Rating: Summary: Shocking... Review: I've heard amazing things about this movie, both good and bad. And I have to say it was one of the bes tmovies I've ever seen. If you are senstive and easily.....this movie is jus tnot for some people. I though I could handle it, but for about 15 minutes after watching I just felt sick to my stomach and threw up...witch is actually good! You get draged into this movie and WOW! just check it out, if your up to it.
Rating: Summary: The Dream And The Darkness Review: It was hard to watch this movie with a disengaged outlook the first time I saw it. Watching Sara Goldfarb (Ellen Burstyn) mentally deteriorate on the screen was just plain heart wrenching (my mother is a recent widow living on the other side of the country, and though she is mentally stable and not a TV and chocolate addict, I couldn't help experiencing some measure of guilt as I related the events in the movie into my own personal life). I remember seeing Jared Leto in "Fight Club" and "American Psycho"', but I couldn't remember where exactly I saw Jennifer Connelly before, though she looked very familiar. The evening following my first viewing of "Requiem For A Dream" I was in the video section of the Gilbert Public Library and came upon "Dark City" (remember, Roger Ebert's favorite movie of 1998). I had watched this movie twice before (on video) and liked it. And, lo and behold, here was a movie with Jennifer Connelly in it. I checked it out of the library and watched it later that night and, lo and behold (again), the movie had a scene, close to the end, with Jennifer Connelly standing at the end of a pier in pretty much the same perspective and distance from the viewer that she stands out on the pier in Harry Goldfarb's vision of her in 'Requiem For A Dream'. The shots are so similar it's hard to believe it was anything but intentional. But what is the reason? I've come up with nothing other than by comparing "Dark City' and "Requiem For A Dream" we can make some interesting analogies. Both movies deal with the idea of freedom and the degree of control one has over the direction of his or her life. Both deal with being an adult, but also of being ultimately naive of the forces that direct the real world. Both movies have hypodermic needles as an important element. And no one would disagree that the 4 main character's of "Requiem for A Dream" live in darkness. The differences: in 'Requiem For A Dream' the main characters make the need to create an alternative vision, to escape all the intricate responsibilities and complications of the real world, their prime motive. The characters of "Dark City" are ignorant of the beings that create the illusion of their existence, even when the malevolent and indifferent creatures are subdued and replaced by someone benign and caring. Jennifer Connelly on the pier in "Dark City" represents achieving, if not paradise, at least a place of peace and rest. On the pier in "Requiem For A Dream" she becomes the light at the end of Harry Goldfarb's tunnel, who disappears in Harry's dream as he, she, and the two other main characters curl up in fetal positions, succumbing to the horror of the chaos they've invoked or into the empty illusions they've cultivated. When I first watched 'Requiem For A Dream" I saw the edited DVD version, the R-rated version being the only one offered for rental at the major video outlets in the Phoenix area. I later rented a video of the director's cut (Unrated version) at an independent video shop in Gray Tennessee -- after reading some of the reviews on this site I felt I might have missed something terribly important. The differences between the two versions are insignificant.
Rating: Summary: Ellen Burstyn should have won the academy award Review: This disturbing film, creatively directed by Darren Aronofsky of "Pi" fame is about drug addition. For Ellen Burstyn, cast in the role of Sarah Goldfarb, a lonely Brooklyn housewife who is trying to lose weight to appear on a TV show, the drug of choice is diet pills. For her son, played by Jared Leto; his girlfriend, played by Jennifer Connely; and his pal, played by Marlon Wayans, the drug is heroin. Based on the novel by Hubert Selby, Jr., who also wrote the screenplay, the setting is a run-down and sad Brooklyn neighborhood near the beach, where buildings are old, people are poor and the American dream is a far off taunting illusion. The time period is unclear because the TV set, which is the center of Sarah Goldfarb's life, is of 1950s vintage; and yet the characters all use cell phones. But these details really don't matter much. There are enough other fantasy elements in this film to hurl it into the age that created music videos. Using creative film techniques, the director has managed to bring the audience right into the mental states of the addicts. There are extreme close-ups, slow-motion and fast-motion sequences and split screen effects. We go on the fantasy trip with the characters and then we crash with the reality. We watch the effects on them as their personalities change as well as their physical appearances. The result is chilling. The script calls for outstanding acting jobs and Ellen Burstyn's work is perhaps the finest of her long career. The other actors also shine in these very challenging performances. Jared Leto is more than just a handsome young actor; Jennifer Connely, who is almost too pretty for her harrowing role, is excellent; and Marlon Wayans, who we usually see in comedies, proves here that he handle a serious part. This is not a film for the squeamish. It is deeply disturbing and sad. But the discomfort is worth it for those who are willing to explore this underbelly of a perverse American dream. Recommended.
Rating: Summary: The Best Movie : 2000 Review: Requiem for a dream, in my opinion, was the best movie in Y2K. Sure, there are powerful performances, but what's makes this film even more special is that you actually feel for the characters. Also, I thought the score throughout the film was haunting, and all the editing (esp. the fast forward parts), was very fun to watch. This DVD is the unrated DVD that was shown in theaters. Basically, the film is rated NC-17. But you can also buy the movie in an R-Rated version. The only difference between the unrated and R-rated versions is that Marion's party scene at the end (which is explicit), was cut shorter. WOW, that's a really big difference, yeah right! One big difference between the two DVDs is that the Unrated version has a lot more features, and the R-rated only has theatrical trailers. I totally recommend this movie and DVD, and it ain't for the kids, but anyone who is addicted or plans to be, should consider watching this movie. It will definitely change your life.
Rating: Summary: Total Mind [...] Review: I went to the video store to rent it. The clerk warned me"its good, but its depressing".. I thought "ive seen Titus, I can handle morbidity...." WRONG! This movie without a doubt is THE MOST DISTURBING, DISORIENTING, SHOCKING , MIND NUMBING , SOUL DRAINING FILM I HAVE EVER SEEN! After the credits rolled, I just say that there, exhausted, dazed, confused and just watched with glazed eyes as the credits rolled. I literally had to rouse myself, and plunge myself in another activity to "shake off" the after effects of watching this film....This movie is the most powerful and intrusive and yet, well crafted film ever put on celluloid, period. Now, as to the review...I dont agree with all these heavy-handed PC reviews about it being anti-drug. I dont think this film is anti-drug...it draws no conclusions at the end. To me this film while being an emotionally searing film, is in a way, apathetic in its portayals of the major characters..It shows you their lives, and how they lead them, no more. The film is not meant to be a cautionary tale, or blaze the path of salvation for someone else...its just s story...a nightmarish, hellish bedtime story, whose unifying theme happens to be people on drugs. AS for the performances, all the major characters shine..Aranofsky really got the best out of them. Most notable was Ellen Burstyn as Sara Goldfarb; simply put, the woman was ROBBED this year at the Oscars by old horse-mouth herself. As for the rest of the cast..to me, they all put in career-defining performances...my heart was not failed to be broken by ALL the characters in this movie. In fact, that is what the experince of watching this film is like..it breaks your heart over and over and over again, but not in any cheesy or obviously sentimental way..but graphically, brutally and shockingly.., it totally goes for the jugular and will not let go. At the end of the movie...all the major characters end up huddled in the fetal position...which is exactly what I wanted to do after watching this movie. Great flick...if u dare.....- A.N. Oh, and P.S....if its not the director's cut version, dont bother...u wont get as much from the ending without it.
Rating: Summary: it's not about the drugs... Review: Yes, this is a movie about addiction. No, this is not a movie about substance abuse. Internalize this distinction before you watch it, or write a review about it. Aronofsky isn't moralizing about the perils of smack; he's commenting on the industries, legal and otherwise, that thrive by promising dreams they can't deliver, and on the eventual collapse of lives built around those promises. This is not "drugs are bad, mmmkay?"; it is something far deeper and broader, and to pan it -- or praise it -- as anti-drug propaganda is to miss the point entirely. See this movie. It will hit you like a kick in the stomach, but it will make you a better person.
Rating: Summary: overly declarative and simplistic short, extended to feature Review: This would have been a ground-breaking short film of 15 minutes length. Instead, the filmmakers extend the themes crafted early in the film through the most declarative parallel montage of all time, hitting the viewer over the head: these characters are all suffering/addicted, etc. The film cuts back and forth between the son and the mother for nearly an hour, when 5 minutes of it would have been fine. Nothing new happens in the film after the mid-point.
Rating: Summary: Awsome movie... Review: ...nuff said...
Rating: Summary: too brilliant for words Review: This film is one of THE BEST films I have seen in my life. It is completely mesmerizing, to the point where you lose your self in it, and at the end you feel nothing less than complete shock. Requiem for a Dream involves you like very few other films do. Completely mind-blowing, amazingly acted, totally real.
Rating: Summary: Still recovering... Review: I saw this movie twice. Once in the theatre and more recently on DVD. The first time I saw it I had high expectations because of all the film buffs that highly recommended it to me. I thought it was a bit slow moving the first time I saw it, but once I walked out of the theatre, I was deeply moved. In order for a movie to be good, I need to walk out of the theatre in amazement--amazement in the acting and amazement in the plot. Ellen Burstyn and Jared Leto were both excellent in this movie. Burstyn played Leto's mother, Sara Goldfarb, so unbelievably well. She was a pathetic, sad, old, self-pitying woman who became addicted to diet pills and eventually went crazy. Leto, who played Harry, eventually had his arm amputated because of a growing infection from heroin injections, and Jennifer Connelly, who played Marion Silver, humiliated herself by succumbing to acts of sexual violence in exchange for heroin. This movie does not glamourize heroin use. It truly makes you think about it's fatal consequences.
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