Product Details
Requiem For A Dream [2001]

Requiem For A Dream [2001]
Directed by Darren Aronofsky

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #929 in DVD
  • Released on: 2001-08-06
  • Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: PAL
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 97 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Fantasy mixes with the harsh reality of addiction and the desire for hope in Requiem for a Dream. Beginning at the dawn of a new summer in Coney Island, the film charts the relationship of Sara Goldfarb (Ellen Burstyn) and her son Harry (Jared Leto)--two characters who are lost with in a world of the self-absorbed desire to feed their addictions at the cost of hope and love. With a sublime score (performed by the Kronos Quartet) accompanying some intense visual imagery, the film sets up an almost fairy-tale wash over the characters' lives, with every hit of their chosen drug turning them into beautiful people surrounded by a haze which enhances all their features. However, unlike films such as Trainspotting which turn the dream into a nightmare then end with a huge dose of hope, Requiem for a Dream forces the viewer through all loss of hope and the descending madness of reality, as winter begins.

Darren Aronofsky's follow-up to the critically acclaimed Pi is a movie which exposes not only the terror caused by addiction of any kind--be it TV or Heroin--but also offers a powerful insight into the destruction caused by the desire to achieve "the American Dream". Based on the novel by Hubert Selby Jr, the film sacrifices dialogue in favour of imagery and movement: the editing and cinematography are reminiscent of MTV, however the movie takes this very aggressive style and moulds it to its own needs, adding a beautifully haunting narrative and powerful performances by its four main characters (Burstyn just missing out on an Oscar for Best female lead to Julia Roberts). Ultimately the viewer is left with a sense of desperation and despair: Requiem for a Dream exposes drugs and addiction in the most powerful and truthful way a film has ever managed, leaving no stone unturned.

On the DVD: This disc is bursting with excellent special features. The anamorphic widescreen picture makes the most of the film's stylish visuals, and the soundtrack offers choice of either Dolby Digital 5.1 or 2.0. As well as offering the obligatory theatrical trailer, scene selection and a fantastic director's commentary, there's also a "making-of" featurette, TV trailers charting the reviews and success of the film, an "Anatomy of a scene", and a wide range of deleted scenes. By far the best feature is Hubert Selby Jr's interview with Ellen Burstyn, which offers the writer a chance to put across not just his opinions on his work but also on life as a whole. All these features are placed within an impressively formatted menu. --Nikki Disney

Special Features
English
Region 2
Dolby Digital 5.1 English
Dolby Digital 5.1
English

Synopsis
For his follow-up to his darkly brilliant debut, PI, director Darren Aronofsky chose to adapt a tough and meaty piece of work: Hubert Selby's 1968 novel REQUIEM FOR A DREAM, a dark spiral into the abyss of barren fantasies doomed to extinction. However, in Aronofsky's frenetic, visionary, unique, and disturbing style lies the perfect setting for this story of four people whose intertwined lives are filled with eternally hopeful despair. This is a different sort of horror film. Harry Goldfarb (Jared Leto) and Marion Silver (Jennifer Connelly) are lovers in Brooklyn with dreams of setting up a small business and spending the rest of their lives in love--their version of the American dream. The two are also desperate heroin addicts, a compulsion that darkens their lives and leads Harry to repeatedly pawn his mother's television. His mother, Sara Goldfarb (Ellen Burstyn), is addicted to television, which is why she keeps replacing the stolen set. One day she receives a call from her favorite show, the surreal TAPPY TIBBONS SHOW, and learns that she has been selected to appear on an upcoming broadcast. When she can't fit into her best red dress, her doctor prescribes diet pills (uppers), to which she swiftly and painfully becomes addicted. Harry's cohort, an intelligent hustler named Tyrone (Marlon Wayans), completes the foursome. With its unflinching dissection of addiction, REQUIEM FOR A DREAM is a psychologically disturbing, visually captivating depiction of lost hope. The last half hour of the film is among the most harrowing of any film ever made.


Customer Reviews

Good cinema5
If you are curious as to what makes someone an addict this film goes part way to answer that question. More markedly not just a heroin user - a junkie in the steroetipical sense, this story intertwines the main character and his mother, both through very different circumstances become addicts, the consequences for both are devastating. Other characters in the film associated to the lead actor also become addicts with dire outcomes. The camera work is superb. The dialogue honest, vibrant and touching in places. Sureal quality of story telling showing the impact on people who use mind altering substances. a WONDERFUL PIECE OF CINEMA .

One of the best movies ever made...5
There seem to many comparisons between Trainspotting and this film and while they deal with similar subject matter, they each have a unique and compelling vision of addiction and its seductive power. I recommend both Requiem for a Dream and Trainspotting.
The acting and cinematography, along with the brilliant soundtrack really make this movie the masterpiece it is. I think it is safe to say that this is Jared Leto's finest performance ever, he's never been able to equal it. The first time I saw it I almost turned it off at the end. It isn't that the ending isn't good, it's just horrific. Each character lands in a personal hell built on the foundations of addiction. I can't say which character has the worst ending, they all suffer immensely. I think this movie is a more powerful anti-drug message than any presented by weak campaigns popular in the American school system. Watch it if you are considering doing drugs or are just getting started. Watch it if you've never taken drugs, it's powerful no matter the audience.

A masterpiece5
Simply brillian, the best film i have ever seen. Very bleak though, not for the faint harted. every teenager in the country should watch this film and they would never do drugs, I can't get it out of my mind. It haunts you in a way that is unique to this film. Unforgettable and I would say life changing; it creates sympathy and abject horror to the lives of the people and will keep you on the straight and narrow path. I reccomend it to anyone over 15 I don't really think it deserves it's 18 certificate. It is truly amazing and the camera techniques and the music are both outstanding.