Sunday, April 26, 2009

Requiem For A Dream

I just watched Requiem For A Dream on Hulu.com, after reading Mr Bennett's blog post. Wow.

Requiem For A Dream (2000) stars Jared Leto, Jennifer Connelly, Marlon Wayans, and Ellen Burstyn. To this date, I have never seen a movie that has made me more uncomfortable than this one. I have seen countless gory slasher films and otherwise repulsive movies, but this one takes the cake. There was not a single scene in the movie that didn't make my skin crawl.

That being said, there was a lot of merit to the movie as well. It was skillfully shot, and there were many clever camera angles that Director Darren Aronofsky utilizes to drive his point home. He captures the adverse affects of consistent drug use and addiction over the course of time, even though there is only one scene of someone shooting up in the entire movie. Aronofsky uses a series of cuts that show an eyeball dilating and other clever gimmicks. I have never seen something like this in film, and I found it to be an extremely clever and innovative substitute for constantly showing the act of drug use.

As an audience member, you find yourself completely immersed in the lives of the four characters. The plot is chaotic and hard to follow at times, but I think this plays into the director's vision of the chaos surrounding the lives of this sorry quartet. Requiem For A Dream is a movie that can be analyzed endlessly, because it is so much more than a movie about drugs. It is a meditation on corruption, greed, loneliness, and love. I've seen addiction in my own life in many forms, and I think that this film is fairly accurate it's description. Drug use is analyzed as a method of escapism, because each person driven to drugs has a root problem that they must run from, something I found to be extremely realistic and true to life.

I think that this movie is much more powerful to teenagers rather than adults as Mr. Bennett said, because of the parallels it may possess to the teenage lifestyle. I think we are affected more, because we are most likely around drugs more, and also, because many teenagers are constantly tempted with one of this movie's themes, escapism. Young people are forced to come to terms with a lot of things in their life when they reach a certain age, and the ones that cannot cope or have difficulty seek solace in whatever they can. Video games, movies, drugs, and many other things are mediums of escapism. It may affect us more because these themes often apply to young people. This is of course, is a generalization, I'm not saying escapism applies exclusively to young people, but it could be a reason why this film has a differing impact on different age groups.

This movie is one of the most powerful I have ever seen, and it was incredibly sad. The relationship between Harry and Marion went from perfect to nothing in the span of Summer to Winter. I think the scene where Harry calls up Marion from Florida, who he left back in New York so he could score drugs, is the saddest scene I've ever seen. Marion asks Harry to "come home tonight" as she is getting ready to go to an orgy, forced to degrade herself for her addictions. Harry can only say that he will, but both know that this will never happen.

This movie will have you thinking for a long time after you watch it. It is one of the best movies that I have ever seen, but I think I will not watch it again, at least not anytime soon. I would advise everyone mature enough to go watch it and see for yourself.

4 comments:

  1. Nice points man. I may not get around to it today, but I plan on watching this soon.

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  2. Arggh. Another one bites the dust. Fella's, it's not a great film. It's over the top sensationalist melodrama.

    But, if it spoke to you, then what can I say. Perhaps being 17 years old means living in a sensationalist melodrama. That must be scary and exciting. If I were to categorize my life as a genre of film, I'd have to say it was a (no, Yuriy, not a porno!) documentary on Channel 13, like "Social life of the solitary snapping turtle" or something like that. Or maybe a badly made comedy starring Chevy Chase or Steve Martin. No, wait. An episode of Gilligan's Island, without Ginger or Mary Ann.

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  3. Haha that was hilarious Mr Bennett! I would disagree though about it being a melodrama, melodramas are incredibly formulaic most of the time with their protagonist/antagonist, damsel in distress. This movie doesn't have a good guy or a bad guy, they are just regular people who keep making these wrong decisions.

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  4. I still must see this film but very nice post Benny and a brilliant and funny response Mr. Bennett.

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