wake-up call to any recreational drug user. Jared Leto is convincing as the waste-product son with a good heart. The hallucination scenes are half Andy Warhol/half Marat Sade. Rarely does a film disturb/amaze everyone who sees it...but this one does. I understand Aranofsky is going to direct the next Batman movie. Hopefully he can rescue the franchise from hacks like Schumacher. In the meantime, "Requiem" should be required viewing for every aspiring director. You must see this film!
Rating: Summary: Honest Review: This movie is a honest look at drug addiction; how it starts, what the people go through, and how it inevitably ends... Solid movie with good acting.
Rating: Summary: disturbed to insanity Review: I have to agree with the other reviews I have read. This movie is so disturbing and upseting, yet you keep watching it because of its powerful hold it has on you. All the performances were great, and whether you do drugs or not, it shows the reality of it all. And this movie is not only about illegal drugs, but it shows the effects of popping pills that doctors prescribe also. I have to admit, after the movie was over, I was in complete shock as the credits started rolling. The ending is so powerful in itself that there really is no way of explaining it. You just have to watch it. I sat there, trying to decide whether I actually liked the movie or not, and regretting not having watched the movie with others. But in the end, this is definitely a movie worth seeing, but only if you would consider a movie like this in the first place. My only advice is that you may want others around you while you watch it, especially if you are very emotional and get emotionally involved in movies, like me.
Rating: Summary: Changed Review: When I rented this movie I hadn't heard anything about it at all. I was bored and took off to the tiny video store closest to my apt. I's seen almost everything they had and I thought, "oh, what the hell, I'll check this out," half expecting it to be one of those teeny bopper, MTV-type movies because of the cast. Wow. I'd like to apologize to Jared Leto and Marlon Waynes - I just didn't know. The performances in this movie were brilliant. Ellen Burstyn was amazing. The characters' miserable pursuit of their misguided dreams grabs hold of you, crushes your spirit. You know what's going to happen but can't stop watching, as though you just want to be their for them, for Sara, for Harry, for Tyrone, for Marion. It's not some corny anti-drug movie. It's a raw, gut-wrenching, unforgiving look at the by-product of a society that has chosen to dull its senses with an assortment of addictions and which feeds on empty images of glamour, high life and leisure. As the credits rolled, I just stood there ( I had stood up right in front of the television screen for the last 30 minutes or so of the movie), chest heavy, brain throbbing, balance thrown, as though the wind had been knocked out of me. It is difficult to watch, as alot of our reality tends to be, but it is so necessary. No stupid happy-ending wrap-up here. This is real. And unforgettable. It leaves you changed.
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