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I'm Losing You

  • 1998
  • R
  • 1 Std. 40 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,0/10
527
IHRE BEWERTUNG
I'm Losing You (1998)
Home Video Trailer from Sterling Home Entertainment
trailer wiedergeben1:59
1 Video
13 Fotos
Drama

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuNearing his 60th birthday, a movie producer discovers that he may have less than a year to live as a result of inoperable cancer. The effects of his disease take the toll on him and his dist... Alles lesenNearing his 60th birthday, a movie producer discovers that he may have less than a year to live as a result of inoperable cancer. The effects of his disease take the toll on him and his distressed wife. However, his dysfunctional family are not told and their soap opera-ish life ... Alles lesenNearing his 60th birthday, a movie producer discovers that he may have less than a year to live as a result of inoperable cancer. The effects of his disease take the toll on him and his distressed wife. However, his dysfunctional family are not told and their soap opera-ish life goes on. His son, a has-been actor, has to deal with a precocious daughter and a drug-addl... Alles lesen

  • Regie
    • Bruce Wagner
  • Drehbuch
    • Bruce Wagner
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Frank Langella
    • Daniel von Bargen
    • Rosanna Arquette
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,0/10
    527
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Bruce Wagner
    • Drehbuch
      • Bruce Wagner
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Frank Langella
      • Daniel von Bargen
      • Rosanna Arquette
    • 12Benutzerrezensionen
    • 8Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 wins total

    Videos1

    I'm Losing You
    Trailer 1:59
    I'm Losing You

    Fotos12

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
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    + 7
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung28

    Ändern
    Frank Langella
    Frank Langella
    • Perry Needham Krohn
    Daniel von Bargen
    Daniel von Bargen
    • Dr. Litvak
    Rosanna Arquette
    Rosanna Arquette
    • Rachel Krohn
    Andrew McCarthy
    Andrew McCarthy
    • Bertie Krohn
    Aria Noelle Curzon
    Aria Noelle Curzon
    • Tiffany 'Tiffi' Krohn
    Salome Jens
    Salome Jens
    • Diantha Krohn
    Don McManus
    Don McManus
    • Jake Horowitz
    Gina Gershon
    Gina Gershon
    • Lidia
    Rick Zieff
    Rick Zieff
    • The Dentist
    Phyllis Lyons
    Phyllis Lyons
    • Dentist's Wife
    Buck Henry
    Buck Henry
    • Phillip Dagrom
    Julie Ariola
    Julie Ariola
    • Melanctha
    Alexandria Sage
    • Perry's Assistant
    Amanda Donohoe
    Amanda Donohoe
    • Mona Deware
    Norman Reedus
    Norman Reedus
    • Toby
    J.B. Gaynor
    • Zephyr
    Gary Watkins
    Gary Watkins
    • Ted Kressler
    Elizabeth Perkins
    Elizabeth Perkins
    • Aubrey Wicker
    • Regie
      • Bruce Wagner
    • Drehbuch
      • Bruce Wagner
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen12

    5,0527
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10telebob

    Slice of death in L.A.

    A thoughtful movie can be influential and instructive in guiding us through the obstacles and sometimes true horror of life. This is that kind of movie, and, if not a great one....certainly a very fine one. It deserves a 10.

    A few years ago I had read Bruce Wagner's novel with horrified fascination...and I was suddenly shocked to be seeing it as a movie here, late at night, in little flyblown Costa Rica on the Movie Channel...at first I thought it looked familiar, and then..."my god, it's "I'm Losing You!" I had not even known it had been made.

    Such a sad loss to have had "Eyes Wide Shut" or "Blair Witch" suck all the air out of the room and leave "I'm Losing You" to the video cutout rackjobbers. This is a strong and corrosive movie, and so sad. Perhaps it is no wonder it had no 'hit' potential....but if one ever wants a slice of the LA urban dystopia as a part of their research project in the year 3000, they couldn't do better than "I'm Losing You."

    Rosanna Arquette and Elizabeth Perkins are truly remarkable, but then so is almost everyone else who is in this very real, very serious, melanomadrama.
    6lambiepie-2

    What!?!?!

    Thank goodness for digital cable. I never heard of this film until it hit cable. I really wanted to like it, I really wanted to get into it, but the minute it tried to get my attention, it turned right around and lost it. The actors were okay with the material they were handed, but I felt it could have been so much better! The characters, although there were many, didn't seem to go anywhere although I knew they had to go somewhere. They didn't intertwine, I wanted to get to know them and the moment that it seemed like I would, the story went somewhere else and I got uninterested. I watched the film twice (for that is all they've showed it so far) seeing if I was missing something but both times, I was left empty. I have to admit that reading the responses regarding this film has more information than the film itself.

    My suggestion?? The director Paul Thomas Anderson should have taken this one as a project, I believe it would have stuck to the book more and been a hell of a lot better.
    matt-201

    Oncoglamorama

    Bruce Wagner's Hollywood novels have a particular horror-movie frisson: a can't-turn-the-page-but-can't-stop-turning tension. A dark bill of goods read by a sardonic M.D. to a terminal patient, the typical Wagner story is L.A. loserdom braced onto a Renaissance canvas--a gossipy Movieline-magazine horror story given epic proportions. Wagner so loathes the calmly powerful, not-so-bright people who thwart him that he visits every kind of calamity on them--crack-induced strokes, cancer, AIDS, tabloid sex-torture. It's as if the power of his imagination and the boil of his frustration crashed into each other and made a monster hybrid--insider bitterness raised to a Mailerian scale, where the felicities of a crashed deal take on the properties of the goings-on in a Nazi death camp, or a terminal ward. A blurb in the jacket for Wagner's masterly "Force Majeure" read, "Wagner lavishes on Hollywood the kind of attention that novelists once lavished on sex, or the Second World War." Ain't it the truth: Wagner turns bellyaching into high opera.

    Wagner's 1996 novel "I'm Losing You" was described by John Updike as "inhabiting a universe so cratered it's hard to turn the pages." The novel is a Boschian cry of despair from the bowels of Century City. In his new movie version, that Munchian shriek is turned into a soft, Cronenbergian whisper. The has-beens and never-weres of Wagner's ultimate dystopian L.A. are viewed not with sadomasochistic coolness here, but with gentleness and, dare I say it, love. There's nothing sentimental in this picture, and not a frame that isn't perfumed by death, but there is a quality that took me off guard. I'M LOSING YOU is a reminder, almost inaudible in this cratered blockbuster universe, of the humanistic potential of movies--the possibility of art as a guide for human beings to navigate their way out of hopeless predicaments. The insider edge is off the movie; unlike the book, it isn't about the perfectly poised name-drop. The movie might as well be taking place in Ohio: the substance of it is in its insight into beleaguered characters trying to buttress themselves with fame and money against catastrophes that claim the Hot 100 and Joe Nobody alike.

    Wagner has assembled the strongest ensemble cast since BOOGIE NIGHTS. Rosanna Arquette is a strange overlap of the luminous and the feral as an art evaluater who makes a melodramatic discovery about her roots that leads to a reconnection with a mystical Jewish practice. Andrew McCarthy, as a fallen eighties actor, goes places you wouldn't imagine him capable of--he suggests a warmer, less remote Edward Norton. As a fortyish Hollywood rich kid who's HIV-positive, Elizabeth Perkins fairly scorches a hole in the movie--the rage of a magnificent woman pushed out of the box before her time lights up every scene she's in. And Amanda Donohoe, Buck Henry and Laraine Newman all have potent brief moments.

    The pitfall to Wagner's genius is generally that he uses his gift for conjuring catastrophe only cruelly--it sometimes feels as if there's no possible response to his books except to faint. Here, he's put that talent to use: he questions the tactics we use to deal with the undealable. In a stroke of ill fortune endemic to the characters in Wagner's books, I'M LOSING YOU was released on the same day as EYES WIDE SHUT and THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT. I can only hope someone within the sound of my voice will see this beautiful, almost-great movie before, like its characters, it passes into the ether.
    5Hermit C-2

    Didn't do it for me.

    Illness, death, and a family's reaction to it have been the subject of a multitude of films, but the potential there for high drama is so great that the vein could hardly be exhausted. When I first started watching "I'm Losing You" (and no, I didn't read the book) and saw Frank Langella's character receive his terminal bad news, I assumed the focus would be on him and how his family handled the crisis. I was surprised, then, when it turned out that the Grim Reaper was all over the place, stalking characters major and minor.

    Which would have been fine if this film had been the great meditation on death and dying that it so obviously wants to be. Maybe there just wasn't enough time to thoroughly develop all the characters and plot elements, but I surely wouldn't have wanted a longer film. Consequently nothing in it really reached or impressed me. Particularly poorly handled, I thought, was Rosanna Arquette's character, whose mental breakdown and interest in/obsession with with a Jewish funeral ritual were not very well-explained, at least not to my satisfaction. The ritual, by the way, was interesting from a cultural and educational point of view, but as a part of the film it was my least favorite. I disliked Julie Ariola's pious character every time she was on the screen, for some reason. And I found myself again wondering why Arquette has such a hard time finding roles that are worthy of her.

    Apparently many people found this film edifying, but I would proceed with caution. One thing proponents and detractors alike could probably agree on: if you're looking for a tear-jerker, go elsewhere. There probably wasn't a wet eye in the house when this film was playing.
    8Toad--

    Everything that movies should be about, but rarely are.

    I truly enjoyed watching this movie, which is driven by the people in it - I'm looking forward to reading some of Wagner's books now. The cast and characters are excellent, and I love it when I discover a movie that is driven by the people in it, rather than the explosions or car chases. Highly recommended.

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    Handlung

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    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: One True Thing/Rush Hour/A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries/Permanent Midnight/Touch of Evil/Chicago Cab (1998)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 3. September 1998 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • T'estic perdent
    • Drehorte
      • Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Killer Films
      • Lionsgate
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 13.996 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 7.027 $
      • 18. Juli 1999
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 13.996 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 40 Min.(100 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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